
Do you remember the stories from when you were growing up?
You might remember ancient myths. Or religious parables. Or maybe cartoons.
In the process of connecting with these story, we can internalize the patterns of these stories and live them out.
The stories that we hear shape our thinking and our lives by impacting upon our beliefs, attitudes and values. Yet so often these stories are presented to us without rhyme, reason or chance to review.
We move people through our stories. A great storyteller can sometimes get you to feel as if you were there. So your heart rate rises as the tension builds, you feel the tension in the characters as their journey takes an unexpected twist, and you might even feel warm and fuzzy (or laugh out loud or scream with terror) as the storyteller plans.
The patterns behind stories and metaphors are usually left lost in the stories themselves. And yet there are patterns.
Milton Erickson was just one of the famous figures modeled in NLP who used a lot of metaphors. Some of his clients were said to have reported that there was no hypnosis at all and that Erickson just told a few stories.
So the first session of the Year of the Tiger (another metaphor?) seems the perfect time to explore The Magic of Metaphor.
In this session led by Daniel Smith (GradCertNLP, Certified NLP Trainer and Certified New Code NLP Trainer):
- Discover some of your metaphors,
- Explore how to deliberately construct metaphors for influence and impact,
- Start to experiment with how to weave these deliberate metaphors into ordinary conversations.
This is not intended as an “introduction to NLP” session, but rather an opportunity to play with one of the advanced aspects of NLP.
The Magic of Metaphor will be held Wednesday, 17 March, from 7pm at the REV Office.
There will be no charge for this session though registrations are essential.
We are now fully booked – please put your details below to be kept on the waiting list. Thanks!
This event will be held in the REV Office: 15B Ladoll International Hotel, 831 Xinzha Lu at Shimen Er Lu, just north from Nanjing West subway station.


The other morning, I noticed the sun reflecting off the top of the Shanghai World Financial Centre. And the building was acting like a prism, with beams of light scattered off the surface. Yet, as I looked up at the beautiful beams of light, it occurred to me that I couldn’t see the light itself as much as I could see the dust from which the light was reflecting. As beautiful as it appeared to me, it was the dust in the air that allowed me to even perceive it!