Recently,
unable to drift off one night, my mind darting with thoughts, I decided to try
something different. After a few slow breaths, I began rhythmically tapping the
top of my head, then above my eyebrows, and below my eyes – all the while
repeating aloud: “Even though it takes me a while to fall asleep when my mind
is active, I love and accept myself and will let myself rest.”
I was
trying a therapeutic practice called Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT), also
known as ‘tapping’ – because it literally involves tapping various parts of
your head and body with your fingers. Within minutes of repeating this pattern,
a few taps at a time, my body and mind began to calm.
EFT has
been around since the late-1970s, developed by American psychologist Dr Roger
Callahan who originally observed how including acupressure principles
while treating a patient with a phobia had profound results – seemingly
diminishing their feelings of fear far more rapidly than other therapies might.
In the early days though, empirical evidence lacking, the technique didn’t
catch on as widely as other psychological therapies.
What
exactly is EFT?
“It’s
sometimes referred to as ‘psychological acupressure’,” says London-based
transformational coach and tapping practitioner Alice Carder. “What you’re
doing physically is stimulating acupressure points on the body, and
that is sending a calming signal to the brain to let your body know it’s safe
and it can come out of fight or flight mode.”
These
‘points’ have been central in Traditional Chinese Medicine for thousands of
years, and stem from the idea that physical and emotional health are
intrinsically linked, and the body contains a series of meridians – or energy
channels. These can develop blockages or imbalances, which are linked with
things being off kilter with our physical or emotional health too.
Stimulating acupressure points enables us to address these blockages
and imbalances, thus helping restore our health.
The same
principles apply with acupuncture (where fine needles are carefully inserted
into specific points within the body) and acupressure massage. With
EFT, your own fingers are used to tap on acupressure points – mainly
around the head, face, chest area, under the arms and along the hands.
In more
modern times, as with many therapies with traditional Eastern roots, the
technique has merged somewhat with more Western theories, where some
practitioners may be more focused on how stimulating certain nerves can trigger
changes in brain chemistry, for example.
“There are
different strands to it, depending on whether you follow Western or Eastern
medicine,” says Carder. “There are studies that say EFT actually lowers [the
stress hormone] cortisol, so there are physiological things going on. And from
an Eastern medicine point of view, it’s balancing the energy in the body.”
There are
big psychological elements too. The tapping process is often accompanied by
calmly repeating a phrase relating to the problem or feeling being targeted.
This usually follows a similar set of words along the lines of: “Even though I
feel/am [followed with whatever is relevant], I deeply and completely accept
myself.”
This can be
tweaked as suits – some people may prefer more pragmatic wording – but it ties
in with the widely-acknowledged schools of thought that language, and
acceptance, can both play significant roles in therapy and healing.
Does EFT
work and when is it used?
Like all
therapies, nothing is one-size-fits-all, and what works for one, may not work
for another. But there’s a growing body of evidence backing up the
effectiveness of EFT across a range of purposes – from managing anxiety, anger
and stress, to insomnia and even coping with cravings and phobias – largely
centred around its calming effects, as well as how it helps reduce distressing
or problematic thoughts or feelings. This can be particularly beneficial for
people with conditions like post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Numerous
studies have emerged in recent years, including an analysis of its
effectiveness in treating PTSD published in US journal Explore in 2016, and
various studies backing its benefits for anxiety, depression and emotional
disturbance in young people, many of which are listed on the National Institute
for Healthcare Excellence (NICE) website.
Researchers
at the UK’s Staffordshire University have also published studies hailing the
therapeutic benefits, helping encourage its inclusion within mainstream mental
health services. There’s also a 2018 Tedx Talk called ‘Is Therapy Facing a
Revolution?’ by Australian researcher Dr Peta Stapleton, which explains its
clinical effectiveness.
One of the
very interesting things about EFT is how quickly it can work too. “Research has
shown that you need less sessions of this than you would of say CBT [cognitive
behavioural therapy] to get the same effect,” says Carder. “It seems to work
quite quickly.”
From
trauma therapy to simple self-help
If you’re
curious about trying it, Carder recommends starting out with a qualified
practitioner who can guide you on the techniques. And for many people, EFT
could be part of a mental health treatment plan.
However,
tapping is also something people can potentially utilise by themselves, much
like deep breathing exercises – just something you can add to your self-help
toolkit, which costs nothing, can be done anywhere, and doesn’t require any
equipment. There are apps designed to guide people through EFT practice too.
Carder
notes there’s also a lot of interesting evidence around its helpfulness in
addressing long-standing trauma and thought patterns. Some EFT practitioners,
such as Carder, take the therapy further with a process called ‘Matrix
Reimprinting’, which enables you to go back to the origin of a traumatic memory
or experience and effectively transform the emotions around it.
Carder
notes that a lot of what we do, feel and how we react to things is controlled
by our subconscious mind. These patterns may originate from childhood
experiences, or events at any stage of life, which become the foundation of our
emotional responses and behaviour patterns later on. “A lot of the time, we’re
unaware of what those things are or where they come from. Or sometimes we are
aware, but we haven’t really taken the time to review and deal with it. From a
psychological point of view, that’s what we’re doing with this work – we’re
making the subconscious conscious and then looking at it and reviewing it,”
says Carder.
She cites
American developmental biologist Dr Bruce Lipton – a key figure in the Matrix
Reimprinting field – who describes the process as a bit like changing the tapes
than run in our subconscious minds. “What EFT does, is stop the tape. And what
matrix reimprinting does is take that tape out and replace it with another one
– the one you want to be in there.”