subject: How To Tap A Few Expressions From Concealed Hypnosis To Explode Your Impact And Personality [print this page] Time is a powerful concept, one that has boggled the mind of humankind for several thousand years. When you harness this concept, and use a particular set of language patterns, you can dramatically increase your persuasive ability and generate much more compliance among your listeners than you may think possible. You'll be surprised how easily you'll be able to incorporate these words into your everyday speech, increasing your influence and charisma.
These specific expressions are occasionally called "Time Words," or more particularly "Subordinate Clauses of Time." These contain words like: Before, during, after, as, since, prior, when, while, and others. They are "subordinate" as they link two events, one happening before, during, or after the other, and the one event is dependent, or "subordinate" to the other.They are available belonging to the Milton Model language designs of clandestine and conversational hypnosis.
To provide an example, if I say, "When I go to dinner tonight, I'm going to consume chicken," the "eating chicken" part of the sentence is dependent on the "when I head to dinner part." What's presupposed here is that I'm going to dinner. That part likely won't be questioned by the listener.
In order to steer somebody of your truth or a concept, or to start them contemplating taking a certain action, simply create a sentence like the one above, and place the concept or suggested action inside the "head to dinner" part of the sentence.
To provide an example, in case you are in sales, you could say something like, "When you buy this product you might encounter huge benefits." This seems much stronger than if you started the sentence with "If you purchase this product," as that leaves it open to whether they are going to buy the product. When you begin the sentence off with, "When you buy this product," it is foregone conclusion.
You can even say things like, "Once you buy this product," or, "When you take this product home," or, "Later today, when you have this product," as they all take for granted that the product will probably be bought.
You can even use some "before" words as well. For instance, it is possible to say something like, "Before you purchase this product, be sure you can fit it inside your car." Just be sure that in the place of "ensure you have room inside your car," you put something else that has a high probability of being true.
Whenever you make use of these forms of words, it gets the listener considering things that will come about before or after they believe your idea, or take your suggested course of action. When they do this, they've already subconsciously accepted the thought of doing it.