Home
Thought Field Therapy
Newsletter - The Healer on Tap Volume 4 Issue 1

Welcome to ‘The Healer on Tap’. Our quarterly newsletter.

Send us your information below if you would like to automatically receive your free copy each quarter.

The way we do the things we do!


Sounds like a song title doesn’t it? But seriously have you ever wondered why we do the things we do?


Our collection of life experiences contributes to the making of us. We are who we are and we do the things we do based on the residual effects of the things, circumstances and memories of our past.


Close your eyes for a minute and think of a memory.
What is the first one that pops into your head? Is it a strong memory? Is it a good memory or is it a bad one?
Now consider your frame of mind – right now: Are things going really well for you or, perhaps, not so well. How are you processing what’s going on for you - right now: With a optimistic attitude or with a negative bent?


Think back again to the memory you just brought to mind and consider whether what you do or how you do what you do could be driven by underlying unresolved life issues.
Where things seem to be consistently not going well, there may be not just one but many unresolved life issues that have stacked up one on top of the other - on top of the next like a precariously balanced pile of pancakes. You’re coping quite well until bang – the pancake stack topples and you just can’t function as well as you would like let alone see yourself going anywhere else but further down.


Many mental health practitioners appear to approach the provision of care to their clients from a standpoint of applying a diagnosis which then points them in the direction of various treatment approaches relating to the diagnosis. A cynical view here could be that this can amount to a pigeon holing of clients and a subsequent railroading of treatment. 


A person centred approach rather than a diagnosis driven treatment plan can mean that a more open view of the whole person in the context of their life history can be considered. This way any relevant and important contributory issues can be considered rather than there being the risk that they can get overlooked or even ignored.

Mental health practitioners who find themselves overly oriented towards diagnosis can lose sight of the individuality of the person; the idiosyncratic collection of experiences and circumstances that bring the person to the symptoms with which they present.


An example of this may be the DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual) diagnosis of PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder). In order to be diagnosed with PTSD one needs to exhibit a certain combination of 17 symptoms. This can be seen as a legal issue more than a mental health issue as to whether one is PTSD or not.

In preference, let us talk about traumatic stress which includes those who may tick the right boxes for PTSD but it also includes many others who might not tick the right boxes but are still distressed and have the quality of their lives adversely affected.


Some things can be very distressing and traumatic for some people that may not affect others in that same way. This is sometimes referred to as sub-syndromal traumatic stress and it is a very useful way thinking about these disturbances.


In fact unresolved traumatic stress, amongst other things, can be important in tipping vulnerabilities into symptoms. A vulnerability to addictions may manifest as, for example, problematic drinking. A vulnerability to anxiety may underlie the life interrupting experiences of panic attacks. Numerous academic studies support the notion that traumatic events are really quite common.

There is universal acceptance in the mental health world, for example, that sexual abuse (in a defined way) is part of the experience of something between 25 and 30% of women before the age of 18. And that is just sexual abuse. What if we look beyond that to, say, physical abuse and emotional abuse? Further, we could consider not only these categories of abuse of commission but also abuse by omission such as neglect, abandonment and emotional unresponsiveness by primary caregivers.


A diagnosis driven focus usually leads to primary attention being directed at “symptoms”. When the individual is not adequately considered, some very important and relevant contributory factors/issues can get ignored.

As a result of this, relative inefficiencies in regard to treatment can arise. Issues from a person’s psychosocial history, not only including abuse of commission and omission referred to above, but also experiences of loss and disruption, when they remain unresolved, can frequently be fundamental and foundational to presenting problems.
The person centred approach doesn’t ignore symptoms but looks beyond them.


Efficiencies in treatment can be achieved by viewing symptoms as resultant from vulnerabilities that individuals may have to various disorders. What can tip the vulnerabilities into the symptoms can be the existence of life issues and experiences that may remain unresolved.

By adopting a bottom up approach of identifying and effectively treating any unresolved life issues, greater efficiency can then be achieved when it comes to actually addressing the symptoms.


One of the major obstacles to the adoption of this kind of approach is that of the relative inefficiencies of contemporary and conventional approaches to the resolution of traumatic stress which can include high expense, painfulness and high drop out rates.   

         
In psychology today there are emerging therapeutic modalities that can be used to calm the emotional distress associated with underlying life issues in a gentle, non invasive and efficient way. Modalities such as thought field therapy (TFT) and eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing  (EMDR) can be very effective in removing the negative charge from memories of life events usually very quickly.


So in considering seeking treatment for an emotional disturbance, ask yourself “why do I do the things I do?” and just check whether there are any underlying unresolved life issues that may be contributing and bring them up with the mental health practitioner with whom you may consult.

Give us a call on +61 (0) 8 9389 6839 or email siggy@tftau.com for a comprehensive reply to your particular situation.

TFT Tip for a great nights sleep:

Before you go to bed tonight, try this out for a sensational nights sleep:

First take two fingers and tap the side of your hand (the outside, about half way between the end of your little finger and the beginning of your wrist), six to eight times

Then tap the edge of your eyebrow (close to the bridge of your nose) six to eight times

Now tap under your eye, on your cheekbone (about level with your pupil if you were looking straight ahead) six to eight times

Now tap under your arm (level with bra strap on a woman or nipple on a man) six to eight times

Now tap the indent just below and to the right or left of your cenre collarbone knotch six to eight times

Now again tap under your eye, on your cheekbone (about level with your pupil if you were looking straight ahead) six to eight times

Then again tap the indent just below and to the right or left of your cenre collarbone knotch six to eight times.

Finally for rapid relaxation and a great sense of calm, take two fingers and tap on the gamut spot (back of hand between the knuckles of the ring finger and little finfer) while you take six to eight seconds to raise your eyes from the floor to the ceiling.

This sequence will work as well for children as it does for adults. If it is a baby or someone unable to tap themselves that can't sleep, gently cradle the baby (or place your hand on the persons hand and do the tapping sequence on yourself.

Advanced training in TFT in Australia in 2010.

Clinical Psychologist, Christopher Semmens will present these interactive three day training seminars.

Contact us for information on Thought Field Therapy Diagnostics Level training in Melbourne, Queensland, Sydney and Perth during 2010.

Learn how to diagnose specific treatment sequences
Learn about toxic sensitivities
Learn about Heart Rate Variability
3 day Interactive training with Christopher Semmens


See www.tftau.com/courses-training.htm  for 2010 training courses in the TFT technique for health professionals and lay people.

atft logo

 

In Perth,
Gold Coast
and
Melbourne

in 2010...

 

QLD:
GOLD Coast
June 22 & 23
2010
(Tuesday and Wednesday)

WA:
PERTH
24 & 25 July 2010 (Saturday and Sunday)

VICTORIA:
MELBOURNE
23 & 24 September 2010 (Thursday and Friday)


Presented by
clinical psychologist
Christopher Semmens

workshop description
and registration

 

TFT Diagnostics Training:
GOLD Coast QLD
June 25, 26 & 27

Sydney NSW
October 1, 2 & 3

Perth WA
November 12, 13, 14

download
registration form


Tel: 08 9389 6839
Email: siggy@tftau.com




Your emails to Chris

I was planning on coming to see you again but, quite frankly, I am powering at the moment and really cannot believe how well and happy I am feeling.  I joined a local weight watchers group after I saw you last and have now lost nearly 5 kilos.  I have also cut my hair a bit shorter so between the two am feeling and looking heaps better – it is so good to have a few decent clothes to wear again and tho I cannot fit into all my old clothes, can get into enough to feel good about myself…………

Am still smoking but am not too worried about that at the moment – I have promised myself to tackle that one again when I get to my goal weight – if I have problems with that I will come to see you for help (probably will).

My legal issues have gone from bad to worse, but it really is not bothering me too much and whenever I feel stressed about it I do my tapping and magically, it all goes away……………..I am not even finding the need to tap very often lately as I have regained the skills to cope with life again.

Chris, thank you for all your help and being there when I needed support.  Though I feel if I had friends and family around I probably would not have needed to come to you in the first place, I am very grateful that I found you and TFT.

Finally, I must admit that I wanted Hypnotherapy and was not trusting of TFT initially.  Though it worked in your office, I was not so confident in it at home and tho it did calm me, my situation meant I soon became distressed again.  I do not even remember when I became aware of the improvements in my life, but I know for sure that the TFT did work well for me when I used it regularly.

Please feel free to use this email in any way you may desire to support TFT.  I am totally convinced it works and am eager to learn more, but right now am just too busy getting on with my life.

With thanks and kind regards from one very satisfied client. (name and adress withheld for privacy reasons)

 


Consultations
By appointment with clinical psychologist Christopher Semmens at consulting rooms in Perth, Western Australia...
more information

Products

Now on the shelf!!

FEARfix multimedia package for the self-help application of these effective techniques for a range of emotional and behavioural disorders... The next best thing to private consultations with Chris Semmens. Ideal for those in remote and or rural areas

details

TFT Tip:

Before you start a tapping sequence, think about the problem and give it a rating between 1-10 (SUD = subjective units of distress). Rate the emotional distress associated with the problem on a scale of one to ten with ten being the worst and one being the least

This will activate the emotion available then to be treated with TFT

 

 

 

 

 

 



 


 

 
Get the FREE
FearFix Anxiety Report
Email
First Name
 
 
webdesign by Uplift Design