Sub-Modality Eye-Accessing Cues (SMEACS)
Discovered and developed by Eric Robbie
Sub-Modality Eye-Accessing Cues (SMEACs) tell you what
kind of pictures people are seeing in their imagination.
Traditional eye-accessing cues only tell you whether a
picture is a memory or a construct. SMEACs go much
further by revealing many details about the pictures:
how big it is, where in space it's located, whether it's in
focus or blurry, how bright it is, what the dominant shapes
and colours are, and lots more.
With practice, you'll begin to notice more and more details.
Eric has reached the stage now where he can 'see' most of
the content in other people's pictures.
Eric has taught SMEACs in the UK, the US and Mexico. The next chance to learn
is at the Advanced Master
Practitioner program.
"We were able to consistently discern whether someone's pictures were in
colour / black and white, near or far, still or moving, bright or dim, focused
or blurred, and so on. It's amazing how easily these skills can be learnt and
built upon in such a short time." - Steve East
"By the end of the course I was amazed with what I was starting to see. If anyone has the opportunity to train with Eric in the future, I heartily recommend that they seize that chance." - Stephen Redmond
"I now see things I didn't before and it is so much fun, especially when
you tell people what they are accessing and they look at you and ask 'how did
you do that?!!'" - Val Knight
"Getting to spot the distinctions in how someone is processing their internal
dialogue was a really good thing and an "A-HA" moment for me. I like Eric's
style of training. It felt to me that it was more personal than a lot of other
trainings." - Adam Wilson
"Even as a champion of Eric's work, I was amazed at the consistent results everyone was getting by the end of day two. It was truly phenomenal. I can also say from my own experience that after practicing these skills for less than one year, I can now often detect SMEACs from as far as ten feet away. It's changed my life. Communicating with people is now so much easier for me; so much more intuitive." - Chris Morris
"Teaching people to allow themselves to see what's right in front of them is no easy task. Eric does this exceptionally. One of the few who can do and teach. A rarity of our times." - Jamie Dixon
