Reviewing Your Mistakes

In NLP there are the concepts of ‘uptime’ and ‘downtime’. Let’s cut through the jargon and decode this – ‘uptime’ is when you are focused on the outside world, paying attention to the responses you are generating and processing all that external input. ‘Downtime’, on the other hand, is when you are inside your head running internal dialogues and analysing what happened – not good when in the field.

When one is in the field, you want an external focus because you need to react to the people around you. This can mean, noticing their current state as input for your moving them to a state closer to where you want them to be. The choices people make are mostly state dependant and, just like a kid who knows the right moment to ask their parents for a bike, you’ll find there are right moments to go for the close or to move your target to the next stage in the influence or seduction process. These moments are state dependant and your job as an influencer as to both recognise and create these states.

When one is not in field, one wants an internal focus so you can review what happened and learn from it. This can mean reviewing your mistakes or noticing what worked well. It’s important to be as honest and objective as you can about what you did well or badly. By objectively reviewing how your sarges went you can best learn from your mistakes and from your achievements. In consequence you keep going with what works and cut out what is not paying dividends.

In my own experience, I was good at learning from my mistakes but looking back, I see I could have learned as much from analysing and reviewing what was successful. If it works, keep doing it. If it doesn’t, spend some time honestly analysing why it did not work. Was it your delivery? Was it used at the wrong time? Was it simply the wrong line or technique for that situation? Recording yourself can help in this objective analysis, after the fact.

If you are not sure where you went wrong or why it worked well, what can you do?

The first step for me is to look through my previous experiences in my journal. I keep a paper and online journal to look back on what has worked for me before (to do this more often) and what has led to outcomes I don’t want (to avoid these behaviours).

In addition to this, I will post online for additional feedback, especially if I can’t understand a situation. I mostly post on mASF (www.seductionfast.com/discussion). There you will find lots of advice on what you did well and how to improve. Aim to find people with a successful reputation and experimentally implement their advice.

It’s worth mini-trialing your mistakes during the week, especially if you mostly party at weekends.

It is better to meet people all week so you are used to meeting people any time. Don’t see weekends as a special occasion (thus higher pressure at weekends). Having said that, you might find it easier to try out revisions of your technique during the week.

Let’s say your main sarging days are Friday and Saturday then you post about your experiences on Sunday, you get feedback on Monday and Tuesday. You then implement those changes to your game on Wednesday and Thursday in preparation for the coming Friday and Saturday. That is the basis for a solid learning curve.

Learn from your mistakes through reviewing them and objectively implementing changes.

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