EFT Tapping for Trauma
The news of the hoax neck bomb in Sydney caused me to reflect: what if Madeleine had known how to tap on her fingers, what if the police woman who sat with her knew how to tap, what if her parents waiting for hours knew how to tap, what if her friends waiting in the street knew how to tap…… they’d be much less likely to undergo post traumatic stress disorder – which often doesn’t show up immediately. Meridian tapping is so effective in clearing both past and currently occuring trauma that it’s worth learning for that alone. The Pulvers certainly never expected to have to face such a traumatic siuation so it’s great to be prepared with such a simple technique that we always have literally at our fingertips which can be used in any situation. If you already know how to do it, then share it with other people so they can have it on board too.
Extreme Self-Care
I attended the Wake-Up Sydney! conference “A Time for Renewal” (www.wakeupsydney.com.au) and one of the speakers, Gemma Summers, talked about the concept of extreme self-care, which she defined as the art of caring for ourselves in extreme times. And indeed we are facing a great deal of stress from many directions. Even technology, supposedly here to support us, causes stress in itself. I was fascinated to hear that getting enough sleep has been made a priority in the government’s preventative health care agenda because people are up using some form of communications device when they need to be asleep.
There are lots of different ways you can care for yourself better, including the usual healthy eating, drinking water, exercising, meditation and taking time out to relax and do what we enjoy. I’d also add regular sessions of EFT tapping into the mix because it helps to decrease levels of adrenalin in our system and creates a more relaxed body and clearer mind.
Extraordinary Resources
One of my little maxims is that life is unexpected. It proved so for me last week. One moment I had never heard of a man called Craig Hamilton, an organisation called Integral Enlightenment or a course called “Awakening to an Evolutionary Relationship to Life” and then 1o minutes later – the length of time it took me to skip through the course description – I was subscribed.
I didn’t know then just what this course entailed, that there would be 1200 people in 39 countries coming together and that so much opportunity would be provided to me. Well, I’m beginning to explore the opportunities and am so excited to have found the course and the community is providing - as if by accident – except I know it’s no accident.
When we are still and pay attention to an intention, then the universe works in truly mysterious ways and can deliver to our doorstep extraordinary resources that we didn’t even know existed.
To
Are you a wimp?
One of my clients has been facing the challenge of multiple myeloma, a cancer which causes many different symptoms but especially lesions in the bone which cause pain and fracture. She has been through the mill with chemotherapy and various procedures as well as suffering with pain from fractures of the vertebrae. Recently she was facing a bone marrow aspiration and told me of her fear of further pain and feeling like a wimp but having to be strong and that everyone saw her as strong.
I pointed out that to lable oneself a wimp in these circumstances was hardly a kind thing to do, that to be fearful in these circumstances was normal, that we didn’t always have to be strong and that she could ask for help with the pain. Sometime we need to honour our fears, give ourselves permission to fall in a heap and get other people’s support. We tapped away on this with the result that she was able to take action that truly supported herself and ultimately also supported other people.
She had loved ones hold her hand and asked the doctors for pain relief which they provided in three different ways. This turned out to be so successful that they then used the same protocol on subsequent people who needed the bone marrow aspiration.
So let’s all be kinder to ourselves and get the support we need.
Understanding the Internal Blocks to Business Success and How to Clear Them
Being in business for yourself, no matter what form it takes, Is akin to being on the biggest personal development course you could ever enrol in! Running a business, large or small, causes you to bump up against your beliefs about yourself and the world. It reflects your habitual patterns as well as your comfort zones around money and success. This article is for you if you feel that you are not in flow but are instead limiting yourself in some way, perhaps not doing what you feel like you’re capable of doing, and not achieving your potential or the potential of your business.
Do you:
6 Tips for Getting Organised
It’s much easier to take action towards fulfilling your dreams if you keep your life in some sort of order. Anne Quessy who got me organized way back, thank goodness, provides some tips for you.
1. Do one task at a time – AND complete it. Discipline yourself to stay focused because completing a task means you only have to do it once.
2. Only have one set of papers around you at a time to ensure that nothing else takes your energy away from what you have set yourself to do.
4. Break tasks into smaller tasks to get a sense of achievement along the way – always writing these tasks down - use a DAILY To Do Book to write down what you have done and what you will do. This means you know where you are going and can look over previous days and see just what you have achieved.
5. Don’t put up with anything that does not work – get it fixed or get a new one. It is a stress and a log jam on your ability to take action.
6. Make sure everything in your home and office has a home - so you know where everything is and don’t have to spend time finding it.
What’s important?
You’d think I’d have better things to do on a Sunday than read an article about baristas setting boundaries as to what coffee they will serve and jacking up about pandering to people’s request for certain coffees which would mean that the quality of the coffee served would be affected. Included in this are orders for sugar, skim milk, a large cup and extra hot. One woman who objected to this stand was quoted as saying “As someone who likes a sugar stirred into my coffee, I don’t want to have to take the lid off and put in the sugar as I’m running out the door”.
But I did keep reading because I was quite fascinated by what warrants a big article on page 3.
I’ve just returned from places where 43% of the people are unemployed because their factories have been bombed into extinction, where bullet holes and mortar damage scar their homes, and who still have no-go zones because of landmines. Travel offers new and different perspectives and while I enjoyed visiting many amazing places, my trip to the Balkans certainly gave me a fresh view on how privileged my life is and what good fortune I enjoy in so many ways. It makes me wonder just how precious we have become when we sulk at the thought of stirring sugar into a drink or get upset because we can’t get a double shot 3/4 latte hard? (Don’t ask me what that means).
I suggest instead it is time to get real and focus with gratitude on what we do have (which is so much) and it’s time to have some discernment about what to focus our attention on – or perhaps even have some discernment over what to get stressed about!
Tapping for Creativity
We can use EFT to assist us in whatever quality we want to enhance in ourselves. Creativity is an intensely valuable quality and as children, we are all creative. The problem is that our creativity gets squashed along the way – and often our self-esteem with it. Others may have made us feel shamed in the past, and now it doesn’t feel safe to put our ideas or work forward.
Even though my teacher said … (I deeply and completely accept myself)
Even though I was put down for being different …
Even though I was laughed at …
Even though my parents discouraged me from pursuing a creative/artistic career …
Even though I was told being creative didn’t bring in a secure income …
Even though I was told being creative was no way to make a living …
Even though I was criticised for my creative endeavours …
Even though I was shamed as a child …
Even though I was unfairly criticised …
Of course you need to tackle the fears of what using your creativity might bring.
Even though I’ll look foolish …
Even though it’s not safe to expose my work/ideas …
Even though I’m afraid of being vulnerable again …
Even though I might be humiliated or embarrassed …
Even though my creativity might be limited to one good thing …
Even though I’m scared of people’s expectations …
Even though my family or friends might be hurt/upset …
Even though it’s too dangerous to express myself …
Watch how you keep yourself stuck through episodes of criticism and self-doubt.
Even though I’m filled with self-doubt …
Even though I sabotage my creativity …
Even though I’m my own worst critic …
Even though I shut the door in the face of my creativity …
Even though I ignore/deny my creativity …
Even though I procrastinate in taking creative action …
Even though I procrastinate in expressing myself …
You can ask yourself questions to stimulate creativity – some good ones are:
How can I do this differently?
How can I do this an easier way?
What would make a big difference here?
What is a new perspective?
What do you need to “Unlearn”?
While I was searching my bookshelf for a book I wanted, the title of another book, “A Life of Unlearning“, seemed to jump out at me. It rang true for me – it seems that in order to live our life in the best possible way, one of the best possible things we can do is to unlearn some (maybe most!) of what we have already learned. It’s not always easy to do that because we are highly habitual – I remember John, my ballroom dancing teacher, bemoaning the fact that he found it much harder to correct people who already knew how to dance than to teach people to dance from scratch. Those bad habits had already become ingrained into the person’s physiology and he found it hard work to get them out of those habits. (OK, so yes, he was talking about me!)
So what, besides dance moves, do we need to unlearn? Well, I think there’s a whole raft of thinking and behaviours that would profit from some unlearning. One of the biggest challenges is to unlearn our view of the world. There is so much evidence that our world is energy based and yet so much of our society seems ignorant of this. I’ve been demonstrating to people in presentations how you can measure someone’s energy field with divining rods. There’s an obvious fascination with this and sometimes it is the person’s first introduction to themselves as an energetic being. Of course EFT is an energy based technique and because it works so well in helping people to feel better on all levels there is an obvious advantage in being open to the possibility that the world does not work in the way we thought it did.
As I write I’m thinking there is so much to unlearn. I think I’ve yet to come across someone who wouldn’t be better off by unlearning their critical view of themselves. We seem to pick up that inner critical voice early on and maintain it despite evidence that it’s not even valid. You might even be attached to this criticism because you think you need it in order to motivate you to do something. But if you think about being criticised by other people you’ll realise that being criticised makes you angry and upset. Criticism is constricting and contracting whereas praise and kindness is expansive. So the criticism needs to be unlearned and replaced by praise, kindess and compassion towards ourselves. I’m really a work in progress on this one I have to confess.
Another unlearning could be that of limited thinking. I was lucky that after I went to naturopathic college I worked with Petrea King for a while and learned to be open to possibility. Her experience with cancer took her close to dying but as those of you who have met Petrea or listened to her on the radio will know, she is very much alive (and in good humour!) many years down the track. I learned from her and many other people that seeming miracles can happen and that things don’t necessarily go on the ‘official’ predicted trajectory.
I think I’ll throw this open to you to continue – what else would it be beneficial for you to unlearn? I’d love to hear from you what you are unlearning so we can share it. Drop me a line and let me know.
The War We Engage In
Check out to see how you say you want peace in the world yet wage a continual war. Do you do battle with your family, the weather, the election results, the neighbours, the jackhammer noise, the delayed plane, the promotion you didn’t get, your bank balance, the drop in your investment, a loved one’s illness. The more I observe how I’m reacting the more evidence I find that I’m so often at war. It’s intriguing really because we know that there are no winners in a war and yet we keep objecting and preferring to be at war instead of at peace.
It’s wearisome too to keep battling things that are as they are. Jumping up and down about your bank balance and losing sleep at night worrying about it doesn’t actually change the dollar figure, not does it change the direction the share market is headed in, it just gets you down. Complaining about the cold, wet, windy weather doesn’t bring out the sun.
Yet, the idea is so prevalent that unless we oppose something we won’t be able to change it. If we accept the way something is, we won’t be motivated to take action, we’ll become passive dummies. The truth however is the opposite - a peaceful response can bring about profound change where that is possible. Where change isn’t possible, for instance when it’s raining every day of your holiday , isn’t it more useful to be peaceful rather than angry? (I hope I’m going to remember this if it rains on my holiday!)
OK, I know I’m biased but EFT has to be one of the best tools for enabling us to stop waging war on both ourselves and other people, events and situations. It’s so good because you can take any negative emotion, physical sensation or thought form and take the heat out of it. You can use it on past events that you’re still waging war on (and how good we are at recycling the past!) as well as on things that are happening right now. Make a list of people and things that have upset you in the past that you’re still holding on to and another list of what you’re not happy with at the moment. Spend some time tapping each day making your way through the lists. Yes, this could take weeks, even months but then, the war has been going on for many years.
Then the important thing is to stop the war as it happens. Your plane is delayed – sit in the airport lounge and tap on the annoyance and impatience. (These days with the increasing popularity of EFT you might find you’ve got company.) The sharemarket has dropped another two percent – tap on the anxiety as you watch the news. It’s raining on your beach day – tap on the frustration. It doesn’t matter how trivial, or how profound, you’ll be taking action on ending the war and creating peace. I realise how I make a much more positive impact on the world when I generate peace in myself instead of negativity. What impact do you want to make?







