Chapter 16: Hypnotising Your Audience 253
reduce the detail, deliberately adopting vague language that can be acceptable
to different people. Table 16-1 outlines the main differences between these
two models.
Table 16-1 Milton Model versus Meta Model
Milton Model Meta Model
Makes language more general Makes language more specific
Moves from surface structure to deep
structure
Moves from deep structure to surface
structure
Looks for general understanding Looks for precise examples
Aims to access unconscious resources Aims to bring experience to conscious
awareness
Keeps client internally focused Keeps client externally focused
Comparing language patterns and the Milton Model
In Table 16-2, we highlight some of the key language patterns of the Milton
Model. Just as in the Meta Model – Bandler and Grinder’s earlier explanation
of language – the Milton Model identifies three key types of pattern. You see
the same deletions, generalisations, and distortions that happen in normal
speech (which we explain in full in Chapter 15) – the ways in which people
make sense of their everyday experiences and transform them into language.
Table 16-2 NLP Milton Model Patterns
Patterns Examples of the Vague Language
You Can Use to Challenge Deletions,
Generalisations, and Distortions and
Take a Person into a Receptive State
Deletion
Simple deletion (misses out part of the
message)
You’re ready to listen
Unspecified verbs (doesn’t say how the
action is carried out)
As you make sense of this in your own
time...
(continued)