Once, a master blacksmith was teaching his apprentice how to craft a legendary sword. The apprentice, frustrated after hours of hammering, threw his tools down and sighed,
The blacksmith didn't argue. Instead, he used patterns to shift the boy's perspective: Sleight of Mouth by Robert Dilts
"If you look only at this afternoon, it feels like a struggle. But if you look at the thirty years a warrior will carry this blade, today is just a brief, necessary conversation between the hammer and the steel." Once, a master blacksmith was teaching his apprentice
"Have you ever seen a sharp blade made from soft tin? The very thing you’re complaining about—the resistance—is the only reason a sharp edge is even possible." But if you look at the thirty years
This story illustrates the core of Dilts’ work: we don't change the world; we change the we use to navigate it. By shifting the linguistic frame, we unlock new choices that were previously invisible.
The apprentice picked up his hammer, realizing that his "problem" was actually the .
"It’s not that the metal is stubborn," the master said. "It’s that it is durable . Its resistance now is exactly what will keep it from breaking in battle later."