The Gentle Power of EFT
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,912 legacy views
Legacy rating: 5/5 from 1 archived votes
There’s a relatively new healing technique that is growing in popularity with remarkable speed. It’s called EFT, which stands for Emotional Freedom Techniques. If you haven’t already heard of it, EFT is a safe and gentle form of energy medicine that is now being recommended by the American Psychiatric Association, and is widely used in VA hospitals in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. Like acupuncture, EFT is a meridian-based therapy, but with EFT, no needles are used. Instead, the EFT practitioner (or the client) taps on various acupuncture points on the client's face, body, and hands, while the client focuses on the issue that needs to be healed by repeating phrases about it, for example: "Heartbroken because my husband passed away." The combination of focusing on the issue while tapping spontaneously and permanently releases it from the body-mind. EFT has been successfully used to treat dozens of issues and conditions, including:
- Grief
- Trauma (including PTSD)
- Fears and phobias
- Obsessive compulsive disorder
- Relationship issues
- Hormonal imbalances
- ADD/ADHD
- Dyslexia
- Insomnia
- Depression
- Anxiety
- Allergies
- Migraines
- Chronic pai
Sound to good to be true? When I first heard about EFT, I certainly thought so. Until I tried it. The results I got were so powerful and repeatable that within a week, I had dropped the other healing techniques I’d been using in my private practice for four years and was exclusively using EFT. Since then, I’ve used it to help my clients heal myriad issues, including everything listed above. The EFT motto is: “Try it on everything.” The reason for this is that no matter what the problem is, if you do EFT on it, more often than not, you’re going to see improvements, and usually dramatic ones.
Developed in 1993 by Gary Craig, EFT has been spreading across the globe ever since. Google “Emotional Freedom Techniques” (with the quotes, to keep results to that exact phrase), and you’ll get over four and a half million hits. Enter the same phrase into the Amazon search bar, and you’ll have your choice of over 200 books. It’s being used by physicians, psychotherapists, nurses, chiropractors, coaches, sports psychologists, and teachers all over the world, on everything from PTSD to sports performance (it’s very popular on the pro golf circuit). Psychiatrist Curtis Steele has said "EFT is the single most effective tool I've learned in forty years of being a therapist,” and Candace Pert, PhD, former Chief of Brain Biochemistry at the National Institutes of Health, says, “EFT is the most important development in medicine since antiobiotics.”
Since I learned EFT, it has completely transformed my life, both personally and professionally. If I had only one tool for living to give my daughter, it would be EFT. In fact, if I had only one tool for living to give anyone, it would be this incredible tapping cure that heals broken hearts, releases long-held trauma, catalyzes spontaneous forgiveness, and sets people free from the prison of suffering.
Article author
About the Author
Heather Ambler, MA, CBP, uses EFT to help people heal from grief and trauma. In private practice since 2004, she works with adults and children, both in person and by phone. In addition to her work with clients, Heather also teaches EFT to individuals and groups, and blogs about EFT at www.efttappingtips.blogspot.com.
To learn more about Heather and her work, visit her website at www.heatherambler.com, or call 413.464.2463
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Fatherhood and Lineage
Recently, my wife and I went on vacation, and I had to explain to my nine year-old son why it was just the two of us going. I explained that mom and I needed time for just the two of us, just like he and I spend father and son time.
Related piece
Article
9 Steps to Eating on Purpose
How many times do you just wolf-down your meal in a mad rush to finish before getting back to work? How many times are you eating out of obligation to just eat? How many times do you see undigested food in your stool? Gross, I know! Do you have food allergies? If you answered “Yes” to any of these questons it is likely you need to retrain yourself in how to eat on purpose. 1. Maintain regular and consistent mealtimes. It is better to eat five smaller meals than three large meals.
Related piece
Article
Childhood Illness: Training for the Future
Children are to a degree necessarily imbalanced. They are in a constant state of change. Children seek to discover the limits of their control over their environment. What has become known as childhood infectious illnesses are the training ground of achieving and maintaining balance in their life as an adult. The ability to react appropriately to stimuli is a learning process. If a lion comes up and bites you, you should bleed! If a child is challenged by microbes their body should react appropriately by producing a fever and the lymph nodes should be activated.
Related piece
Article
Health Care Reformation: A Modern Day Horror Story
I was just a young doctor when I first toured the Heidelberg Castle in Germany. As is the case in many castles in Europe the narrow passage was dank and poorly lit. What light there was cast eerie shadows on the carefully placed stones that made up the walls leading to the alchemy lab. A sign on the wall read “No Photographs May Be Taken of the Alchemy Lab!” It struck me as odd at the time, that one could take pictures of any other room in the monstrously large Heidelberg Castle, just not this one.
Related piece