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Getting What We Want (Part 1 of 4) – Know what we don’t want?

July 17, 2008 by Gene Monterastelli

I know that I can use EFT to help me get what I want in my life, but I don’t know how. Do you have any suggestions?

[Note: This is article number one in a four-part series on how to get what you do want. In this article we will look at the first of four steps in using EFT to make changes to our lives.]

I would bet at least half of my client sessions are about helping clients make changes in their lives. They are seeking better health, a different work situation, financial abundance, or more vibrant loving relationships.

Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) is a wonderful tool for making changes in our lives, from the small to the big. The amazing thing I have found in working with clients on these issues is most clients know they want a change, but they are not sure what that change is.

They say: “I want a better job…or…I want a partner I can spend the rest of my life with…or…I want to be healthier…or…I want more.”

So, I ask them, “What does that look like? What type of job do you want? What type of partner and relationship do you want? What do you want your health to be like?”

Almost always they respond: “I don't know?”

Being able to name what you want and having a vision for the future is a skill, one that can be learned and cultivated. It just happens to be a skill that most of us were never taught.

Before we can start changing our lives to be the way we want them to be (and to use EFT to clear the blocks that are preventing us from having this life) we need to know what we want.

I have found that even if clients don’t know what they do want, they can articulate in great detail what they don’t want. Since coming up with a list of what we don’t want is easy, we start there. Doing this lays the groundwork for naming what we do want.

Doing this very simple, but for this first step to be effective we must do it in a very detailed way. To explain this, let’s look at an example. Let’s look at wanting to make a job change.

If the question is: “What don't you like about your present job?” it might be true to say “It sucks!” but it is not going to very helpful in defining what you do want.

Coming up with a list of things you don't like about your current job might look like this:

  • It sucks the life out of me
  • I hate going to work
  • My boss does not appreciate me
  • It is very boring
  • I am not paid enough
  • The hours are too long
  • There is unexpected over time
  • I don't get to see my family enough
  • It is not creative

This might seem like a very simple first step, but if we do it well it will set up the next step very easily. Get out a notebook or a number of sheets of paper, one for each area of your life you would like to change. Across the top of the piece of paper put a label for the area of your life you would like to see change (ex: health, relationships, family, job, car I drive, home, education, spiritual growth).

Draw a line down the middle of the page creating two columns. In the left hand column write in great detail everything about this area of your life you don’t like. Between each detail skip a line or two.

While doing this step it is better to be too detailed than not detailed enough.

Some people find this step very easy; complaining comes as second nature. For others this might be hard. We’ve been told not to be complainers and to suck it up and deal with things. I would agree it isn’t good to obsess about what we don’t like about our lives, but if we don’t know what we don’t want it’s going to be hard to know what we do want.

If you struggle with this step, give yourself permission to look at this darker side.

Tapping for this might look like:  I am not a complainer…and I don’t want to be seen as a complainer…I know that there are many blessings in my life…I am thankful for these blessings…but I know that I can have more and I deserve more…in order to move down this path to get closer to what I want I need to name what I don’t want…for this short period of time I give myself permission to name the things I don’t like about my life…I know I won’t harp on these things…but this is just a step in getting closer to the life I want…I am thankful I have the chance to consider these changes. [How to use these tapping phrases]

In step two of this process we are going to look at how we can transform these details in to the characteristic of what we would like to see come into our lives.

Getting what we want in to our lives:

  • Knowing what we don't want (this step)
  • Knowing what we want
  • Getting clear of emotional blocks
  • Taking inspired action

Filed Under: Q&A Tagged With: Abundance, How To, Phrases

When A Client Is Too Much

July 9, 2008 by Gene Monterastelli

I’m wondering how to approach a new client. She is interested in EFT, but says that she is only willing to give her issue two sessions, maybe three, tops, since she has been in therapy for years. She says she doesn’t want to start any long-term therapy. I saw her this last Friday for the first time, and we only talked (and when I say “we” talked I mean she only talked). You talk about multiple issues? This is the queen. I have a session with her next Friday. I don’t even know where to start. If this were your client, where would you start?


photo by John Brian Silverio

Sometimes, with clients and in our own lives, we are presented with a very neat and clean issue to work with, having very defined aspects and very easy entry points. Other times issues are so intertwined, you don’t know where to begin. This is because as humans we are complicated complete systems.

In a general sense here are a few things I keep in mind when working with clients where everything is coming up at once.

1) Manage expectations.
Before we start I talk about the reasons people often have their issues and the type of work that brings healing. Sometimes this healing happens quickly; other times the healing takes a little longer. I explain at the beginning there is no way we can tell the outcome we are about to have. I share many past examples to show how slowly or quickly progress can happen.

2) Keep detailed records of the progress we have made.
When there are many issues it is very easy to think more about new pains that rise up than about the healing that has preceded it. For example, my head hurts and my back is hurting. We do work on my head, which stops hurting, and all I can think of is my back. Now I’ll say how bad my back is. I‘ve forgotten my head ever hurt.

When a client gets frustrated that they are not making progress because all they can feel is the present pain, I remind them of the progress we’ve made. I bring out my notes and say, “When we started you were dealing with this, this and this. In two sessions this is the progress we’ve made.”

One client I work with regularly has to be reminded of her progress every three or four sessions. Sometimes I need to remind myself of my own progress, too.

3) Knock an issue all the way out before you move on to the next.
If you start with issue A, finish it off before moving on to issue B. If you don’t, neither you nor your client will feel satisfied because nothing has been completed.

There is an exception to this rule. If you are working on something small and something much larger and more emotional comes up, you want to resolve the bigger issue first.

4) You are not meant to work with everyone who walks through your door.
It is a very different thing for doctors who by law are required to provide medical care. They are expected to treat everyone who comes through their door. Most people who are doing EFT are paraprofessionals. Even though we are helping people to access the healing powers they already have, we fall much more into the coaching than the medical category.

This gives you the right to decide a client is not for you. If you expect the client to be more trouble than he or she is worth, encourage the client to find help somewhere else. This is not say that you don’t want to help, but you won’t be a good fit for everyone who walks through your door. You will serve your clients better when you work with the clients who are the best fit for you.

I have had clients come to me just looking for one more person to complain to about how horrible their life is, who don’t really want to progress. I have decided I want to work with clients who are willing to overcome issues and move forward. It’s okay for you to choose who you’ll work with.

Filed Under: Q&A Tagged With: Focus, How To, Practitioner

Using Poetry with EFT (in this case for forgiveness)

June 10, 2008 by Gene Monterastelli

In a recent newsletter you talked about using a forgiveness poem as a tapping tool. I’m not sure what I am supposed to do. Can you give me more instruction?


photo by Pankaj

One of the reasons I love Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) so much is because it’s so flexible. It can be adjusted only to deal with many different issues and many different personalities.

I know I write this all the time, but one fifth of the questions I receive require this sort of answer: The words are not magic. There are no right or wrong words to use while tapping.

For EFT to work we need to focus in on the issue we are currently working on. Saying phrases out loud can be a very helpful tool in getting us to focus, but it isn’t the only way. What matters is that we are tuned into the issue at hand and are tapping at the same time.

The “Movie Technique” is a perfect example of this principle. One application of this technique is to let the movie of the past event play in our minds and tap along with it. As the movie plays, emotions about the memory come up. By tapping we are cleaning these emotions up.

Tapping along to a poem stirs up emotions in a similar way. I want to be very up front. This is not for everyone, but it is very effective for some.

Sometimes when we read a poem, emotions are stirred; that is the sign of good poetry. If these emotions reduce health and well-being, then it presents an opportunity for us to do some clean-up work.

I was e-mailed the following poem by one of my readers, Etta, who said that tapping along with this poem had helped her.

You might read this poem and feel nothing, which is okay. If that is the case, then this isn’t a useful tool for you. But if you read this poem and can use it to tune into your day and some of the choices you made that you regret, then it’s an excellent tool for you.

The great thing about EFT is it costs so little to try. Take 30 seconds and read this poem out loud, not like a performance, but as words you are speaking to your deeper self. Pay attention to what comes up. While you read, tap along. With each phrase just move to another tapping point.

I would love to hear your experience while trying this.

Little Prayer For HRA's (Huna Research Associates)
by Max Freedom Long

If I have hurt someone today
With thought or word or deed,
Or failed another in his need
I now repent

If I can take those steps again,
Tomorrow will I make amends
And heal with love those hurts.
I do this pledge

And if some hurt has struck me deep
And no amends are made,
I ask the Light to balance all.
I count the debt as paid.

Parental Sprits, whom I love,
And who I know love me,
Reach through the door I open wide.
Make clear my path to thee.

Filed Under: Q&A Tagged With: Daily, Focus, Forgiveness, How To, Peace

The Body Has Information About Our Issues

May 26, 2008 by Gene Monterastelli

I remember reading a suggestion about “asking” a troubled body part what it’s trying to tell you. What exactly does that mean? And how does the answer get conveyed? Would it be a thought or words popping into your head? If so, would it be immediately or would it require additional tapping?


photo by Justin Litton

Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) is most effective when we can be very specific about the issue that we are working on, but sometimes this is very difficult. There might be so many emotions going at once that we can’t break them into workable parts. Other times there is just a general feeling for which we can’t identify a source. When this happens I like to turn to my body.

One of the reasons I love the feedback that the body gives us is because it’s hard to deny physical sensations, whereas I can choose to deny my emotions. I am capable of convincing myself I’m not mad, angry, or sad. When I do this I am really just pushing an emotion down and choosing not to heal. I can’t explain away knots in my stomach in the same way I can explain away anger. This makes my body a gateway into healing that may be unavailable through other means.

To do this we are going to tune in to the information the body can give us. The following process can be used for both physical and emotional issues. I am going to explain the process in terms of an emotional issue, but it works the same way for a physical issue.

REMEMBER: It is very important to be easy about this. There is no right or wrong answer, and there is no right or wrong way to do this. Trust the process and trust yourself. The body wants to give us information to heal, but if we worry about getting “the right answer” we’ll be too worried to hear what the body is conveying. If you feel any anxiousness to doing this (or doing this well), just tap.

(I know my body has information for me…I’m worried I will do this wrong…I’m worried I will miss important information…I know there are no wrong answers…Even if I don’t make any progress by doing this it’s only taking a few minutes…The more I do this, the better I am going to get at it…Since I don’t know what I’m doing, I choose not to have specific expectations…I give myself permission to be easy about this.)

These are the steps I would recommend.

1) Take a deep breath.
Close your eyes and center yourself. It’s always easiest to understand what’s going on inside of you when you take a moment to relax and pull back from the outside world.

2) Tune into the part of the body you want to get information from.
If there is a very noticeable physical sensation when you think about the issue you’re working on, tune into this place. (For example, a tight chest, shortness of breath, knots in your stomach, tightness in your shoulders, or pain in your hip.)

You might not have a very strong physical sensation clearly associated with an issue. You might be uneasy about something that is about to happen, but you don’t know what that is or where in your body you feel it. The feeling of uneasiness in the body is as abstract as the uneasy feeling.

If you have no idea what part of the body is associated with the feeling simply ask your body where the feeling lives. This might sound a little odd, but it’s as easy as that. Think of the feeling you are working with and just ask your body, “Where does this feeling of uneasiness live?” Trust your body and trust the process. Something will come to mind. At this moment the information might make no sense. You might get the sense the uneasiness lives in your right ankle. Just go with that. Once you know which part of the body you’re working on, just notice this part of the body. Imagine what it looks like on the inside.

Again, be easy about this. There is no “right” answer. As you tune into this part of the body you might see the literal inside of the body, or you might see a metaphoric picture (such as a large stone heavy on your chest).

Also, remember not everyone “sees” things when they focus on something. So don’t be worried if you only see black, but feel that part of the body.

3) Just ask that part of the body what it wants to tell you.
Once you have tuned into the part of the body associated with the emotion ask that part what it needs. Again, this is as simple as paying attention to the image and area of the body and asking the question. In addition to asking what the body is trying to tell you, you can also ask what the body needs.

Pay attention to what pops into your head. It might be completely off the wall. When I ask clients for information and they start by saying, “I am sure this has nothing to do with this, but…” it is the best possible news. If something comes to mind that seems completely unrelated then we can be very certain that it has something to do with what is going on.

4) You might get a clear answer or you might not.
Again, be easy. The information can come in lots of forms. You might get a thought or phrase. You might see a picture. You remember something from your past. You might just get a metaphoric image (like a giant rock).

4a) If the information is usable, then do EFT.
Many times when you do this process you will get very specific information.

  • A memory that can use EFT: As you tune into this body part a memory from your past might come to mind. If any negative emotions are associated with this memory (or memories), do EFT on them. Many times the memories that come up are unexpected and even parts of our past we have completely forgotten about.
  • Information about the body part: I have done this process and have heard very clearly that a specific part of my body has a particular feeling. I’ve heard that body parts are tired, under appreciated, need healing energy, or need forgiveness. Do my various body parts have specific emotions? I don’t know, but I do know that my subconscious mind is giving me very specific information about the parts of my body that need to be healed. Can my knees feel tired? Don’t worry about it. Tuning into the feeling of tiredness associated with my knees and tapping has brought healing to me.

4b) If you get information you don’t understand, just tap.
Sometime when we do this process we get information that makes no sense at all. For example we could be working on the feeling of being uneasy — and we don’t know why we are uneasy. As we go through this process we get the sense this feeling is somehow associated with our lower back. When we tune into the lower back we see tight bands pulling tightly. This is a great image, but we have no idea what it’s related to.

When this happens we tap about not knowing what the body is telling us.

“My body is giving me information, but I don’t understand what it is…I know my body is trying to communicate with me, but I am missing it. …I thank my body for giving me this information, but I need some help…”

This will often bring up information. If it doesn’t bring up any information, ask for the information. Ask your body, “What are you trying to tell me? I need some help!”

5) Repeat.
Just like the instruction on shampoo (”wash, rinse, repeat”) it is best to “Tune in. Tap. Repeat.” Keep tuning in until you feel sure you’ve done enough cleaning. I know this process may seem very odd. It’s difficult to put into words what it feels like to ask a body part for information and get it. The best thing to do is just dive in and give it a try; it only costs you a few minutes. Doing this sort of tuning in takes practice. You will never get information the same way twice. Trust your instinct. The more you do this, the more you are going to trust yourself and the more/better information you are going to get.

Filed Under: Q&A Tagged With: Awareness, Body, Focus, How To, Pain, Peace

Feedback – What We Can Learn From Each Round of Tapping

May 1, 2008 by Gene Monterastelli

I read all these stories about how people get amazing results with EFT right away. It’s just not happening for me. What am I doing wrong?


photo by dave_mcmt

Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) is easy to use, it can be used on many types of issues, and it can be done anytime anywhere. But even with that being said, the main reason people first become interested in learning EFT is because they hear stories of how EFT changes lives. We all want to heal and improve our lives and are intrigued when we hear others are solving similar problems to the ones we have. The stories most often told are the “one-minute miracles”. We have all heard the stories of people who have fought with some physical or emotional issue for years only to have it go away in moments. These are more than just urban legends. I have seen it in my own practice.

These occurrences are frequent, but they are not the norm. (I believe someday one-minute miracles will be the norm as we continue to learn how the body/mind/spirit system works.) Just because you don’t experience a one-minute miracle doesn’t mean EFT isn’t working, and it doesn’t mean you’re doing EFT wrong.

Personally I think every round of EFT is successful regardless of the amount of progress that is made (even if no progress is made at all). I believe this because with every round of EFT we do we receive some feedback we can learn from. As an added bonus, a round of tapping is so short we receive feedback very quickly, helping us to adjust our approach for our next round of tapping and allowing us to move to healing quickly. If we heed the feedback we receive with each round of tapping we can quickly resolve the current issue. In my experience there are four typical outcomes to a round of tapping that give us information. .

1) The pain/emotion reduce in intensity.
Obviously, this is the best case scenario, the ultimate goal we are trying to reach with tapping. If the intensity decreases we are on the right track and should keep moving in this direction.

2) The pain/emotion increases in intensity.
On the surface this would seem to be a bad outcome. “We are trying to get away from an issue and now there’s more of it? That can’t be a good thing?” But it really is. Increased intensity simply means that we have tuned into the issue more than before. For example, let’s suppose my right knee is injured. All day as I move around there is an ever-present dull ache. The moment I sit down to take a break the pain seems to swell and become very sharp. My knee didn’t start hurting more the moment I sat down. Instead, since my mind wasn’t fully focused on my daily tasks, my thoughts drifted to my knee and I became aware of how much pain I was really in. It is simply an issue of how much I’m focusing on the pain. When I tap on an issue and the intensity goes up, it means I’m on the right track.

3) The pain/emotion changes in location, texture, or type.
This type of feedback is very common. A pain that started in our shoulders is now in our hip. A feeling of anger becomes frustration. A sharp pain that felt like a stabbing pain now is a very warm dull ache. This might not appear to be progress, at first glance. If I start with a pain in my neck that has an intensity of 6 and after a round of tapping it’s a pain in my hip that has an intensity of 6, I still hurt. Any time we have a change in some characteristic of what we’re working on, it really is progress because the change signifies that we are moving down the right path. Change always means progress, with EFT.

Side note: When this happen it is important that we change what we’re tapping on. If the pain moves from the neck to the hip, the next round of tapping must address the pain in the hip. If the emotion changes from anger to frustration, the next round of tapping is must be directed at the frustration. The tapping we do should reflect the issue as it is in the moment we start the next round of tapping.

4) There is no change in intensity.
At first blush this doesn’t seem like desirable feedback, but in reality it is good news. If we do a round of tapping and make no progress at all then we have learned the current set up isn’t right, and we need to change something. At this point we start to look to the reasons that EFT most commonly doesn’t work. Did we clear psychological reversal (PR)? Are we hydrated enough? Are we being specific enough? In this case what seems to be failure is good news because it tells us we need to try something different.

It is all good news!
No matter what the outcome from a round of tapping, it is good news. With every round of tapping we are either healing or gaining information about what to do next.

With each round of tapping you do, remember to be easy with yourself. One round of tapping costs you less than one minute of your day, it’s easy to do, and no matter what the outcome is, you are one step closer to healing. If you don’t have a one-minute miracle, take the information you’ve learned from this round of tapping and go on.

Filed Under: Q&A Tagged With: Awareness, Focus, How To, Physical Response, Why

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Gene MonterastelliGene Monterastelli is a Brooklyn based tapping practitioner. In addition to working with individual clients and groups, he regularly writes and records about how to use tapping to move from self-sabotage to productive action.
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