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Image Stream to Solve Relationship Problems

The Image Streaming technique was developed by Dr Win Wenger to help increase mental functioning, creativity and to solve problems from a different level of thinking. This technique was also used by Einstein for solving problems, although it was not called by the same name then.

How will this solve marriage/relationship problems, you ask? Well whenever we ask ourselves what is the solution to our problem, we tend to think linearly. We tend to come up with answers that are directly related to the problem, and often the real solution may not be so. Image Streaming is one way of enabling you to come up with solutions that you would have never thought of otherwise, aka think out of the box. Because our unconscious mind is connected to the collective unconscious (Carl Jung), we are able to draw wisdom from that aspect. This impacts the quality of your solution many fold. In essence, you can come up with genius solutions to your problems the same way Einstein did. I encourage you to keep an open mind and try it!

Instructions

  1. Ask yourself a question.

     
  2. Start the Image Stream. Have a live listener or tape recorder with you. Sit back, relax, close your eyes, and describe aloud whatever images suggest themselves. Go with your first, immediate impressions and describe them aloud, rapid-flow, in sensory detail. More free images will then emerge. Notice when the scene changes or other images emerge, and describe these, as well.

    It's important to describe aloud, to bring the mind's images into conscious awareness, no matter how unrelated the images may at first appear.

    Let yourself be surprised by what your images reveal to you. The more surprising, the more likely that you're getting fresh input from your subtler, more comprehensive and more accurate faculties.

  1. Feature-Questioning. Pick out some one feature—a wall, a tree or bush, whatever's there. Imagine laying a hand on that feature and studying its feel (and describe that feel), to strengthen your contact with the experience. Ask that rock or bush or wall, "Why are you here as part of my answer?" See if the imagery changes when you ask that question. Describe the changes.

  2. Inductive Inference. Once you've run a set of images, thank your Image-Streaming faculties for showing you this answer. Ask their help in understanding the messages in your images. They are often symbolic.

    Repeat the process by starting a new Image-Stream, with entirely different images which nonetheless somehow are still giving you the same answer to the same question. After 2 to 3 minutes of this new imagery, repeat this step to get a third set of images, each different, yet each showing you the same answer a different way.

  3. What's the Same? Examine whatever's the same among the several sets of images when all else is different. These themes or elements-in-common are your core answer or message.

  4. Relate. Go back to your original question and determine in what way or ways these core elements are the answer to your question.

  5. Debrief. Summarize this whole experience either to another person (directly or by telephone) or to notebook or computer. This change of medium, and change of feedbacks, should add further to your understanding.


Follow-up questions
You might want to verify your responses with questions such as these:

  • "How can I make sure that I'm on the right track with this understanding of the question?" (You should get back either a way to test and verify, or a reminder of real-time data or experiences which demonstrate that this is the right answer to be working with.)

  • "What more do I need to know in this context?"

  • "What's a good, practical, concrete first step to acting upon this understanding?"

Credit
Dr Win Wenger, Project Renaissance, http://www.winwenger.com/