--- In emotrance2_at_yahoogroups.com, "SFX" <sfx@...> wrote:
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: gloriacoleman953612000
> To: emotrance2_at_yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 5:18 PM
> Subject: [ET2] EFT and emotrance
>
>
> I find that not everybody responds to EFT, perhaps 10%. Occasionally I
> have a patient that EFT actually worsens the problem.
>
> Does Emotrance work for everybody that gives it a sincere try?
>
> Is everybody that sincerely tries able to learn to become a ET
> pratitioner?>>
>
>
> Never say never as they say.
>
> And never say always, or everyone.
>
> There is a sliding scale of autism in people in every society which
goes undetected in the mid ranges and those people will have trouble
with just about everything that is designed for "generally functional"
people (i.e. people who can hear, see, feel, think at least up to a
point), like ET was.
>
> There are also people who just freak to high heaven when you start
mentioning the fact that people have an energy system and emotions are
the feedback devices for said energy system, because it's against
their religion (aka brainwashing).
>
> Scientists, mostly. Really religious people don't have a problem
with the existence of energy and spirit at all and tend to take to ET
like the proverbial ducks to water.
>
> Severely disassociated people, apart from the autistics, will also
have trouble with basic EmoTrance "because I don't feel anything at
all ..."
>
> We teach the practitioners that, if someone doesn't get on with ET,
to not keep belaboring the point but to do something else instead,
including - gasp! - actually ASKING the person how we can be of help,
what they would like to see/hear/do/experience right now to make
whatever it is they need help with move along a little towards a
future resolution.
>
> I've in the past made soup for someone and just watched them eat it.
A pretty incredible experience, actually.
>
> EmoTrance is as easy, gentle and usefriendly as they come; in fact I
don't know what else is out there that comes even close in being this
respectful and loving in every way.
>
> EmoTrance is also self evident; even if a person "can't do it" they
can sure learn to *see* how people are showing you with their hands
just exactly where what is in their energy system and even autistic
people can be trained to respond to that with words, movements, and
behaviour.
>
> It won't result in the sort of experience others might have but it
would do some thing.
>
> Two autistics doing ET with each other ... I really don't know what
that would be like, but it would sure be interesting to try it out and
see what would happen!
>
> The neat thing about EmoTrance is that even if someone can't "do
it", if they have the intellectual capacity, they can at least start
to *think about it* and put some cause-and-effect in their
environments back in order, especially in relationship to human emotions.
>
> I've known people who "thought about it" for two, three years and
then something happened and they got it all of a sudden.
>
> Because EmoTrance is so global, and goes so much further than
symptom alleviation, it is interesting on every level and there's
always the hope the lightning strike will come eventually.
>
> So no, it's not for everyone immediately with total money back
guarantee in 15 minutes for all problems, ever, but as far as
therapies, techniques and theories goes, it has its merits nonetheless.
>
> Hope that helps,
>
> SFX
>
> Dr Silvia Hartmann
> http://SilviaHartmann.com
>
Hi SFX,
Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, and you have
done a marvelous job. Before I had discovered energy medicine I was
severely disassociated, you can say I was like Mr. Spock. I have come
along way now, I feel emotions ( I still don't know what love is),but
I have some trepidation whether somebody like me could learn ET. I
practice EFT and other modalities, because I want to help others not
to be as I was.
I am a believer in religion and there are the religious that believe
that energy medicines are something like witchcraft. However as you
wrote, I find it brings greater understanding to religion, it
complements it most elegantly. Let the scientists freak;)
Autism is an ancestral conflict. An ancestor to the patient had a
trauma or did a terrible act that "can't be spoken about". The
patient reflects this conflict in his behavior.
Ex: A Jewish autistic boy never spoke, moved little. He was call a
"zombie". It was discovered that his grandfather had escaped from a
concentration camp and hid in a river for 2 days breathing through a
reed. He never spoke of this trauma. He had to stay silent and still
to preserve his life. When this was told to the boy he recovered in a
short time.
I know a man that violated a woman, the criminal's wife was pregnant
at the time. The child was born autistic. He so far refuses to believe
that his action may have affected his daughter. He was never reported.
I know about this case because his victim sought help from me.
I know a practitioner that freed 4 autistic children in the last 3
months by finding out what happened to their ancestors. It can go back
to the 3rd or even 4th generation. Thats all they have to do is just
hear the event discussed and they are freed.
Sincerely,
Stephen Coleman
California USA
Received on Thu May 22 2008 - 04:44:05 BST
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