Conversational Hypnosis With The Milton Model – The Complex Equivalent

Reading This Means You Are About To Discover Something Fantastic

The Milton Model is a powerful set of language tools and communication strategies that you can use in a variety of situations to conversationally, or covertly hypnotize and persuade others.

Today’s pattern is called the “Complex Equivalent.”

It is very similar to the cause and effect, but is a little bit more subtle, and a lot more versatile. Instead of the “cause and effect” pattern, where you say that “x causes y,” with the “complex equivalent” pattern, you say the “x means y,” where can be pretty much anything, and y can be anything as well.

For example, let’s say you are holding an information meeting where you hope to sell some kind of investment products. You can take something that is absolutely true, they are at an information meeting on investments, and simply give it a meeting that helps you:

You’re being here means that you are interested in a new way to safely make some money, and because of our newly designed products are exactly for people like yourselves, that means that many of you will find exactly what you are looking for.”

Or you could combine this with a previous pattern, mind reading, saying something that is generally true about most people, and assign it any meaning to your liking:

You’re being anxious about your financial future only means that you are more open to opportunities than other people.

One effective way to use this is to take somebody else’s implied complex equivalent, and simply redefine whatever they think means something to mean something else.

If somebody says they can’t do well in business because they don’t have a college degree (no college degree means not good in business), you can “reframe” this to say that not having a college degree actually means that they’ve had more time in the real world, and that is actually better for business, not some theoretical classroom learning environment that you can’t really apply anywhere.

A couple other examples:

My parents were poor, that means I’ll be poor (having poor parents means you’ll be poor). Not really, that only means that you get to discover your own way to be rich, which is better than some kids of rich parents, who are trapped into making money the same way their parents did.

I got passed over for a promotion means that my boss doesn’t like me.
Not really, that means that your boss really appreciates and values the job you are doing now, and hasn’t found somebody to replace you yet.

Yet another way to covertly slip this pattern in any conversation is to connect any two ideas with the word “is.” “Is”, is basically a linguistic “equals” sign, equating the idea on the left, with the idea on the right.

You’re reading this is really good because you can really learn a lot from this.

You thinking those thoughts now is fantastic because that is an indication that you are on the brink of some fantastic learnings.

The Milton Model is the easiest method to conversationally hypnotize people and make them feel wonderful about themselves, and that is one of the best ways gain quick respect and admiration from almost anyone you speak with.

Milton Model language patterns are the quickest way to connect directly with your unconscious to create lasting change for the better.

Your sitting in your chair reading this now is an indication that you are committed to self-improvement, and that is the best way you can achieve success in any area of your life. In fact reading this blog on a daily basis is one of the greatest ways to get there.

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