We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum... Read More »
Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) Body

kah22
Posts: 1,874 Forumite



I've been impressed with what I've read about EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique) or Tapping as it is often referred to.
I'm assuming that practitioners would normally be registered in a trade/professional body. However, as an alternative medical treatment the body will hardly have Government recognition; so I'm asking can anyone tell me what is the most wildly accepted/recognized body in the UK and Ireland catering for EFT practitioners?
As always many thanks for your assistance and feel free to add in any comments you may have about EFT.
Kevin
I'm assuming that practitioners would normally be registered in a trade/professional body. However, as an alternative medical treatment the body will hardly have Government recognition; so I'm asking can anyone tell me what is the most wildly accepted/recognized body in the UK and Ireland catering for EFT practitioners?
As always many thanks for your assistance and feel free to add in any comments you may have about EFT.
Kevin
0
Comments
-
never heard of it but i assume its mumbo jumbo0
-
I've been impressed with what I've read about EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique) or Tapping as it is often referred to.
I'm assuming that practitioners would normally be registered in a trade/professional body. However, as an alternative medical treatment the body will hardly have Government recognition; so I'm asking can anyone tell me what is the most wildly accepted/recognized body in the UK and Ireland catering for EFT practitioners?
As always many thanks for your assistance and feel free to add in any comments you may have about EFT.
Kevin
- no idea but if I had to guess I'd say the nearest would be the BWA
- they'd be the ones who are expert at quackery
- sorry Kevin .. .. but 'vulnerable' people read this board
In summary, the present study establishes that certain techniques used by EFT may be useful in the treatment of fear. However, this effectiveness appears unrelated to the unique features of EFT and instead derives from components shared with more traditional therapies already established as effective treatments for specific phobia. The clinical significance of EFT, including the duration of treatment effectiveness, still needs to be ascertained
Assuming this treatment is free, sign yourself up for 13 weeks free treatment and let the group know your findings, objective or otherwise after the 'free trial'.Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ0 -
Hi Kevin
The body for registered EFT practitioners is AAMET. Like other services you can always ask to see proof of someone's certificates and insurances. I don't want to say much more though, as it could go against the regulations of this forum. Although I will say that I paid for EFT and found it more effective for me than the 12 free CBT sessions I had through my Doctor the previous year (for depression). Also, I waited longer than 12-weeks to get my first CBT assessment session. We are all individuals though and it may not be for you. Maybe try and find out if there is a local tapping/EFT group in your area, as it is a cheaper way to try it. Also try typing 'borrowing benefits' into the place with lots of videos and try it that way. Even cheaper. However don't use big problems or issues with this latter method.
As Richie-from-the-Boro says, there are vulnerable people out there and people should NOT use EFT as an alternative to seeking medical support and advice from their Doctor. Always keep yourself safe, as not everyone is reputable.
Good luck.
Michelle0 -
Before you waste your moneyEmotional Freedom Techniques (EFT)Emotional Freedom Techniques is the creation of
Gary Craig, an energy healer who would fit well in any New Age borough. Gary is always smiling and happy because he has found the cause and cure for almost everything, and he really wants to help you. He loves you and cares for you. How do I know? He says so on his website:
I hope this doesn't sound too grandiose but you just walked into the most successful health innovation in the last 100 years. Based on impressive new discoveries regarding the body's subtle energies, Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) has been astonishingly successful in thousands of clinical cases. It applies to just about every emotional and physical issue you can name and often works where nothing else will.Subtle energies is the scientific term for chi (prana, ki, orgone), those mysterious energies that are in constant need of balancing, harmonizing, unblocking, channeling, funneling, and transferring in order to maintain perfect health. If you doubt Gary's word, you can read the testimonials from dozens of people who have been cured of everything under the sun by this fabulous therapy.You'll feel welcome at Gary's site. He's loving and caring, as are all his staff. And you matter. He treats the person, not the disease. Let's cut to the chase. Basically, Gary's discovered what traditional healers have known for millennia: if you can relax people, they become suggestible and you can relieve their stress, ease their minds, and allow their bodies to heal themselves. Gary's discovery came when he found out he could cure people by using acupuncture without the needles. He stimulates so-called energy meridian points on the body by tapping them with his fingertips. This kind of therapy is attractive to many people because it uses no drugs. Therefore, it is unlikely that there will be any side effects. It apparently did not occur to Gary that maybe he had tapped into the placebo effect or the power of suggestion. He may even be using cold reading techniques without being aware of it. Why accept simple psychological explanations when a complex mystical one is available?Of course, the gimmick wouldn't be complete if Gary didn't remind us that he knows about ancient wisdom (he is following a time-honored Eastern tradition that has been around for over 5,000 years, he says, though acupuncture has not been around nearly that long. It has a recorded history of about 2,000 years.*). Plus, Gary knows about modern science. He says Albert Einstein "told us back in the 1920's that everything (including our bodies) is composed of energy." (This is the golden rule for New Age quacks: when in doubt, quote Einstein and mention quantum physics.) Thirdly, Gary tells us that "these ideas have been largely ignored by Western Healing Practices." (He should have added "with good reason.") What Gary forgets to tell us is that the so-called subtle energy of acupuncture has nothing in common with the energy in E=mc2. When you unblock that kind of energy you get nuclear weapons or power, not miraculous health cures. The reason these ideas have been largely ignored by conventional Western doctors is that they are nonsensical. Both the meridians and the subtle energy that supposedly flows along them are mythical entities. If Gary's methods are helping anyone, it is because he is touching them, relaxing them, reducing their stress.Bob Park explains very simply and clearly how the placebo effect works in contexts like EFT:Once we are convinced of the healing power of a doctor or a treatment, something very remarkable happens: a sham treatment induces real biological improvement. This is the placebo effect. Healers have relied on the placebo effect for thousands of years, but until recently, it was usually referred to as the "mysterious" placebo effect. Scientists, however, are beginning to understand the complex interaction of the brain and the endocrine system that gives rise to the placebo effect.
People seek out a doctor when they experience discomfort or when they believe that something about their body is not right. That is, they suffer pain and fear. The response of the brain to pain and fear, however, is not to mobilize the body's healing mechanisms but to prepare it to meet some external threat. It's an evolutionary adaptation that assigns the highest priority to preventing additional injury. Stress hormones released into the bloodstream increase respiration, blood pressure, and heart rate. These changes may actually impede recovery. The brain is preparing the body for action; recovery must wait.
The first objective of a good physician, therefore, is to relieve stress. That usually involves assuring patients that there is an effective treatment for their condition and that the prospects for recovery are excellent—if they will just follow the doctor's instructions. Since we recover from most of the things that afflict us, the brain learns to associate recovery with visits to the doctor. Most of us start to feel better before we even leave the doctor's office. (Voodoo Science: The Road from Foolishness to Fraud. Oxford University Press, 2001, pp. 50-51.)So, the metaphysical mumbo jumbo that accompanies Gary Craig's tapping with his fingers is unnecessary baggage. He could tell you to take two of these little blue pills twice a day for two weeks and probably have just as many satisfied customers as the EFT folks. One difference, however, is that we have a way to test whether those little blue pills are a placebo or not. But we cannot do a randomized, double-blind controlled experiment on subtle energy being unblocked along meridians by either the insertion of needles or the tapping of fingers. This is good because nobody can do a scientific test to prove that EFT is bunk.In case you're wondering whether Gary Craig is another medical doctor gone astray, the answer is no. He tells us on his website that he is "a Stanford engineering graduate and an ordained minister and, although we don't pound the table for [Abraham's god] here, I do come at this procedure from a decidedly spiritual perspective." I feel safer already. His mentor was Dr. Roger Callahan, the inventor of Thought Field Therapy (TFT). The idea behind TFT is that negative emotions cause energy blockage and if the energy is unblocked then the fears will disappear. Tapping acupressure points is thought to be the means of unblocking the energy. Allegedly, it takes only five to six minutes to elicit a cure. Dr. Callahan claims an 85% success rate. He even does cures over the phone using "Voice Technology" on infants and animals. He claims that by analyzing the voice he can determine what points on the body the patient should tap for treatment. You can take Callahan's course in Voice Technology for a mere $100,000.[new] As you have no doubt surmised by now, Mr. Craig is a great judge of character. Craig admits that he spent the $100,000 for the course and was Callahan's first student. Craig says he found the course "useful," but he's abandoned it. He'll sell you his own course on DVD for a mere $150. One of the bonuses you'll get from Craig is nearly two hours of Stanford scientist, Dr. William A. Tiller, describing numerous experiments regarding intention, including "actual photographs taken with the lens cap still on the camera." (This is an old trick, made popular by Chicago bellhop Ted Serios in the 1960s, though he didn't use a camera with the lens cap on as Uri Geller did.) Says Craig of Tiller's cap-on photos: "No fooling. This can only be done, of course, if something is at work besides normal physics. Our intention is far more pervasive and powerful than we think. It just needs to be cultivated."* [/new]There's one born every minute and two standing in line to take their money.
http://www.skepdic.com/eft.html'The More I know about people the Better I like my Dog'
Samuel Clemens0 -
I appreciate the warnings and support but let me add this. There are other forms of medical assistance available out there other than conventional medicine e.g. chiropractic treatment, Homeopathy, acupuncture, and herbalism to name but a few.
Now I am not for one minute suggesting that these are any better than conventional medicine but what I am suggesting is that the use of complementary or alternative medicine can sometimes be as effective, and sometimes more effective than standard medicine. I would also strongly suggest that complementary treatments in addition to standard medicine can be very valuable.
The caveat has to be that you fully check out and be comfortable with the alternative treatment and then check out the practitioner offering the service to see if he/she is a reputable person. And that is one of the reasons I was looking to find a reputable trade/professional body who deals with EFT.
As an add on let me say that my first glance at EFT was on a tape by Paul McKenna the hypnotist and self-improvement author. I might also say that while writing this response I was reminded that there are two of these types of therapy floating about: EFT and THT (Thought Field Therapy) and it is possible that I’ve gotten my EFT and THT mixed up. But then again that is one of the main reasons for my original post, I’m only doing my homework.0 -
Hi Kevin
I don't think there is any problem with looking for new possibilities, or being cautious on that same journey. I even understand Oliver14's comment and in the past I would have thought the same. However it doesn't cost you anything just to look. Yet I feel it is important to re-state my comment about the first contact being your Doctor (if it is for you). Also speak to someone you trust and who knows you about things that have interested you. We are just 'randoms' after all.Free CBT through a GP may also be of benefit. We are all individuals after all.
I hope you find what you are looking for, whatever form it takes. But remember to keep yourself and your bank balance safe.
Take care.
Michelle0 -
I looked at it on you tube and found it very interesting, as have always been interested in holistic healing
:DI am going to give it a go:);):D
"You can't stop the waves, but you can learn to surf"
(Kabat-Zinn 2004):D:D:D0 -
I looked at it on you tube and found it very interesting, as have always been interested in holistic healing
:DI am going to give it a go:);):D
Assuming this treatment is free, sign yourself up for 13 weeks free treatment and let the group know your findings, objective or otherwise after the 'free trial'. If it requires you to spend money on it speak to a relative GP or friend about first.Disclaimer : Everything I write on this forum is my opinion. I try to be an even-handed poster and accept that you at times may not agree with these opinions or how I choose to express them, this is not my problem. The Disabled : If years cannot be added to their lives, at least life can be added to their years - Alf Morris - ℜ0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 350.3K Banking & Borrowing
- 252.8K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 453.2K Spending & Discounts
- 243.2K Work, Benefits & Business
- 597.7K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 176.6K Life & Family
- 256.3K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.6K Read-Only Boards