Neurological drivers are the major subjective distinctions that are directly hard-wired to the neural system. Peripheral vision has a collection of neurological drivers that make it distinct. Tunnel vision feels like a trap because it is based on sympathetic nervous system arousal and it is detailed (chunked down). Peripheral vision, on the other hand, is contextual and its manifestation is based on the parasympathetic nervous system. While tunnel vision allows us only to notice a fraction of the stimuli we unconsciously perceive, peripheral vision is panoramic.

Step 1: Initiate a downtime state. #

Step 2: Select an issue, a problem that is context dependent or has an object of reference (a person, a memory, a future event). #

Step 3: Practice peripheral vision: #

Focus gaze. Expand your awareness to the panoramic sub-modality. Loosen your jaw. Calibrate your body and posture to a physiological shift.

Step 4: Anchor the peripheral vision state. #

Step 5: Move to the first perceptual position, associate to the problem context. #

Step 6: Fire the anchor. #

Step 7: Break state. #

Step 8: Repeat five times steps 3 to 7. #

Step 9: Eco-check. #

Step 10: Second ecology check via perceptual positions: Self (first, peripheral vision); Other (second, re-integration); Other (third, observer). #

Step 11: Future pace. #