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9. GOVERNING LAW
These Terms and Conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the law of England and you hereby submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the English courts.

Dear Ms Burton,
Let me first tell you how impressed I was in reading your book. I have had already the opportunity to read other books on the same subject and apply NLP techniques to my children, but it was the first time that I found a real “manual” on NLP in plain English. Initially I was a little bit skeptical because I thought it was a real book for “dummies”, instead it wasn’t.
I have a question to ask you, though. At page 45 you mention study conducted on a group of children which shows how you can be badly impacted by the beliefs of others.
My daughter was recently moved to a classroom of children considered “slow learners” and her performance overall started to decrease although her potential is really high.
If possible, I’d like to know as much as possible about that study to show the teacher how wrong she was wrong in taking that decision.
In the meantime, I will continue to reinforce my daughter’s self confidence and positive beliefs as much as possible.
Many thanks in advance and keep up with the good work.
Best regards
Mario Blasi
Hello Mario, I’m a bit slow to learn about this new website I’ve put up and this is my third attempt to reply to you. Which is interesting as I was making the point that some things take longer for us to learn according to our style and natural talents. I get impatient with technology and miss out important steps.
I think your best policy here is to build a relationship with your daughter’s teacher rather than quoting any data to suggest she doesn’t know her job. Share your concerns and agree how you can work together to support your daughter’s learning – you need her on your side. Sounds like you are doing all you can to boost your daughter’s confidence and you believe in her potential. With your sponsorship, I’m sure she’ll do well. all good wishes, Kate
Dear Ms. Burton,
I realized on you book Coaching with NLP for Dummies that sometimes you say “your client” and after uses “she”, for example on page 217, chapter 12: “2. After your client… Ask the client to image that she’s…” Who is that she that appears sometimes? Or this is a way to talk to man and woman at the same time?
Best regards,
Elisabete
Elisabetr
Hi Elisabete, first of all, many apologies for the late response to your message. The ‘she’ and ‘he’ are interchangeable. It’s simply used by the editors to get away from talking about ‘he’ all the time. Clients may be both male and female. Thank you very much for your interest in the ‘coaching with NLP’ book and I hope you’re finding it useful.