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Neuro Linguistic Programming
is a remarkable technology that unlocks many of the secrets of how the brain programmes itself. Once you learn thses patterns, you’ll be able to do what the most influential people across history have done. And our brand new and enhanced Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP) Practitioner Course can absolutely help you unlock this true Potential. When you bring your consci

ous mind and unconscious mind together truly magical things can happen… through our NLP Practitioner course we will show you the tools and techniques to make them work together to enhance your world.

21/04/2026

I think one of the biggest misunderstandings people have about confidence is this:

They think confidence is what comes before the action.

As if one day you wake up, stretch a little, look at your to-do list, and suddenly feel completely certain about sending the email, making the call, posting the idea, starting the course, having the awkward conversation, or walking into the room and speaking first.

That would be lovely.
Very efficient.

Terrible for the rest of us.
Most of the time, confidence doesn’t come first.
Evidence comes first.

And the evidence usually arrives through very small movements.
That’s the bit people miss because small movements are not very glamorous.

They don’t look like transformation.
They don’t sound impressive in a podcast interview.

Nobody says, “My whole life changed because I finally replied to one message on a Tuesday morning while standing in the kitchen waiting for the kettle.”

And yet… sometimes that’s exactly how it happens.
A small movement creates evidence.

You send the message.
And the world does not collapse.

You post the imperfect thought.
And nobody arrives at your door to revoke your right to speak in public.

You ask the question.
You make the call.

You begin before you feel ready.
You say the thing a little clumsily.
You turn up slightly unsure of yourself.
And then your nervous system gets new information.

Oh.

We can do this.
Not perfectly.
Not beautifully.
Not with swelling music in the background.
But we can do it.

That matters more than most people realise.

Because when you’re stuck in what Dr. Seuss called The Waiting Place, you can begin to believe that the answer is more thinking.

A bit more preparation.
A bit more planning.
A bit more internal negotiation.

You tell yourself you need clarity.
Or confidence.
Or the right moment.
Or a sign.

But often what you actually need is evidence.
Not massive evidence.
Not life-changing evidence by lunchtime.
Just enough evidence to loosen the grip of the old story.

Just enough to challenge the part of you that says,
“No, no, no… we don’t do this sort of thing.”

A very small action can do that.

That’s why I’ve started to think that leaving the Waiting Place rarely happens through one giant leap.

Usually it happens through movements so small they barely look heroic at all.

Press send.
Book the date.
Walk in.
Speak first.
Stop rewriting.
Let it be seen.
Try once.

That’s the strange power of small movements.

They may look tiny from the outside, but internally they are gathering proof.
Proof that you can begin.
Proof that discomfort is survivable.
Proof that action teaches faster than overthinking.
Proof that who you have been is not the same as who you have to be next.

So maybe that’s the question this week:

What small movement would give you better evidence than another hour of thinking?

Because sometimes one small act will teach you more than a week of waiting ever could.
John “taking action” Cassidy-Rice

16/04/2026

Dr. Seuss wrote about The Waiting Place.

And I suspect he understood something most adults don’t admit often enough:

Waiting can feel far safer than living.

Because when you’re waiting, nothing has been tested yet.

Your idea is still intact.
Your courage is still theoretical.
Your plan still looks good in your head.

Reality, unfortunately, likes to smudge things.

It asks you to speak before you feel ready.
To begin before you feel clear.
To act while there’s still uncertainty in the room.

In other words, terribly rude.

But that’s where life tends to happen.

Not in the perfect plan.
Not in the imaginary future version of you who has no doubts.
Not after every green light arrives in a neat row.

Usually it happens in the middle of the wobble.

So maybe the question this week is not:
“What am I waiting for?”

Maybe it’s:
“What has waiting been protecting me from?”

Because the answer to that one is often where the real story begins.

John “starting stories” Cassidy-Rice

Master NLP Through Over-LearningUnderstanding is step 1.Mastery is what happens after the “I get it” moment.Pick ONE pat...
14/04/2026

Master NLP Through Over-Learning

Understanding is step 1.
Mastery is what happens after the “I get it” moment.

Pick ONE pattern. Use it daily:
• say it out loud
• test it in real chats
• notice what lands
• repeat until it runs on autopilot

Repetition + feedback = instinct.

What do you *know*… but haven’t practiced past “good”?

Most people quit right before it gets fun.If you’re practising NLP like a test, you’ll tense up.Practise it like play:• ...
11/04/2026

Most people quit right before it gets fun.

If you’re practising NLP like a test, you’ll tense up.
Practise it like play:

• Try one new phrase today
• Expect it to be clunky
• Laugh, adjust, try again

That “messy middle” is where over-learning happens—until it shows up under pressure without thinking.

What’s one skill you’re repeating past “good enough” this week? https://www.nlpcourses.com/

You’re not “bad at remembering.” You’re normal.Ebbinghaus found we can lose ~47% in 20 minutes… and ~78% in a month.Over...
09/04/2026

You’re not “bad at remembering.” You’re normal.

Ebbinghaus found we can lose ~47% in 20 minutes… and ~78% in a month.

Over-learning is how you fight back: practice past “I get it” until it runs on autopilot.

Try this with one NLP pattern:
1) 3 reps today
2) 3 tomorrow
3) Use it in one real convo

What’s one skill you know… but don’t yet own?

09/04/2026

Have you ever had one of those moments where something seems obvious to you… and absolutely nobody else in the room appears to be joining you there?

A bit like spotting the answer in a puzzle and then discovering everyone else is still arguing about the instructions.
I sometimes think Alan Turing lived there.
He was born in London in 1912 and, from early on, had the sort of mind that didn’t just learn ideas — it took them apart to see how they worked.

At school he was bright, independent, and not especially designed for neat conformity. Later, at Cambridge, and then beyond, he began doing the kind of thinking that would help shape modern computer science. Britannica describes him as a British mathematician and logician whose work fed into mathematics, cryptanalysis, computer science, artificial intelligence, and more.

Then came the Second World War.
At Bletchley Park, Turing became one of the key figures in the effort to break German codes, including Enigma. Bletchley Park’s own material places him among the most important codebreakers there, and credits his work as part of the story that helped make Bletchley Park a birthplace of modern computing.

Now, on paper, that sounds wonderfully tidy.
Brilliant man.
Big war.
Secret work.
History redeemed.
But real lives are never that tidy, are they?

Because while Turing was helping his country think more clearly in one of its darkest periods, he was also living in a country that could not think clearly about him.

In 1952, he was prosecuted for homosexuality under the law then in force in Britain. The UK National Archives notes that he was arrested, prosecuted, and subjected to oestrogen treatment rather than prison in an attempt to “cure” his sexuality.

That’s the part that catches in the throat a bit.
A man trusted to help decode the enemy, but not trusted to be himself.
And maybe that’s what makes his story feel so modern.
Not just genius.
Not just achievement.
But the strange loneliness of seeing further than the system around you — while still being crushed by parts of that same system.
There’s something in that which goes far beyond history.
Because most of us know a quieter version of it.
Seeing a possibility other people can’t yet see.

Knowing something matters before there’s language for it.
Feeling out of step, not because you’re wrong, but because the room isn’t ready.

Turing’s life reminds me that being ahead of your time is not always glamorous.

But so much of progress begins exactly there — with somebody willing to keep following a thought even when it makes them look unusual.
Or difficult.

Which, to be fair, is rarely how success gets marketed on a mug.
Still, history has a habit of circling back and whispering something deeply inconvenient:

the people who help the world move forward are often the very people the world doesn’t know what to do with at the time.
Alan Turing knew something about that.
John “pattern hunting” Cassidy-Rice

Passing the test isn’t the point.You can ‘learn’ an NLP pattern in a weekend.Over-learning is when it shows up on a bad ...
07/04/2026

Passing the test isn’t the point.

You can ‘learn’ an NLP pattern in a weekend.
Over-learning is when it shows up on a bad day—without you hunting for the right words.

Like driving:
License = basics.
Confidence = miles, mistakes, and repetition until roundabouts don’t spike your heart rate.

What are you practicing past “I know it”?
Find out more about our NLP courses today! https://www.nlpcourses.com/

07/04/2026

I was thinking the other day about how much of life seems to involve waiting for somebody else to approve of you.

Waiting for the email.
Waiting for the nod.
Waiting for someone important-looking to say, “Yes, you may now begin being useful.”

It’s a strange system when you think about it.
As if potential only counts once it’s been stamped by a person behind a desk.

Mary Seacole would have been a nightmare for that system.
She was born in Kingston, Jamaica, in 1805, to a Scottish father and a Jamaican mother. Her mother ran a boarding house and used traditional remedies, and Mary learned a huge amount from being around illness, care, and recovery from an early age.

Then the Crimean War broke out.

British soldiers were suffering badly. Mary Seacole wanted to go and help. She applied through official channels in London and was turned away. Which is the sort of moment that usually sends a person home to make tea and have a quiet sulk.

Reasonable, really.

You try. They say no. You tell yourself it wasn’t meant to be. You develop a slightly dramatic inner speech about how nobody recognises talent.
You maybe have a biscuit.

Mary Seacole skipped that bit.

Instead, she paid her own way to the Crimea, travelled there herself, and set up the British Hotel near Balaklava, where soldiers could get food, supplies, and care. She also went out to tend the wounded close to the battlefield.

That’s what I love about her story.

Not just that she was brave.
Not just that she cared.

But that she seems to have had very little patience for the idea that “no” from the wrong person should become “no” from her.

And honestly, that’s where so many of us get stuck, isn’t it?
Not at the point of failure.
At the point of permission.

We assume the closed door means the end of the story, when sometimes it just means the official entrance is shut and you’ll need to come round the side like everyone else who ever did anything interesting.

That’s one of those awkward truths history keeps handing us.
The people who make a difference are not always the people who were welcomed in.

Sometimes they’re the ones standing there thinking, “Well, this is inconvenient… but I’m still going.”

There’s something very modern about Mary Seacole in that sense.
She didn’t sit around building a personal brand about resilience.
She just got on a boat.

Which, when you think about it, is a far more impressive response than posting a quote about courage over a picture of a sunrise.

Her story is a reminder that confidence doesn’t always look like certainty.

Sometimes it looks like being refused and carrying on anyway.
And if you’ve been waiting for someone to choose you, approve you, validate you, or hand you the tidy little badge that says you belong here, Mary Seacole offers a wonderfully inconvenient thought

maybe usefulness matters more than invitation.
And maybe the people who change things are very often the ones who stop waiting in reception.
John ‘taking action’ Cassidy-Rice

Keep Your Inner Child Learning: The Power of Playful Over-Learning in NLPIf it feels clunky, good.Over-learning is pract...
04/04/2026

Keep Your Inner Child Learning: The Power of Playful Over-Learning in NLP

If it feels clunky, good.
Over-learning is practicing past “I get it” until it’s automatic.

Try this today:
• 3 tiny reps in real conversations
• Say the pattern out loud
• Log one joyful mistake + the tweak

What are you practicing past perfect this week?
Find out more about our NLP courses today! https://www.nlpcourses.com/

Over-Learning: The Secret to Making NLP Second NatureKnowing a pattern isn’t skill. Skill is using it when you’re tired,...
02/04/2026

Over-Learning: The Secret to Making NLP Second Nature

Knowing a pattern isn’t skill. Skill is using it when you’re tired, triggered, or in a meeting.

Pick ONE tool.
Practice it daily in real conversations.
Repeat it when it’s awkward.

That’s how NLP moves from “I remember” to automatic calm + confident choices.

What are you over-learning this week?

Find out more: https://www.nlpcourses.com/

02/04/2026

There was a plate on the bench…
Not neatly labelled.
Not carefully stored.
Just… left there a bit too long.
You know the kind.

The ones you mean to tidy up later,
and then later turns into “𝘐’𝘭𝘭 𝘥𝘦𝘢𝘭 𝘸𝘪𝘵𝘩 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘰𝘮𝘰𝘳𝘳𝘰𝘸.”
Except this one wasn’t in a kitchen.
It was in a lab.

And when Alexander Fleming came back to it, something had gone wrong.
Mould.
Contamination.

The sort of thing that, in most situations, gets quietly thrown away without a second thought.
Clean it up.
Start again.
Pretend it didn’t happen.

But he paused.

And this is the bit I keep coming back to…
He didn’t just see what was 𝘸𝘳𝘰𝘯𝘨.
He noticed what was 𝘥𝘪𝘧𝘧𝘦𝘳𝘦𝘯𝘵.

Around the mould, the bacteria hadn’t grown.
Now, most people would’ve just seen a ruined experiment.
He saw a pattern.

And that small moment — that willingness to stay curious instead of dismissive — led to the discovery of penicillin.
Which, when you think about it, is slightly unsettling.

Because it suggests that some of the most important breakthroughs in history didn’t come from getting everything right…
…but from not ignoring what looked wrong.

And I don’t know about you, but I’ve definitely had moments where something hasn’t gone to plan, and my first instinct is to tidy it up mentally.

Call it a mistake.
Move on quickly.
Don’t look too closely.

Almost like we’re trying to protect ourselves from what it might mean.
But what if…

what we call “failure” is often just unfinished information?
Something we haven’t looked at properly yet.
Something we’ve decided the meaning of a bit too quickly.
It’s something I see a lot when people get caught in overthinking.

They replay the moment,
label it,
file it away…
without ever asking, “𝘞𝘩𝘢𝘵’𝘴 𝘢𝘤𝘵𝘶𝘢𝘭𝘭𝘺 𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦?”

Because that question changes everything.
It turns judgement into curiosity.
And curiosity… well, that’s where things start to move.
That’s why, in the work I do, we don’t rush to fix things straight away.

We slow them down.
Look at them from a different angle.
Sometimes even sit with the “mess” a little longer than feels comfortable.

Because every now and then…
there’s something useful hiding in it.
So here’s a small thought for today:

Is there something you’ve already written off
that might just need another look?

Not to fix it.
John “seeing it differently'“ Cassidy-Rice

Passing the test isn’t fluency.Over-learning = practicing past “I get it” until the language shows up under pressure—mee...
31/03/2026

Passing the test isn’t fluency.

Over-learning = practicing past “I get it” until the language shows up under pressure—meeting, meltdown, or awkward silence.

Try this:
• Choose ONE NLP pattern
• Use it 5 times daily in real chats
• Notice what worked, tweak, repeat for 7 days

Fluency is built after the first win. Where do you quit early?

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