Language Patterns and Reframing

Here are some of the most influential experts and thought leaders in language patterns, reframing, communication psychology, coaching language, and transformational conversation techniques:

Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) & Reframing


Therapeutic Language & Hypnosis


Cognitive Reframing & Psychology


Coaching & Transformational Conversation


Persuasion, Influence & Communication


Storytelling & Meaning-Making


Coaching-Specific Reframing Experts (ICF/Transformational)


Key Concepts They Are Known For

Expert

Key Contribution

Milton Erickson

Indirect suggestion

Bandler & Grinder

NLP language patterns

David Grove

Clean Language

Chris Voss

Tactical empathy

Marshall Rosenberg

Nonviolent Communication

Aaron Beck

Cognitive reframing

Virginia Satir

Transformational family communication

Marcia Reynolds

Reflective coaching

Nancy Kline

Thinking partnerships


ICF-Aligned Reframing Questions

In International Coaching Federation coaching, reframing is not about “fixing” the client or forcing positivity. It is about helping the client see new meaning, broader awareness, alternative perspectives, choices, possibilities, assumptions, and learning.

This aligns strongly with:

Good reframing:


1. Perspective Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client is:

Purpose

Helps the client step outside the current interpretation.

Questions

Example

Client:

“My manager ignored my idea in the meeting.”

Coach:

“What are three other possible explanations besides your idea not being valued?”

Possible client awareness:


2. Strength Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Helps transform perceived flaws into possible strengths.

Questions

Example

Client:

“I overthink everything.”

Coach:

“How has overthinking protected or helped you in the past?”

Awareness:


3. Learning Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Shifts focus from failure → learning.

Questions

Example

Client:

“I completely failed that presentation.”

Coach:

“What did that experience reveal that could strengthen your next presentation?”


4. Values Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Reconnects behavior and decisions to deeper values.

Questions

Example

Client:

“I’m angry my team missed the deadline.”

Coach:

“What does your frustration reveal about what’s important to you?”

Awareness:


5. Identity Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Separates behavior from identity.

Questions

Example

Client:

“I’m just bad at leadership.”

Coach:

“What leadership strengths have you demonstrated, even in small ways?”


6. Possibility Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Opens possibility and agency.

Questions

Example

Client:

“There’s nothing I can do.”

Coach:

“What is one action that is still within your control?”


7. Time Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Changes emotional intensity through time perspective.

Questions

Example

Client:

“This mistake ruined everything.”

Coach:

“When you look back on this later in life, what might you learn from it?”


8. Systemic Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Broadens awareness beyond the individual.

Questions

Example

Client:

“My team is lazy.”

Coach:

“What environmental or systemic factors may also be affecting performance?”


9. Emotional Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Positions emotions as information rather than problems.

Questions

Example

Client:

“I hate feeling anxious.”

Coach:

“What might the anxiety be alerting you to?”


10. Agency Reframe

When to Use

Use when the client:

Purpose

Restores ownership and choice.

Questions

Example

Client:

“They make me feel worthless.”

Coach:

“How would you like to respond in a way that honors your own value?”


Advanced ICF-Style Reframing Principles

Avoid:

Bad:

“Don’t you think this is actually a good thing?”

Better:

“What meaning are you making of this experience?”


Reframing Language Patterns Used by Strong PCC/MCC Coaches

Instead of:

Instead of:

Instead of:


Powerful Micro-Reframes


A Simple Reframing Flow for Coaching Sessions

Example:

Client:

“I lost my job. I’m a failure.”

Coach:

“You’re connecting the job loss to your identity.”
“What meaning are you making of losing the role?”
“What else might also be true?”
“What strengths helped you survive previous transitions?”
“Who do you want to be during this chapter?”
“What possibility is emerging?”

Language patterns used by master coaches

Language Patterns Used by Master Coaches

Masterful coaches — especially strong PCC and MCC-level coaches in International Coaching Federation aligned coaching — use language very intentionally.

Their language typically:

They avoid:


1. Awareness-Evoking Patterns

Purpose

Help clients notice deeper meaning, assumptions, emotions, values, patterns, and beliefs.

Examples

When to Use


2. Expanding Perspective Patterns

Purpose

Broaden thinking and open new viewpoints.

Examples

When to Use


3. Ownership & Agency Patterns

Purpose

Move clients from victimhood → ownership.

Examples

When to Use


4. Identity & Values Patterns

Purpose

Connect actions to identity and values.

Examples

When to Use


5. Emotional Awareness Patterns

Purpose

Help clients process emotions safely and meaningfully.

Examples

When to Use


6. Pattern Recognition Language

Purpose

Help clients notice recurring behaviors or beliefs.

Examples

When to Use


7. Possibility & Future-Oriented Patterns

Purpose

Create movement, vision, hope, and possibility.

Examples

When to Use


8. Reflective Listening Patterns

Purpose

Demonstrate deep listening and provoke insight.

Examples

When to Use


9. Minimalist MCC-Style Questions

Master coaches often ask fewer, simpler, deeper questions.

Examples

Why Powerful

Simple questions:


10. Challenge Without Judgment

Purpose

Challenge gently while maintaining partnership.

Examples

When to Use


11. Growth Integration Patterns

Aligned strongly with ICF Competency 8 — Facilitates Growth.

Examples


12. Clean Language Patterns (David Grove Influence)

Used heavily by master coaches because they reduce coach bias.

Examples

Why Powerful

Avoids:

Allows clients to generate their own meaning.


13. Language Patterns That Reduce Resistance

Instead of:

Instead of:

Instead of:

Instead of:


14. Advanced MCC Conversational Patterns

Holding Multiple Truths

Working With Identity

Working With Systems

Working With Meaning


Powerful Master Coach Habits

Master coaches often:


Example of a Masterful Coaching Sequence

Client:

“I feel trapped in my job.”

Weak coaching:

“Have you considered changing careers?”

Masterful coaching:

“What creates the feeling of trapped?”
“What meaning are you attaching to staying?”
“What feels most important right now?”
“What are you afraid could happen if things changed?”
“What part of you wants something different?”
“What becomes possible if you trusted that part?”
“What small step feels aligned?”

persuasive speaking patterns for workshops

Persuasive Speaking Patterns for Workshops

Persuasive workshop speaking is not about manipulation. The best facilitators, trainers, coaches, and speakers use language patterns that:

Many powerful workshop patterns come from:


1. “Imagine If…” Pattern

Purpose

Creates emotional visualization and future possibility.

Structure

“Imagine if…”

Examples

When to Use


2. Contrast Pattern (“Before vs After”)

Purpose

Makes transformation visible and emotionally compelling.

Structure

“Most people… but high performers…”

Examples

Why It Works

The brain understands change through contrast.


3. Problem → Solution → Possibility

Purpose

Classic persuasive teaching flow.

Structure

Example

“Many coaches struggle because they ask too many questions too quickly.
Clients become overwhelmed instead of reflective.
Today you’ll learn how master coaches slow conversations down.
And when you do that, clients begin generating their own breakthroughs.”


4. “What Happens Is…” Pattern

Purpose

Sounds observational rather than preachy.

Examples

Why Powerful

Reduces resistance because it feels descriptive, not judgmental.


5. Inclusive Language Patterns

Purpose

Creates safety and connection.

Examples

When to Use


6. Story Bridge Pattern

Purpose

Stories increase emotional retention and persuasion.

Structure

Example

“I once coached a leader who believed he had a communication problem.
But as we explored deeper, he realized it wasn’t communication — it was fear of disappointing people.
The moment he saw that, everything changed.”

Why Powerful

Stories bypass resistance and create emotional learning.


7. “The Truth Is…” Pattern

Purpose

Signals importance and emotional honesty.

Examples

Use Carefully

Overuse can sound dramatic or manipulative.


8. Repetition for Impact

Purpose

Creates memorability and emotional emphasis.

Examples

Why Powerful

Repetition increases retention and emotional resonance.


9. Triads (“Rule of Three”)

Purpose

Makes communication more rhythmic and memorable.

Examples

Why Powerful

The brain naturally remembers groups of three.


10. Rhetorical Questions

Purpose

Creates internal engagement.

Examples

Important

Pause after asking.

The silence creates reflection.


11. Identity-Based Persuasion

Purpose

People act consistently with identity.

Examples

Why Powerful

People want to align with valued identities.


12. “Let Me Show You…” Pattern

Purpose

Creates curiosity and attention.

Examples


13. Pattern Interrupts

Purpose

Breaks passive listening.

Examples

Example:

“The biggest communication problem…
is not communication.”

Pause.

“It’s assumption.”


14. Emotional Labeling

Inspired partly by Chris Voss.

Examples

Why Powerful

People relax when emotions are acknowledged.


15. Facilitation Questions That Create Participation

Examples


16. Future-Pacing Pattern

Purpose

Helps people mentally rehearse success.

Examples


17. “Small Shift, Big Difference” Pattern

Purpose

Reduces overwhelm.

Examples


18. Metaphor Patterns

Purpose

Simplifies complex ideas emotionally.

Examples

Coaching

“Coaching is holding up a mirror, not handing out instructions.”

Leadership

“Culture spreads like weather.”

Communication

“Assumptions are invisible walls.”


19. Call-to-Reflection Pattern

Purpose

Creates internal ownership instead of external pressure.

Examples


20. Closing Patterns for Workshops

Strong workshop endings usually include:

Examples


High-Level Persuasion Principles Used by Great Workshop Facilitators

They:


Example of a Persuasive Workshop Segment

“Most people think communication is about speaking clearly.
But what if communication is actually about creating safety?

Because when people feel unsafe, what happens?
They defend.
They withdraw.
They avoid honesty.

And the truth is — many workplace problems are not strategy problems.
They are conversation problems.

Imagine what changes when people feel genuinely heard.”

Common destructive language patterns

Common Destructive Language Patterns

Destructive language patterns damage:

They often create:

In coaching, leadership, facilitation, parenting, relationships, and workshops, awareness of these patterns is critical.


1. Absolutes

Pattern

Why Destructive

Creates defensiveness and exaggerates reality.

Better Alternative

Example

Destructive:

“You never listen.”

Better:

“I don’t feel heard in some of our conversations.”


2. Identity Attacks

Pattern

Attacking the person instead of the behavior.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates shame and identity defensiveness.

Better Alternative

Address observable behavior.


3. Mind Reading

Pattern

Assuming motives or thoughts.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates projection and misunderstanding.

Better Alternative

Stay curious.


4. Catastrophizing

Pattern

Turning problems into disasters.

Examples

Why Destructive

Escalates emotional overwhelm.

Better Alternative

Ground in reality.


5. Blame Language

Pattern

Externalizing all responsibility.

Examples

Why Destructive

Removes ownership and agency.

Better Alternative

Use ownership language.


6. Shame-Based Language

Pattern

Using guilt, humiliation, or inadequacy.

Examples

Why Destructive

Triggers emotional shutdown and fear.

Better Alternative

Use supportive accountability.


7. Labeling

Pattern

Reducing people to a single trait.

Examples

Why Destructive

Oversimplifies complexity and limits growth.

Better Alternative

Describe specific behavior.


8. Defensive Language

Pattern

Protecting self rather than understanding.

Examples

Why Destructive

Invalidates others’ experience.

Better Alternative

Acknowledge impact.


9. Passive-Aggressive Language

Pattern

Indirect hostility.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates confusion and hidden resentment.

Better Alternative

State feelings directly.


10. “Should” Language

Pattern

Rigid expectations and judgment.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates pressure, guilt, and perfectionism.

Better Alternative

Use preference or possibility.


11. Overgeneralization

Pattern

Using one event to define everything.

Examples

Why Destructive

Distorts reality and reinforces hopelessness.

Better Alternative

Create specificity.


12. Minimizing Language

Pattern

Dismissing emotions or struggles.

Examples

Why Destructive

Invalidates emotional experience.

Better Alternative

Acknowledge first.


13. Interrogative “Why” Questions

Pattern

Questions that feel accusatory.

Examples

Why Destructive

Often triggers defensiveness.

Better Alternative

Use exploratory language.


14. Binary Thinking

Pattern

All-or-nothing framing.

Examples

Why Destructive

Removes nuance and flexibility.

Better Alternative

Introduce complexity.


15. Projection Language

Pattern

Projecting internal feelings onto others.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates distorted assumptions.

Better Alternative

Differentiate fact from interpretation.


16. Rescuing Language

Common in coaching, leadership, parenting.

Examples

Why Destructive

Reduces autonomy and ownership.

Better Alternative

Promote agency.


17. Comparisons

Pattern

Measuring worth against others.

Examples

Why Destructive

Creates shame and inadequacy.

Better Alternative

Focus on the individual.


18. Certainty Language

Pattern

Speaking assumptions as facts.

Examples

Why Destructive

Closes possibility and growth.

Better Alternative

Use openness.


19. Emotional Invalidation

Pattern

Rejecting emotional experience.

Examples

Why Destructive

Escalates emotions and damages trust.

Better Alternative

Validate first.


20. Coaching-Specific Destructive Patterns

Leading Questions

“Don’t you think…”

Advice Disguised as Questions

“Have you tried just communicating better?”

Question Stacking

“How do you feel, what do you want, why is this happening?”

Hijacking

“That happened to me too…”

Excessive Teaching

“What you need to understand is…”

Premature Action

“So what action will you take?” (before awareness)


Common Destructive Patterns in Workshops & Leadership

Public Shaming

“This should be obvious.”

Intellectual Superiority

“Actually…”

Dismissing Questions

“We already covered that.”

Fear-Based Motivation

“If you don’t change, you’ll fail.”

Manipulative Urgency

“This is your only chance.”


Transformational Shift

Weak communicators try to:

Strong communicators try to:


A Simple Reframe Formula

Instead of: Judgment

Use: Observation

Instead of: Assumption

Use: Curiosity

Instead of: Control

Use: Partnership

Instead of: Shame

Use: Awareness + Accountability

Instead of: Certainty

Use: Exploration



MCC-Level Language Patterns for the 8 ICF Core Competencies

These language patterns are aligned with strong MCC-style coaching demonstrated within International Coaching Federation coaching conversations.

MCC-level coaching language is typically:

Master coaches:


1. Demonstrates Ethical Practice

MCC Energy

The coach embodies trust, transparency, respect, and professionalism naturally.

This competency is often demonstrated more through presence and behavior than through “techniques.”


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Contracting & Transparency

Permission-Based Coaching

Respecting Autonomy

Maintaining Boundaries


2. Embodies a Coaching Mindset

MCC Energy

Curious, reflective, non-attached, spacious, compassionate.

The coach is not trying to “perform coaching.”


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Curiosity

Openness

Non-Attachment

Reflection


3. Establishes and Maintains Agreements

MCC Energy

Collaborative, fluid, client-centered partnership.

The agreement evolves naturally throughout the conversation.


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Establishing Focus

Clarifying Desired Outcome

Recontracting Mid-Session

Clarifying Coaching vs Topic


4. Cultivates Trust and Safety

MCC Energy

The client feels deeply seen, accepted, and psychologically safe.


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Validation Without Rescuing

Emotional Safety

Respect & Acceptance

Supporting Vulnerability


5. Maintains Presence

MCC Energy

Fully with the client in the moment.

Responsive rather than scripted.


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Staying Present

Working With Emotion & Energy

Following the Client

Spaciousness


6. Listens Actively

MCC Energy

Listening beyond words:


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Reflective Listening

Meaning & Beliefs

Values Listening

Pattern Listening


7. Evokes Awareness

MCC Energy

Awareness emerges organically rather than being taught.

The coach creates insight rather than providing answers.


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Expanding Perspective

Deepening Awareness

Identity & Transformation

Challenging Gently

Possibility


8. Facilitates Client Growth

MCC Energy

The client integrates awareness into meaningful action, learning, and sustainable growth.


Powerful MCC Language Patterns

Integrating Learning

Supporting Ownership

Encouraging Autonomy

Acknowledging Growth

Closing the Session


Common MCC-Level Conversational Habits

Master Coaches Often:

Use Fewer Words

Instead of: “Do you think maybe…”

They ask: “What do you notice?”


Ask One Question at a Time

Avoid: “How do you feel, what do you want, and why?”

Instead: “What are you feeling?”

Pause.


Trust Silence


Use Client Language

Client: “I feel trapped.”

Coach: “What creates the feeling of trapped?”

Not: “What limiting belief do you have?”


Avoid Advice Disguised as Questions

Weak: “Have you tried communicating more clearly?”

MCC-style: “What communication approach feels aligned?”


The Overall MCC Language Shift

Less:

More: