This One Linguistic Trick Can Dramatically Increase Your Conversational Hypnosis Skills


Here is one powerful yet simple trick that you can learn to vastly increase your persuasive power when talking to others. This trick can also be used in print, as you'll soon find out. This method comes from conversational hypnosis, and is usually only used by advanced professionals or high level practitioners. In just a few minutes, it will also be known by you.

If that sounds like something you're interested in, then you are in the right place. This particular technique was developed by Milton Erickson, who is widely regarded as the greatest and most effective hypnotist to ever live. He created a whole new paradigm of hypnosis, and this allowed him to cure his clients of a variety of emotional problems in as little as one or two sessions. All through simple conversation.

This particular language pattern is called the "Lost Performative." The lost what? What it is is a way to make a statement, be it a simple statement or a bold proclamation, and leave the person who is actually responsible for making the statement vague, or unspecified. When done like this, the listener will have to "fill in the gaps," of who this imagined "person" really is. And when they do they will come up with their own imagined reference. This will make the idea much more believable to them, as they are using their own subconscious to support your idea. Pretty cool, right?

The easy way to build this pattern is to start off with the idea you'd like your listener to take as true. Lets use "dogs make the best pets," for an example. If you said, "I think dogs make the best pets," you would simply be expressing your opinion, and that would be easy to disagree with. If you said, "Lots of people think dogs are the best pets," then it's a little bit better, as you now have the backing of this imaginary social group, but it is still just an opinion of a larger group.

But if you say something like, "It has been known for years that dogs make the best pets," then it sounds like you are expressing an established fact. As the phrase, "It has been known for years," leaves a lot of unanswered questions in the listeners mind. Known by who? How did they know? When you are congruent with your statement, that is you say without any hint of disbelief, your listener will usually fill in the blanks themselves.

Some other ways to say it:

It has been proven that dogs make the best pets.

It has been well established that dogs make the best pets.

It is a foregone conclusion that dogs make the best pets.

One thing that is certain, is that dogs make the best pets.

To really cement an idea in your listeners mind, mention it as described above, and then start talking about the implications, or results, or effects of your "foregone" conclusion.