Home     Services     About     News and Events     Wellness     Store

A Kneaded Escape
Where Healing Begins
   
Our Clients
   
Contact Us
A Kneaded Escape
 

 

Once the decision had been made to move from the corporate world to the world of healing, we knew our name had to reflect not only relaxation, but the ability to expand one's personal healing tool kit.  The expansion to the knowledge of EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) was the perfect step, and the following copy of an article, written about A Kneaded Escape wonderfully embodies how we feel about taking your healing into your own hands!  Following the article is a link to a radio interview that was done with Faye on EFT!  There were two guests on the show that evening, so you will need to advance the audio a bit to get to Faye's interview.

Helping others take healing into their own hands
Rooseveltian teaches finger-tapping to relieve anxiety and ailments
BY JENNIFER KOHLHEPP Staff Writer

 

 

ROOSEVELT - People may have the power within their own fingertips to alleviate emotional stress and physical pain.

In a time when more people are discovering that their emotional health is inseparable from their physical health and that both require balance between the body and the mind, Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) is emerging as another means of self help.

EFT requires using the fingertips to tap on specific points on the body while voicing positive affirmations to help clear out emotional blockages from and to restore balance to the body's systems. The process is easy to learn, and when memorized it can be done anywhere.

Once Roosevelt's Faye Nulman, a certified massage therapist with an office in the One Yoga and Wellness Center in East Windsor, learned EFT and started experiencing its benefits, she incorporated the technique into her practice to help others.

 

 

 

A person who regularly suffers from frequent headaches, Nulman used EFT to eradicate her reliance on headache medication. Since then, she has helped clients use the technique to relieve pain, indigestion, stress, panic attacks and adverse reactions to chemotherapy.

One of the most profound EFT experiences Nulman has had occurred with her client Erin Lichtman, of Millstone. Lichtman, who could hardly walk into the wellness center for her appointment one day, left skipping moments later after only three rounds of EFT.

"When I hobbled into Faye's locaton, I was hopeful that she could help me with my back pain, but I had no idea how much," Lichtman said. "I couldn't stand upright and was tilted to the side. I was in a great deal of pain. I was unable to lift or hold my baby."

Lichtman continued, "Faye performed EFT on me and literally within seconds, I realized the knot in my lower back was gone and the pain was nearly gone. Faye repeated the moments-long technique and my pain was completely gone. I was giddy as I left, not in pain for the first time in weeks."

The technique can also be used for shoulder, neck and other aches, fear, breathing and digestive issues, fibromyalgia, stress, anxiety, depression, addictions, weight loss and allergies, according to Nulman.

"Obviously EFT is not offered in lieu of a medical professional opinion," Nulman said. "I am not a doctor, nor would I pretend to be one, but EFT is a nice technique to have to work together with everything else out there."

Nulman said EFT works because most problems and ailments come as the result of unresolved emotional issues.

"About 85 to 95 percent of our issues are a result of something happening emotionally that has not been addressed," Nulman said. "Our unresolved negative emotions are major contributors to most physical pains and diseases."

Basic EFT requires a person to think about a particular stress, ailment, memory or emotion and to simultaneously tap on specific points on the body that correspond to energy meridians used in Chinese medicine. The theory behind EFT is that negative emotions are caused by disturbances in the body's energy field and that tapping on the meridians while thinking of a negative emotion alters the body's energy field and restores it to balance.

Nulman teaches the abbreviated and elongated EFT sequences to her clients.

"I am able to pass the technique on and educate people with it to take responsibility for their own healing," she said.

She also helps clients who may not want to face pain or a problem alone, perform EFT.

"There's extra energy to draw from when you are working with someone else," she said. "Some things are a little too emotional to handle, and with someone else you don't have to look too closely into that mirror at first. Someone else can help do the verbalization or tapping or ask the necessary questions an individual might not think to ask or might not want to ask of themselves."

Nulman said the treatment is done with caution, so that additional problems are not created.

"I've had great success with clients who have come in for pain management and stress relief," she said. "There are no contraindicators. Even if you can't be tapped, there are ways to get around that."

Nulman, said bringing EFT into her practice has been humbling, because the technique often replaces the need for other healing modalities.

"The more I use EFT, the more I realize it is a standalone treatment," she said. "It's been humbling and gratifying at the same time."

EFT Radio Interview

 

 
Home     Services     About     News and Events     Wellness     Store