How To Change Your Mood Fast
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 7,980 legacy views
Have you ever been unfocused before an exam, when you really needed to concentrate instead?
Or have you ever been really nervous before giving a lecture, when instead you needed to be confident?
Or perhaps you’ve been down in the dumps when you needed to be ‘on’ and positive at a social event?
We’ve all had the experience of wanting or needing, for one reason or another, to be in a different mood that the one we were actually in. Most of us just give in, accept our moods, and do the best we can. But there is a quick, easy way to shift your mood when you must, or even just when you choose to. No drugs, no pills, no cost, no side effects!
It’s really simple. It’s easy, too. It’s called ‘anchoring’ a positive emotional state.
In his wonderful online Encyclopedia of NLP ( http://nlpuniversitypress.com/indexA.html)”, Robert Dilts says:
“...“anchoring” refers to the process of associating an internal response with some environmental or mental trigger, so that the response may be quickly, and sometimes covertly, reaccessed.”
If you’re American and have ever heard the first notes of The Star Spangled Banner, and noticed that your right hand flew to cover your heart, even before you were aware of what it was doing, you have experienced a powerful anchor. (If you’re not American, perhaps you’ve seen this and puzzled over it.) If you smell a particular cooking smell and are instantly back in, say, your grandmother’s kitchen, you’ve experienced an anchor. If your partner has ever said, “We need to talk” and you’ve felt icy fingers of fear crawl up your back, you’ve experienced an anchor.
In a famous experiment, Pavlov used this stimulus-response conditioning to get dogs to salivate at the sound of a bell. He rang a bell and then gave them food so often that they associated the food with the sound of the bell, anticipating the food so well that they began to salivate just from the sound, even when no food was present.
All of these examples show that a trigger, a stimulus, can instantly and automatically result in a response. Most of these anchors, that is, trigger-response pairs, were set unconsciously (at least, unconsciously by us!). But what if you could set one intentionally?
You can! You can set an anchor to stimulate a positive emotion whenever you need it. Now, with a little advance preparation, you can turn lack of focus into concentration, or a case of nerves into confidence, or feeling low into feeling good. It just takes a little advance preparation.
Before you need the anchor, in a quiet place at any convenient time, do the following:
1) Pick an anchor. I generally recommend hand positions that you don’t normally use (like touching the thumb and pinkie of your non-dominant hand), for a couple of reasons:n - you can do them anywhere, any time n - they’re unobtrusive n - they take a minimum of effort n - they’re uncontaminated by other feelings
2) Think of a specific time and place when you really felt the way you’re choosing to feel. Make it really real for yourself by graphically imagining the scene:n - seeing what you saw around you at the time, looking out through your own eyes at the time n - hearing what you heard, no matter how faint n - smelling any smells that were associated with the time and place that you left how you choose to feel now n - touching something in the scene n - feeling all the feelings that go with the flood of emotion. Really notice where those feelings are in your body
3) When you are completely associated into the positive state that you’re choosing, especially feeling the internal feelings strongly, then set your anchor (touch your thumb to your pinkie).
4) Relax for a minute or so, distracting yourself with something else.
5) Repeat steps 2 – 4 several times.
6) Test the anchor by using it (touching your thumb to your pinkie). The feelings that you intentionally associated with the anchor should flood your body. If not, repeat steps 2 – 4 again until the using the anchor creates your chosen feelings/emotional state.
Then you have “anchored the resource state” so it’s available to you whenever you need it, say before an exam, a lecture or a social event. Just touch your anchor and go!
Article author
About the Author
Hollis Polk is a personal coach (www.888-4-hollis.com), who has been helping people create lives they love for 15 years, using neurolinguistic & hypnotherapy techniques, decision science, clairvoyance & the common sense learned in 20+ years of business. She is an NLP Master Practitioner, hypnotherapist & has a BSE in engineering from Princeton & a Harvard MBA. She is also a successful real estate broker, investor & business owner.
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Exploring the Profound: Unveiling the Spiritual Meanings That Shape Our Existence
rnIn the intricate tapestry of human existence, there exists a realm beyond the material that weaves together the threads of purpose, connection, and transcendence. This ethereal dimension is often referred to as spiritual meaning, a concept that has captivated the hearts and minds of individuals throughout history. In this article, we embark on a journey of discovery as we delve into the various facets of spiritual meanings and how they shape the very core of our existence.
August 11, 2023
Website
Amanda Hainline
Amanda is passionate about energy, spirit realms and creating an awesome life. And she loves helping others do the same.
August 31, 2021
Website
Intuitive Souls Blog
Learn how to connect with, and develop your intuition, and other psychic abilities.
August 10, 2021
Article
Instant credit repair
rnIf you type that phrase into any search engine, thousands of results will appear, but none of them will be able to provide instant credit repair. There is no such thing. By law, credit repair can be accomplished. Consumers have the right to dispute information on their credit reports, but there is no instant credit repair. This is not a quick process. A few years ago, there was a credit repair clinic that claimed to own a unique and valuable computer "disk". By using this d
May 12, 2020