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Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT)
is a psychotherapeutic tool the theory behind EFT is that negative
emotions are caused by disturbances in the body's energy field and
that tapping on the meridians while thinking of a negative emotion
alters the body's energy field, restoring it to "balance."
Background
EFT was created by Gary Craig in the mid 1990s, and is meant to
be a simplification and improvement of Roger Callahan's
Thought Field Therapy techniques. Craig trained with Callahan in
the early 1990s. In 1993, Craig was the first person Callahan
trained in his most advanced procedure, a proprietary procedure
known as Voice Technology. Craig found through his experience that
the sequence of tapping points did not matter and that special
proprietary procedures were therefore unnecessary, so by the mid
1990s he had simplified Callahan's procedures
Theory
EFT may help in relieving many psychological and physical
conditions, including depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress
disorder, general stress, addictions and phobias. More extreme
claims are made for curing multiple sclerosis and that "You can also
use it for everything from the common cold to cancer.'" The
basic EFT technique involves holding a disturbing memory or emotion
in mental focus and simultaneously using the fingers to tap on a
series of 12 specific points on the body that correspond to
meridians used in Chinese medicine. The theory behind EFT is that
negative emotions are caused by disturbances in the body's energy
field and that tapping on the meridians while thinking of a negative
emotion alters the body's energy field, restoring it to "balance."
The basic principle of EFT is: The underlying cause of all
negative emotions is an imbalance in the body's energy system.
The theory states that negative emotions are built in the
following stages: A negative experience occurs; negative emotions
are felt in response to this negative experience, leading to
inappropriate programming inside the body; and then the body's
energy system gets disrupted due to these negative emotions. The
contention of EFT is that in order to remove the negative responses,
tackling the negative experience is not enough, because doing so
cannot correct the energy imbalance. Rather, the energy imbalance
must be restored along with curing the negative emotions.
The main difference between EFT and TFT lies not in principles,
but in application. In TFT, a specific sequence of tapping points
(known as an algorithm) is used for a particular problem.
This sequence is determined using a procedure borrowed from applied
kinesiology, called muscle testing.
In EFT, the order and sequence of tapping points is deemed to be
unimportant, and therefore there are no individual algorithms for
different problems. Instead, a comprehensive algorithm is used for
all problems, and no diagnosis or muscle testing is required.
Effectiveness
EFT has been the subject of three peer-reviewed publications as
of 2007. In the only MEDLINE-indexed study of EFT, published in the
Journal of Clinical Psychology in 2003 and funded by the
Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology, 35 patients with a
phobia of small animals received a single treatment with EFT. The
authors concluded that:
The findings are largely consistent with the hypothesis that
EFT can reduce phobias of small animals in a single treatment
session. However, due to methodological limitations in the
present study, firm conclusions about the efficacy of EFT must
wait for confirmation from future studies.[3]
The second study, published in The Scientific Review of Mental
Health Practice, was conducted by Waite and Holder on people who
reported specific fears or phobias.[4]
This study compared four groups: A group that received regular EFT;
a second group that tapped on sham points that were not EFT points;
a third group that tapped on an inanimate object (a doll) and a
fourth group that received no treatment. The first three groups did
statistically better than the fourth group, but there were no
significant differences between the three tapping groups. That is,
the groups that tapped on sham points and on the doll did just as
well as the EFT group, but all three groups did better than the
no-treatment group. Since the group that used the doll was not
tapping on meridian points yet still benefited equally, the authors
suggested this as a falsification of the theory that EFT works
because of the body's energy meridian system.
In the Rowe study, the
SA-45 was used to test the effects of EFT psychological
functioning that might result from participation in an experiential
Emotional Freedom Techniques™ (EFT) workshop and to examine the
long-term effects. The SA45 was given before the workshop, after the
workshop, 1 month after the workshop, and 6 months after the
workshop. There was a statistically significant decrease in all
measures of psychological distress as measured by the SA-45 from
pre-workshop to post-workshop which held up at the 6 month
follow-up.
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If you would like to know more on Cognitive
Behavioural Therapy and how it can help you please feel free to call
me (David) on 01923 23 99 77 (office hours) As I run a busy practice
my answer service may well take your call. please leave your details
and I will call you back.
Alternatively please feel free to email me at
EFT@watfordhypno.co.uk
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CONTACT US ON:
01923 613 414
(answer phone when in session)
For the very best treatment and training in Hypnotherapy,
NLP and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in Watford, Northampton,
Milton Keynes and from Spring 2007 Cambridge University

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