I'm writing up a new web page.
I'll publsh chunks in here as I go along in the hope
of getting a bit of helpful feedback from my peers
as I proceed.
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Introduction
This page explores the nature of psychological
conditioning (or effortful desire) and its dependence
on patterned, and hence repetitive, behaviours.
The page comprises a number of relatively short, contiguous articles which
examine, from various perspectives, the results of and the processes
involved in conditioning the nervous system, and consequently, physical,
habitual behaviours.
Given a fundamental understanding of these processes, an exploration of
the
possibility of cessation of unnecessary patterns of behaviour (i.e. those
arising in: arbitrary, cultural conditioning, political and similar
indoctrination, transient peer group pressure, socially engineered
'education', etc.) then takes place.
Ultimately, the generation of both unconditional interrupt (spontaneous
negation by direct observation), and conditional interrupt (deliberate -
based on pattern disruption techniques), is investigated by means of
observation in a series of practical, consciousness expansion exercises
and
interrupt techniques that create negation.
The Fundamental Nature of Conditioning
You only need to learn one or two fundamental things with regard to
'conditioning' (which lies at the root of abberant behaviour) and then the
rest is down to your ingenuity in devising means of altering that
conditioning - mainly by interruption, but sometimes by superseding.
The interrupt will normally work on it's own (and the psychological
conditioning having stalled, then the default - and
benevolent/harmonious/wholistic biological - conditioning will kick in,
PROVIDED the cir***stances or associations that form part of the original
condition (ie the anchors in NLP speak) are also addressed.
The fundamentals are:
1) condtioning exists in patterns
2) patterns can only exist (and take hold) in/by repetition
hduiejgdfkhj = a random sequence
hduiejgdfkhjhduiejgdfkhjhduiejgdfkhj = a pattern
Understand the im****tance of the previous five lines. If you are serious
in
overcoming the limitations of habitual and patterned behaviour - either in
yourself (the place to start) or others - you must understand the indented
lines above in depth. Read them over several times - consciously using
repetition to your advantage rather than being its unconscious slave; play
with them until you thoroughly understand that pattern depends upon
repetition and cannot exist without it. If you learn only one thing from
this page, then learn that. Understand how it works visually, aurally,
orally, in organisations, in physical behaviour, in number and in form.
Patterns exist as periodic oscillations, sometimes simple, sometimes
complex, but even the most complex of oscillations can be broken into
simple
component parts. Patterns do not exist in mere 'words' and sounds, but in
all manner of things - geometry, colour, physical form, physical
movements,
rocks and crystals, architecture, science, mathematics, taste, texture,
visual image, fluid flow, etc, etc. Some exist naturally in that they
occur
spontaneously in Nature, some are not.
That's all you need to know to begin with - the rest falls in place as you
apply it.
Once you become aware of the fundamentals - by daily/moment to moment
observation, not by mere intellectual discussion and theorisation - then
you
should be able to detect patterns in most things & in many cases deal with
them as necessary 'on the wing'.
Alternatively, you may use prescribed (usually tried and tested)
'technique'
as devised by others. The first method is best in terms of actual in depth
understanding; as for the second method, well note that somewhere,
sometime,
somebody (usually Milton Erickson!) originally devised that technique.


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