Managing the inner team
Shortcut to “pulling yourself together”
can act as arbitrator to our own emotions.
A way to think about this conflict is to imagine that we do
have parts, each one with its own identity and characteristics.
Imagine that you have an inner team and each part is a player
in that team. If the parts are communicating with each other
and in harmony, then we have a state of coherence; you are in
rapport with yourself. If some of the parts are at odds with
each other and not communicating effectively, then you have
incongruence and the accompanying stress.
For example, have you ever felt that a part of you felt
obliged to do what you had been asked to do, but another part
felt that you were violating what is important to you? And then
again, have you ever felt that everything about you was saying
“yes” to a conclusion you had reached and a plan you had set
yourself and that the motivation to carry out that plan was
unstoppable? These are examples of what it is like to be
without coherence and what it can be like to have it.
These parts often communicate with us through physical
symptoms. For instance, you might get a sharp pain above
the eyes whenever you think about a particular decision. The
part that is giving you the pain might be the part that lacks
the courage to say “yes” to the decision you are considering.
By learning to communicate with these inner parts, we learn
what they want to tell us; we learn to listen to the wisdom of
our own body. By listening to these parts we are learning to
listen to our unconscious mind. And by learning how to
coach these parts to communicate and work together in
harmony, we increasingly create a state of coherence within
ourselves.
You must have heard the advice (often given somewhat
aggressively) to “pull yourself together.” The outcome of the
advice, if not the style with which it is given, is sound. To
resolve conflict we do need to pull ourselves together, as we
do to achieve a state of rapport and resourcefulness. The
question is how. By modeling those people who are skilled at
resolving their inner and consequently their outer conflict, we
find that they have a structure for pulling themselves together.
These are the steps to follow:
330 NLP AT WORK