This corner of my brain is a mystery.
I like leaving home. Too long looking at my own walls and I start getting restless.
And I like what travel does for me. Seeing other people, seeing other sights, doing new things – it’s all great.
Even the travelling itself, I don’t mind. I’m happy on trains and planes. Driving through the country is nice. I’m writing this at an airport and it’s a cool vibe.
But I still hate to travel.
It doesn’t matter the direction. If I have a plane to catch, then that morning – and probably the night before – I’ll be irritable. That’s true whether I’m leaving home or returning back.
I mean, it could come down to time. All travel burns the clock. But it doesn’t scale like it should. Facing 30 hours of travel is barely worse than facing six.
And commuting is completely different, so it’s nothing to do with big vehicles or high speeds.
I dunno. I could fix it, but it’s not a big deal. It gives me the chance to practice stoicism and resilience.
Still, I’m curious about how and why I work like this.
Just as I used to be curious about the difference between good hypnotists and great ones.
I noticed a shift in myself – impossible to describe, impossible to ignore. Suddenly I was much better at it, getting superior results with much less effort.
Simple conversations got better results than intensive sessions.
It wasn’t down to patterns or techniques, useful as they are.
And it wasn’t down to my state or how present I was. Those improved as a side effect of this change.
I’m sure there are many Secrets to Conversational Hypnosis.
Many I do without thinking?
But these secrets I noticed in myself and others? The ones that seemed to change everything?
Once I figured those out, a lot clicked into place.
Unlike my weird aversion to travel, this is clear to me. Clear enough for me to teach it.
So if you want to radically accelerate the results you get with people – whatever those results may be – learn how here:
https://christianhypnotism.com/events/secrets-of-conversational-hypnosis/