Dear Larry,
"I am using your BSFF with great success. I love the wholeness of it and its
simplicity. I use the metaphor of a log jam when I set up the process and
suggest that each round is removing a log from the jam. The next log may be
nameable or not. Often it is and it occurs as we finish one round or even as the
tapping is going on. I find that resistance/reversal is just a log in the jam
and we tap on that. (One that showed up last night was a low SUDS half-way
through and the statement 'I just don't want to think about it.') I work with
trauma survivors, DID, couples and Christians. I find them very receptive to a
technique that heals troubled spirits. A follow up on the woman who discovered
she had the belief that she had to have a nervous breakdown in order to care for
herself. She took 7 30-gallon bags of trash out of her mobile home, she began on
the laundry and put sheets on the bed for the first time in m21/2 years! She is
thrilled. That was after two sessions. Carolyn Myss says that forgiveness is the
way to stop the energy drain and BSFF really does that. I love the spiritual
wholeness of your technique. I am so impressed that you discovered it."
----------Susan Hykes, psychotherapist, Colorado
Susan Hykes, psychotherapist, Colorado