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Joint

Knee

Arthritic Knee Pain Relief from EFT despite an official Medical Diagnosis

Important Note: This article was written prior to 2010 and is now outdated. Please use my newest advancement, Optimal EFT. It is more efficient, more powerful and clearly explained in my free e-book, The Unseen Therapist™.  Best wishes, Gary

Hi Everyone,

Much has been written about the "power of the Dr's white coat" to establish beliefs within patients about the impossibilities of relief. CJ Puotinen, recognized this phenomenon and successfully incorporated it within EFT for a lady's arthritic knee pain that "won't ever get better." Note the use of surrogate tapping from the audience. Please consult physicians on all medical issues.

Hugs, Gary


By CJ Puotinen, EFT-ADV

Dear Gary,

As you know, most people with chronic pain are willing to experiment with EFT without reservation – they’re sufficiently desperate to try anything, even things that are weirder than tapping. When their pain disappears after a round or two, they just relax and enjoy the relief.

But for some, a doctor’s pronouncement or the patient’s own belief about a condition can be a stumbling block.

I recently taught an “Introduction to EFT” demonstration to 60 people at an assisted living home in New Jersey. All were of a mature age and all had various aches and pains.

After the first two or three rounds of tapping to reduce their pain and improve their range of motion, all but seven or eight reported significant relief or improvement. This is in keeping with your estimate that EFT usually works for about 80 percent of those who try it. After another few rounds, even most of those who didn’t respond at first said they felt better.

But one woman looked troubled. When I asked her to describe her pain, she said, “It’s my left knee. I hurt it when I was a kid, and it’s always been a weak spot for me. It hurts so much that for the past few years, I haven’t been able to get up from a chair without pushing myself up first.” She demonstrated by pressing hard against the chair seat to lift herself up.

“The reason this won’t work for me,” she explained, “is that the pain in my knee is real. I mean, it has a real cause. My doctor showed me the x-rays. He showed me the calcification around my knee and said it’s osteoarthritis. It’s not an imaginary condition. It won’t ever get better. That’s why my knee still hurts.”

I said, “OK, let’s all tap together with this lady for her knee.” Soon everyone was tapping on their karate chop points and chanting with me, “Even though my knee hurts, I fully and completely accept myself. Even though it hurts because I injured  it when I was a kid, I completely accept and forgive myself, and I forgive my knee. Even though my knee will never get better because it’s a real injury  complicated by real osteoarthritis and calcification, I fully and completely love and accept my knee. Even though my doctor showed me the x-rays and said that my knee will never get better, I love and accept my knee, and I love and respect  my doctor. He’s the expert. I believe him. Even though this is a real condition, it isn’t imaginary, I fully and completely accept and love my knee and everything else in my body, I forgive my knee, the calcification, the osteoarthritis, the x-rays, my doctor, and anything that has contributed in any way to my knee’s condition. I choose to be pleasantly surprised at how easy it is to let all this go, to let the pain go, to let all the reasons for the pain go, to say goodbye to the pain, and to kiss the pain in my knee goodbye.  Goodbye pain!”

We all blew a goodbye kiss to the pain. Then, when I asked the woman how much her knee hurt, a look of surprise crossed her face. “Why, I don’t know,” she exclaimed. “I don’t know where it went.”

“Well, let’s see if you can find it,” I said, holding out my hand. “Can you reach your arms out straight ahead?” She did. “Now, keeping your arms in front of you, can you stand?”

She started to move, then looked frightened and sat back.

“Are you afraid of falling?” I asked.

She nodded.

“OK,” I said, “let’s all tap on that. Even though I’m afraid of falling, I fully and completely accept myself. Even though the thought of standing without any support from my hands makes me dizzy, I completely accept and love myself. Even though I can’t believe my knee has stopped hurting, and that confuses me, I love and accept myself and my knee. Even though standing up without holding on to something is dangerous, and I feel dizzy, and my doctor said my knee will never get better, I choose to be pleasantly surprised at how easy it is to set those beliefs aside and let them go. I choose to be pleasantly surprised at how easy and normal it feels to just stand up. In fact, I’m going to do that right now.”

After one quick round of tapping, that’s what she did. She held her hands straight in front of her and rose straight up out of her chair to a standing position.

Four other women said after the demonstration that they too had come into the room with serious knee pain that lingered through the first rounds of tapping but disappeared when we tapped about doctors and medical diagnoses.

I’ve worked with a number of people who are uncomfortable saying anything that contradicts their doctors’ pronouncements, but in each case, incorporating the medical diagnosis and its seriousness into the setup phrase has resulted in rapid improvement.

Thanks again for developing EFT!

CJ

More articles on Pain Management and Pain Relief

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