Tapping Q & A - Getting the most out of tapping and EFT

How Long Does Tapping Take to Work? An Honest Answer (Pod #709)

16 min · 18 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio How Long Does Tapping Take to Work? An Honest Answer (Pod #709)

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How long does tapping take to work? It's one of the most common questions I get, and the answer is the most unsatisfying one in coaching: it depends. In this post I'll show you why that's actually the most useful answer I can give you, and how to use it. TL;DR: How Long Tapping Takes to Work * How long tapping takes to work depends on the issue you're tapping on and how you define success. A 90-second round can shift a present-moment frustration, while a 35-year-old limiting belief usually takes repeated sessions over time. * Happiness equals outcome divided by expectation. The same result feels like a miracle or a failure depending on what you expected walking in. * You can measure tapping success three ways: frequency (how often the issue shows up), duration (how long it sticks with you), and intensity (how strong it feels). Improvement in any one of the three is a real win. * The goal of tapping is to make it better, not to make it perfect. Better is often enough to change the rest of your day. Why "How Long Does Tapping Take to Work?" Is the Wrong Question How long tapping takes to work is the wrong question because it assumes there's one answer that applies to every issue and every person. There isn't. The better question is: what does one step better look like right now? Years ago I had a one-on-one session with a friend whose husband had been telling her for months that she needed to tap with me. I don't think she really wanted to be there. I think she wanted him to stop bringing it up. There was natural resistance at the start of the session, but within fifteen minutes we had surfaced a deep, specific issue and tapped through a round on it. At the end of that round, she was disappointed. Not because nothing had happened. She was disappointed because the issue wasn't completely healed yet. In fifteen minutes she had moved from resistant to disappointed because the work wasn't fast enough. That's the trap built into the question. We're asking how long until the issue is gone, when the more useful question is how much better do I feel right now than I felt three minutes ago. Happiness Equals Outcome Divided by Expectation Happiness equals outcome divided by expectation. The way you respond to any result is determined less by the result itself and more by what you expected walking in. Imagine I tell you at the end of the day that I got six things done. Was that a good day or a bad day? It depends. If I sat down this morning wanting to get eight things done, I'm disappointed. If I sat down wanting to get four things done, I'm doing backflips on my way out of the office. Same six things. Completely different experience. The same dynamic shows up every time we use a transformational tool. If you expect a single round of tapping to permanently resolve a long-standing issue, almost any real result will feel like a failure. If you expect tapping to make the next ten minutes a little easier, the same result feels like a win. This is why unrealistic expectations can quietly sabotage your tapping progress [https://tappingqanda.com/2026/02/pod-689-when-your-expectations-sabotage-your-tapping-progress/] even when the work itself is going well. Key Insight: "Happiness is outcome divided by expectation. The way I respond to something is based on how I expect it to work out." Why No Two Tapping Issues Heal at the Same Rate No two tapping issues heal at the same rate, even when they look identical on the surface. The tool is the same. The timeline almost never is. There's a real difference between me being frustrated in this moment and not wanting to be frustrated, and me dealing with a limiting belief I've carried for the last 35 years. The toolset is exactly the same. The rate at which those two things shift will be completely different. The same is true even when the symptom is identical. I can have pain in my right shoulder because I slept on it wrong, and I can have pain in my right shoulder because I was in a car accident and tore a muscle. Same pain, same location, same intensity on a 0 to 10 scale. The cause is different, so the time it takes to resolve is different. Every time you sit down to tap, recognize this: the goal is to make it better. Not to make it perfect, not to make it gone, but to make it better. That's a frame I keep coming back to with clients, and it's the same spirit behind tapping to embrace progress, not perfection [https://tappingqanda.com/2026/01/tapping-to-embrace-progress-not-perfection/]. The Costa Rica Story: When Better Looks Like Failure Almost 20 years ago, brand new to tapping, I was in a coffee shop in Costa Rica when four other Americans walked in and sat down nearby. I struck up a conversation and one of them mentioned he had just tweaked his shoulder zip-lining through the jungle. I was at the stage of my tapping life where I was running everyone I met over with my enthusiasm. So I said, "Let me show you this amazing thing." I had him tap through Gary Craig's basic EFT recipe. Before we started I asked him, 0 to 10, how big is the pain? He said six. We tapped. I asked again. He said four. In my head, my immediate reaction was: it failed. He and his three friends, on the other hand, said, "Whoa, that's amazing." Because it was. Ninety seconds of tapping had taken a third of his pain away on his subjective measure. He had more movement in his shoulder. The rest of his day was going to be better. My expectation was healed. He experienced better. That's the gap this whole post is trying to close. Key Insight: "When I'm tapping, I live in the ERs. Not the emergency room. Better, easier, gentler, calmer." The Three Measures of Tapping Success: Frequency, Duration, Intensity There are three ways to measure whether tapping is working: frequency, duration, and intensity. Any one of them moving in the right direction counts as real progress. I learned this framework from my friend Mary Ayers, and it has changed how I evaluate every session. Frequency is how often the issue shows up. Years ago a client said to me, "Gene, it's great. I'm only having seizures six days a week." For me, six days a week of seizures sounds like a horror show. For her it meant one day a week she was emotionally and physically clear enough to get everything done. The frequency went down by one day, and that one day was her life expanding. Frequency can be the hardest of the three to measure, because if a behavior is still happening at all, you tend to notice the times it happens more than the times it doesn't. If you're trying to reduce how often you doom-scroll to distract yourself, going from ten times a week to five times a week still feels like ten because you're still doing it. When you're tracking frequency, write it down. Duration is how long the discomfort sticks with you after it shows up. Three times in my work I've had legal action threatened against me by clients. One of those times the client was blaming me for their frozen pipes, so you can judge the seriousness for yourself. The first time it happened, it threw me off and kept me emotional for about 36 hours. The second time, it impacted me for the rest of the day. The third time, it took me about 45 minutes to settle. Same kind of event, same intensity in the moment, same response required (call my lawyer, take care of myself). What changed was how long the emotional charge stayed in my body. That's duration, and it's a real measure of progress. Intensity is how strong the response is when it happens. I can be angry about something my neighbor does, or I can be frustrated about the same thing. In both cases I'm having an emotional response, but I'm far less likely to make a harsh, rash, unuseful choice when I'm frustrated than when I'm angry. Same trigger, smaller response. That's intensity going down. If you've ever found the standard 0 to 10 rating frustrating or unhelpful, this three-part frame is a useful alternative. I've written more about that in what to do when the SUD scale doesn't work for you [https://tappingqanda.com/2016/09/suds-scale-doesnt-work/]. When Tapping Changes You Without Changing the Situation Tapping often makes things better even when the underlying situation hasn't changed at all. That's not a failure of tapping. That's tapping doing exactly what it's designed to do. Picture this. You're facing real financial pressure and you're overwhelmed by it. You sit down and tap on the overwhelm. Ten minutes later you feel calmer. The financial pressure is still there. Nothing about the bank account has changed. But you can now think clearly about the problem, see options you couldn't see before, and make deliberate choices instead of panicked ones. That's a win, and it's the kind of win we usually undervalue. The situation didn't change, but your relationship to the situation did, and from that calmer place you have actual capacity to act. This is exactly the dynamic at work in tapping for overwhelm when you have too much on your plate [https://tappingqanda.com/2025/01/pod-646-the-missing-key-to-tapping-for-overwhelm/]. You're not making the to-do list shorter. You're making yourself bigger than the list. The same logic applies to in-the-moment frustration. When something goes wrong at my desk and I get frustrated, I don't need to turn the frustration completely off in order to keep working. I need to turn it down enough that I can focus. There might be residual frustration sitting in the background. That's fine. If 90 seconds of tapping produces an hour of effective work, I'll make that trade every day of the week. The "One Step Better" Approach to Every Tapping Session The most useful question to ask before any tapping session is: what does one step better look like right now? Then use the tool to see if you can get there. If you do, ask the same question again. That iteration is the whole game. It's not how long until this is resolved. It's what does the next small improvement feel like in my body, and can I get there from where I am? Then, from that new place, what does the next one feel like? This is why the work of tapping looks less like a single grand transformation and more like a series of small, real improvements stacked over time. Each one is its own win. Together they become the change you were looking for. The principle that the key to tapping success is more than the right words [https://tappingqanda.com/2026/02/pod-690-the-key-to-tapping-success-is-more-than-the-right-words/] lives right here: success is less about scripting the perfect setup statement and more about being honest about what better looks like and going after it one increment at a time. Key Insight: "Ask yourself what one step better feels like. Use the tool to see if you can achieve that. Then ask again. That's the work." How to Set Realistic Expectations Before You Tap Setting realistic expectations before you tap is the single most useful thing you can do to make tapping feel like it's working. Before you start a round, answer three quick questions in your head. First, what is one step better for this issue? Not healed, not gone, but better. Name it specifically. "I want to be able to read the email without my chest tightening." "I want to feel calm enough to call my mom back." Second, which of the three measures matters most here? Are you trying to reduce how often this shows up, how long it sticks with you, or how intense it gets? Different issues respond to different measures, and naming the one you care about gives you something concrete to check at the end. Third, what would you accept as a real win? If a 33% reduction in intensity would let you finish what you need to finish today, that's a real win. Decide that before you tap, not after. Otherwise the part of you that wants everything healed in one round will quietly call any real progress a failure. Frequently Asked Questions How long does tapping take to work on anxiety? Tapping can reduce acute anxiety within 90 seconds to a few minutes in many cases, especially when the anxiety is tied to a specific, present-moment trigger. Long-standing anxiety patterns tied to deeper beliefs or past experiences usually take repeated sessions over weeks or months to shift in a lasting way. Why isn't my tapping working? Tapping often is working, but you're measuring it against the wrong yardstick. If you expect a single round to permanently resolve a long-standing issue, almost any real result will feel like failure. Try measuring frequency, duration, and intensity separately, and check whether any one of them is improving even slightly. How many rounds of tapping should I do on one issue? Do as many rounds as it takes to get one step better, then reassess. Some issues shift in a single round. Others need many rounds over multiple sessions. The right number is whatever moves the issue one increment in the direction you want, then you decide whether to keep going. What does it mean if I feel worse after tapping? Feeling worse after tapping usually means you've made contact with something the body had been keeping out of awareness, not that the tapping went wrong. The discomfort is information. Continue tapping on what's now showing up, or pause and come back to it when you have more space. Is tapping supposed to remove the problem completely? Tapping is designed to make things better, not necessarily to remove the issue completely. Sometimes "better" means the external situation changes. More often it means your emotional response to the situation changes enough that you can think, act, and make choices from a calmer place. How do I know if tapping is working long-term? Look at frequency, duration, and intensity over weeks and months, not minutes. Is the issue showing up less often, sticking with you for less time, or hitting with less force when it does show up? Any one of those moving in the right direction is real, durable progress. How long does tapping take to work on chronic pain? Tapping can reduce chronic pain intensity within a single session, sometimes substantially, but lasting change in chronic pain usually involves ongoing tapping practice combined with addressing the emotional and stress components that maintain the pain. Expect incremental progress measured over weeks, not a single permanent fix.

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episode How to tap when you don't know where to start (Pod #716) artwork

How to tap when you don't know where to start (Pod #716)

One of the great things about tapping is that it can be used for a wide range of physical, emotional, and even spiritual issues. But that breadth brings with it the struggle of knowing where to start when there are so many things that you could tap on. Recently, I received this email from one of my readers: I've been tapping on and off for years. Recently, when tapping, I am quickly lost in a quagmire of thoughts and emotions and can't see a direction to go in. I have been wallowing in something vague and exhausting for the past month, and am wondering if there is anything I can do. This struggle is common because we aren't just feeling one thing at any given moment. We are thinking and feeling countless things about what is happening in our lives right now, struggles from our past, and worries about the future. Without a clear entry point, our tapping feels unfocused. We worry that we're just wasting our time, which in turn makes us less likely to tap. This week in the podcast, I share what I do when I am feeling so many things I don't know where to start. It is a simple approach that every tapper should know.

19 de jun de 202617 min
episode I know tapping works..so why don't I do it?! (Pod #715) artwork

I know tapping works..so why don't I do it?! (Pod #715)

There is nothing more frustrating than knowing exactly what to do and still not doing it. When this happens, your critical voice kicks in, shaming you for being lazy and undeserving of transformation because of your lack of action. The hardest part of this type of failure is knowing what is possible but failing to take action. And it isn't down to external forces preventing you…it is all happening inside your head. This week in the podcast, I explore the five most common reasons you don't tap, even when you want to. As well as providing a breakdown of what is standing in your way, I show you a handy process to overcome each of these resistances. Support the podcast! [https://www.patreon.com/join/tappingqanda] Http://tappingqanda.com/support [Http://tappingqanda.com/support] Subscribe in: Apple Podcast [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tapping-eft-q-a-gene-monterastelli/id305764418?ls=1&mt=2] | iPhone [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tapping-eft-q-a-gene-monterastelli/id305764418?ls=1&mt=2] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/7I62kills1P1wMP14YHrMK?si=KhbIUmCVQYWjXW1ICLqzQw] | Pandora [https://www.pandora.com/podcast/tapping-q-and-a-podcast/PC:9303?part=ug&corr=16949303] | Amazon Music [https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/8f4df1b3-2ce7-4a98-b58d-73346178c854/Tapping-Q-A-Getting-the-most-out-of-tapping-and-EFT] | iHeartRadio [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-tapping-q-a-podcast-w-gene-27563720/] | YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFHMpFNO8Mt509f1CfxNL8_gs4V4FqmsP]

11 de jun de 202616 min
episode Tapping to release the identities other people gave you (Pod #714) artwork

Tapping to release the identities other people gave you (Pod #714)

Our subconscious mind confuses the difference between how we were treated and who we are. When someone left us off an invitation, we did not just file away the fact that we were not invited. We wrote a story about what it meant. They don't like me. I'm not interesting enough. I'm stupid. Over time the circumstance fades, but the story stays. It stops being a conclusion and starts feeling like a plain truth about who we are. That is what makes these identities so hard to tap on. Trying to tap on "I am stupid" when it feels like a fact is a little like trying to tap to change the color of your eyes. In this week's episode I walk through the process I use to pull these stories apart so they become tappable again. This is a slightly more comprehensive process than what I normally teach. It is something to sit with, and to come back to over several days, because these identities sit at our core and tend to take more than one pass to unseat. It is important work because changing the story changes how you carry yourself, not just how you feel in the moment. Support the podcast! [https://www.patreon.com/join/tappingqanda] Http://tappingqanda.com/support

4 de jun de 202615 min
episode When Your Problem Feels Too Big to Tap On: A 5-Step Approach (Pod #713) artwork

When Your Problem Feels Too Big to Tap On: A 5-Step Approach (Pod #713)

A client came to me recently and said something I hear more often than you might expect: "Gene, I've been trying to tap on my own, but this problem just feels too big. I don't know where to start." My answer surprised her. I told her she was right. The problem actually was too big to tap on. But that wasn't a verdict on whether tapping could help. It was a diagnosis of the approach she was using. Tapping for big problems is not about finding the courage to tackle everything at once. It is about knowing which small, specific piece to bring into a single round of tapping. TL;DR / Key Takeaways * When a problem feels too big to tap on, the issue is not tapping's effectiveness. The issue is trying to address too much in a single session. * EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) works best on one specific, concrete target at a time. Large life challenges require a series of focused rounds, not one heroic attempt. * Tapping on the emotions about the problem (frustration, worry, disappointment) before targeting the problem itself clears the emotional distortion that makes the issue feel overwhelming. * Identifying the smallest possible next action and tapping on resistance to that one step creates forward momentum faster than any other approach. * Giving yourself permission to value incremental progress is itself a legitimate tapping target, and often the one that unlocks everything else. Why Big Problems Feel Impossible to Tap On (And the Real Fix) Tapping for big problems feels impossible when you try to hold the entire problem in your mind at once. EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) is a technique that involves tapping on specific acupressure points on the face and body while focusing on a precise emotional or physical target. The key word is precise. The more diffuse your focus, the less effective the round. Key insight: "The question is never whether tapping is appropriate for what's in front of you. The question is: how do you bring tapping to a part of the issue in a useful way?" Think about the kinds of problems that feel too big: a serious health diagnosis, a major career transition, building a romantic relationship from a standing start. Each of these is not one problem. Each is a cluster of dozens of smaller problems stacked on top of each other. Trying to tap on "my health situation" is like trying to eat an entire meal in one swallow. The five steps below give you a reliable way to find the right-sized bite for any given session, no matter how large the underlying issue is. Why Tapping for Big Problems Starts With Your Emotions First Before you tap on any aspect of the problem itself, tap on how you feel about the fact that you are facing this problem. This is one of the most overlooked moves in EFT practice, and it changes everything about what comes next. In my Tapping Mastery Blueprint [https://tappingqanda.com/2023/09/pod-577-the-emotion-about-the-issue-healing-fundamentals-part-13/], every single tapping session starts with two questions. First: what is the goal of this round of tapping? Second: how do I feel about the fact that this is the issue at hand? That second question is where most people skip straight past something important. Key insight: "The emotions about the issue are layers of stained glass I'm trying to look through. They distort the issue so I can't see it clearly. Clear those layers first, and the problem comes into focus." When you are dealing with something large, you are almost certainly carrying feelings of worry, frustration, disappointment, and grief about the situation itself. Those emotions are not the same as the problem. They are your emotional response to having the problem. Tapping on them first changes your resource state. It shifts you out of reactivity and into a clearer, calmer place from which you can make better decisions about what to tap on next. Write down every emotion you feel about the fact that you are facing this particular challenge. Then take those emotions one at a time and tap on them before doing anything else. For a deeper look at this concept, the episode on "the emotion about the issue" [https://tappingqanda.com/2023/09/pod-577-the-emotion-about-the-issue-healing-fundamentals-part-13/] from the Healing Fundamentals series is worth your time. Step 2: Name a Baby Step and Tap on Your Resistance to It Once you have tapped on the emotions about the issue, shift your attention away from the full problem entirely. Instead, ask yourself: what is the single smallest next action I could take? That step might be genuinely tiny. Write down all the open questions I have. Research this one thing. Send a message to this specific person. It does not need to be significant. It just needs to be real and concrete. Key insight: "I don't know how to handle the big thing, but I almost always know the first step. After I take the first step, the second step becomes obvious. And after the second, the third." Once you have named the baby step, tune in to whatever emotion comes up around taking it. Resistance, dread, uncertainty, fear of getting it wrong. That emotional resistance is your tapping target, not the step itself. When you clear the resistance, taking the step becomes easy. And taking the step creates momentum, which is exactly what large problems require. This approach addresses one of the most common reasons people stay stuck: they cannot see the whole path forward, so they do not move at all. But you do not need to see the whole path. You only need to see the next step. Clearing the emotional resistance to action [https://tappingqanda.com/2026/02/pod-687-why-you-resist-taking-healthy-action-and-how-to-tap-to-clear-your-resistance/] is one of tapping's most reliable strengths. Step 3: Pick One Small Detail Instead of the Whole Problem If the baby-step approach does not give you a clear entry point, try zooming in on a single detail of the larger issue instead. Not the situation. Not the whole health challenge or the whole relationship pattern. One detail. A few years ago I was dealing with Epstein-Barr virus, which is similar to mononucleosis in its effects. I was completely wiped out. I would feel a flicker of energy and sit up in bed, and my body would immediately shut it down. I had to lie back down. There were dozens of things wrong, physically and emotionally, and I could have tried to tap on all of them at once. Instead, I chose one detail: that specific feeling when the energy appeared and immediately vanished. Just that. The emotion that came up around that one physical experience became my tapping target. Key insight: "By choosing one microscopic detail, I gave myself an entry point. I wasn't trying to solve everything. I was just working on this one thing." Trying to address the entire problem at once produces a familiar spiral: "I'm falling behind, this is lasting forever, nothing I'm doing is working." That is too big a target. One detail breaks the spiral and gives your nervous system something it can actually process. If you find yourself drowning in too many issues to tap on [https://tappingqanda.com/2025/02/pod-650-drowning-in-issues-afraid-of-big-emotions-try-this-simple-approach/], this single-detail approach is often the fastest way back to solid ground. Step 4: Tap on the Overwhelm of Having a Problem This Big This step might feel redundant at first glance. You have already tapped on the emotions about the issue in Step 1. What is left? The answer is: the overwhelm of the problem's size, which is a separate layer entirely. Tapping for overwhelm means giving voice specifically to the experience of facing something that feels unmanageable. Not what the problem is, but what it is like to be the person carrying it. Typical targets for this step sound like: "This problem is unfair and I am exhausted by it." "I do not even know where to start and that makes me feel paralyzed." "I cannot do this alone." "I am overwhelmed just thinking about all the steps between here and done." This is what I sometimes call tapping on the meta-emotion. It is the feeling about the feeling, or more precisely, the feeling about the situation's complexity. In my experience, the missing key to tapping for overwhelm [https://tappingqanda.com/2025/01/pod-646-the-missing-key-to-tapping-for-overwhelm/] is almost always this layer: people address the content of what overwhelms them but skip past the raw experience of being overwhelmed itself. Spend a few minutes here. It does not take long, and the relief it produces makes the remaining steps significantly easier. Step 5: Give Yourself Permission to Value Small Daily Progress The final step is one that beginners often dismiss as too soft. It is not. Giving yourself permission to recognize the value of incremental work is a legitimate tapping target, and for many people it is the one that unlocks consistent action. The tapping here is not affirmation work. You are not trying to convince yourself that everything is fine or that you are doing great. You are tapping to release the part of you that insists the only acceptable outcome is solving the whole thing today. A useful setup statement for this step sounds something like: "Even though I've only made a tiny bit of progress today, I give myself permission to recognize that a baby step forward is still a step forward." Notice what comes up when you tap with that frame. You may find frustration: "I give myself permission to value baby steps, AND I give myself permission to be annoyed that it's always a process." Both are valid. Acknowledge the resistance alongside the permission. That is where the real tapping work happens. The myth of the one big tapping breakthrough [https://tappingqanda.com/2025/09/pod-674-the-myth-of-the-one-big-tapping-breakthrough/] is worth reading alongside this step. Real transformation is nearly always a series of small shifts, not a single dramatic moment. How to Use All Five Steps in a Single Tapping Session When you are facing a problem that feels too big to tap on, run through the five steps in order. You do not need to spend equal time on each one. Some will feel complete in a single round. Others may need more attention. Here is the sequence as a quick reference: 1. Tap on the emotions about the issue. How do you feel about the fact that you are facing this problem? Worry, frustration, grief, shame, disappointment. Take them one at a time. 2. Name a baby step and tap on your resistance to it. What is the smallest possible next action? What emotion comes up when you think about taking it? 3. Pick one small detail and tap on the emotion around it. Not the whole problem. One aspect, one symptom, one interaction, one specific moment. 4. Tap on the overwhelm of the problem's size. Give voice to how it feels to be carrying something this big. This is separate from the problem's content. 5. Tap for permission to value incremental progress. Release the demand that today's work has to solve everything. A baby step counts. Before you start any session on a large issue, it helps to ask the two questions from my Tapping Mastery Blueprint: what is the goal of this round of tapping, and how do I feel about the fact that this is the issue? Both questions from the one question you must ask before every tapping session [https://tappingqanda.com/2026/01/pod-684-the-one-question-you-must-ask-before-you-start-a-round-of-tapping/] apply directly here. The old cliche is true: how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. And if you take one bite at a time with your tapping practice, you will be surprised how quickly you start to build real momentum on even the largest challenges in your life. If you want structured, daily support for building that momentum, I'd encourage you to explore 365 Tapping Lessons [https://365TappingLessons.com], where I walk you through a full year of focused tapping sessions designed to create exactly this kind of consistent, cumulative progress. Frequently Asked Questions What does it mean when a problem feels too big to tap on? It usually means you are trying to address the entire issue in a single tapping session. EFT works best on one specific, concrete emotional target at a time. A problem that "feels too big" is a signal to narrow your focus, not to stop tapping. Where should I start when I don't know where to start tapping? Start with the emotions you feel about having the problem, not the problem itself. Write down every emotion that comes up when you think about your situation (frustration, worry, grief, shame) and tap on those one at a time before targeting the problem's content. How many rounds of tapping does it take to work through a big problem? There is no fixed number. Large issues typically require many focused sessions over time rather than one long session. The goal of each session is not to solve the problem but to reduce the emotional intensity around one specific aspect of it. Can EFT really help with serious health challenges or major life changes? Yes, though the approach matters enormously. EFT does not resolve health conditions by tapping on "my illness." It works by targeting specific emotions, fears, symptoms, or resistance points one at a time. Over multiple sessions, this produces genuine cumulative relief. What is "the emotion about the issue" in EFT? It is the emotional response you have to having the problem, as distinct from the problem itself. If you have a health issue, the emotions about the issue include fear of the long-term consequences, grief over what you have lost, and frustration at the pace of healing. Tapping on these first clears the distortion that makes the underlying problem harder to see and address. What if I tap on the baby step but feel nothing? Try making the step even smaller, or tune in to the emotion more precisely. "I need to make a doctor's appointment" might produce nothing. "I feel a knot in my stomach when I think about calling the doctor" is a specific, tappable sensation. The more concrete the target, the more tapping tends to produce a clear shift. Is it normal to feel more overwhelmed after starting to tap on a big problem? Yes, and it is often a sign the tapping is working. Bringing a suppressed emotion to the surface before clearing it can briefly intensify the feeling. If it persists, use Step 4 directly: tap specifically on the overwhelm of having a problem this big, rather than on the problem's content.

1 de jun de 202612 min
episode Should I be working with a tapping practitioner? (Pod #712) artwork

Should I be working with a tapping practitioner? (Pod #712)

I love that tapping can be done independently of other people. You can use self-guided tapping, a tapping resource, like tap-along videos [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFHMpFNO8Mt4RQBHeFeMkzGDkUN8OzO7C], or tapping scripts. Since tapping is something you can do on your own, it is logical to ask "If I can tap on my own, why would I work with a practitioner?" This is a more complicated question that it might seem at first glance. This is a question about skill, approach, and safety. In this week's podcast, I share how I think about healing and how outside resources and assistance fit into my healing journey. Support the podcast! [https://www.patreon.com/join/tappingqanda] Http://tappingqanda.com/support [Http://tappingqanda.com/support] Subscribe in: Apple Podcast [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tapping-eft-q-a-gene-monterastelli/id305764418?ls=1&mt=2] | iPhone [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tapping-eft-q-a-gene-monterastelli/id305764418?ls=1&mt=2] | Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/7I62kills1P1wMP14YHrMK?si=KhbIUmCVQYWjXW1ICLqzQw] | Pandora [https://www.pandora.com/podcast/tapping-q-and-a-podcast/PC:9303?part=ug&corr=16949303] | Amazon Music [https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/8f4df1b3-2ce7-4a98-b58d-73346178c854/Tapping-Q-A-Getting-the-most-out-of-tapping-and-EFT] | iHeartRadio [https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-tapping-q-a-podcast-w-gene-27563720/] | YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFHMpFNO8Mt509f1CfxNL8_gs4V4FqmsP] Watch a video version on YouTube

28 de may de 202615 min