Remember the toy puzzle where you stick a finger into
each end of a straw tube and the harder you try to pull your fingers
out, the more firmly they become embedded? That is how a psychological
reversal feels—your efforts produce the opposite of the result you
intend.
This dynamic is familiar to most people who make
plans for personal change, which they affirm and reaffirm but never
quite achieve (the flaw in the "New Year’s resolution" approach to
personal development). It is as if the conscious mind has one agenda but
an opposing agenda, outside of its awareness, wins. Because we wind up
doing the reverse of what we intended, the phenomenon is called a
psychological reversal. You were
introduced to psychological reversals in the "Basic Basics"
module. They will be examined here in some depth.
When a client formulates a goal that activates a
psychological reversal, the treatment’s effectiveness will be
compromised until the psychological reversal has been resolved. All
effective therapies address this dynamic in one way or another. Energy
psychology focuses on their energetic as well as psychological roots,
yielding an intervention strategy that neutralizes most psychological
reversals quite rapidly.
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At the core of both cognitive dissonance and of a
psychological reversal is an internal
contradiction.
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In cognitive dissonance (in
which a current experience challenges an existing belief), new
information does not conform to a consciously held
idea.
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In a psychological reversal,
one’s behavior does not conform to a consciously held
intention.
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Cognitive dissonance: What you believe ≠ what you
experience.
Psychological reversal: What you intend ≠ what you do. |
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If
a psychological reversal is discovered, does this mean that
the client does not really
want to
improve? |
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The presence of a psychological reversal
does not mean the client is unmotivated,
simply that other factors are interfering with the conscious intention.
Once a psychological reversal has been identified, some clients may need
additional explanation and reassurance that it does not mean they do not
really want to get over their problem or that deep down they want to
fail. Since the term psychological reversal can itself be intimidating
or seem pathologizing, some clinicians avoid the phrase, referring
simply to inner conflicts about the treatment goals.
But really, isn’t
"psychological reversal" just a polite way of
talking about self-sabotage?
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Psychological reversals have been described as a form
of self-sabotage, but they actually reflect a much broader, and
potentially adaptive, process.
How can something
that looks like self-sabotage be a "potentially adaptive"
process?
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Psychological reversals may be adaptive because the
psyche contains a greater intelligence than only the elements with
which a person identifies.
A person wants to change in a healthy direction and the psychological
reversal gets in the way. But what if a person wants to change in an
unhealthy direction, as seen, for instance, with excessive ambition? Many
well-intentioned aspirations cost a person
dearly, and a psychological reversal is a natural mechanism for
restoring balance.
If excessive ambition is countered by a psychological
reversal, neglected aspects of the personality can flourish, as when a
highly driven corporate executive, for reasons he cannot explain and
perhaps amidst inner echoes of self-recrimination, allows himself to
engage in a truly relaxing, time-consuming creative but "unproductive"
hobby.
On the other hand, psychological reversals can keep a
person addictively trapped in behavior patterns that are costly and
destructive, as when another highly driven executive consciously resolves to
bring more balance and relaxation into her life but her behavior is to
repeatedly push herself to the edge of physical breakdown.
How was the
psychological reversal first identified within energy psychology?
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Muscle-based energy
tests, as we saw in the
Energy Checking module, are a kind of lie detector for unconscious
conflict. When a conflict is activated, an imbalance in the meridian
system can be detected because the muscle associated with the meridian
being checked loses its strength. When Roger Callahan was studying
Applied Kinesiology with George Goodheart, he experimented with this
method. For instance, he asked a woman who was in psychotherapy with him
for help with her weight to picture herself as being thin, just the way
she wanted to be, and he then did an energy test. To his astonishment,
and hers, when she was able to successfully visualize herself at her
ideal weight, the muscle gave way. He began experimenting with different
variations of this, such as having her make the statement, "I want to
lose weight." Again the test indicated that there was subconscious
conflict about this statement. Perhaps this is not surprising. Someone
who has dieted a great deal may have become disinterested in reenlisting
in the yo-yo of losing weight only to watch it be regained. For some,
the genuine desire to lose weight is countered by the fear of receiving
unwanted sexual advances. For others, there is a comfort or protection
in having a rounded body. What Callahan discovered was that an energy
disruption accompanied such conflicts about the desired goal.
He began to do the test
with other patients. Did they also show an energetic disruption when
they thought about reaching their therapeutic goals? "I want to get over
my anxiety attacks." "I want a better relationship with my wife." "I
want to be a successful musician." "I want to overcome my impotence." He
also had them make their statement in the opposite way, such as, "I
don’t want to get over my
anxiety attacks." To his surprise, he found that with the muscle test, a
large number of his clients grew weaker when they thought about getting
better, and they grew stronger when they thought about not getting
better. He called this a psychological
reversal.
What is the underlying
psychological dynamic in a psychological reversal?
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Speculation about the physiological dynamics of
psychological reversals has focused on the differences between the way
the left and right cerebral hemispheres organize information as well as
differences between cerebral cortex and back brain activity. The
psychological dynamic is clear: a conscious intention is in conflict
with motivation that is outside of the person’s awareness.
Is this a mark
of psychopathology?
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While this can be problematic, it is also part of normal development.
In a comprehensive research program at Northwestern University, psychologist
Dan P. McAdams showed that optimal psychological maturation
requires the progressive reconciliation of opposing qualities
within one’s inner nature and within one’s life structure.
A primary mechanism by which this occurs is in the
resolution of conflicts between psychological schemas (relatively
autonomous constellations of information and emotion) with which a
person identifies and those that are outside of consciousness.
McAdams’ research suggests that through this process
wherein opposing qualities are reconciled, the psychological schemas
that organize experience become more comprehensive and
better
integrated as a person matures.
What are
"psychological schemas" and how do they play
into psychological reversals?
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PSYCHOLOGICAL SCHEMAS
are both frameworks for
understanding and designs for
action. One cognitive structure may be primarily concerned with insuring
safety, while another is oriented toward cultivating fulfilling
interpersonal relationships. A person may be fully identified with some
of these explanatory and motivational schemas, while others operate
preconsciously (the schemas are known at some level but are not
available for articulation). Such independent, yet interrelated,
psychological schema can either be in harmony with one another or in
conflict. Their conflict is at the root of a psychological reversal.
A PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSAL occurs
when we consciously identify
with one psychological schema while another that is in conflict with
it is operating outside of our awareness. |
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So psychological
reversals reflect unresolved conflicts within the psychological
schemas that
shape understanding and behavior? |
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Yes, but, psychological reversals exist not
only at the cognitive and emotional level, they also
operate within the person’s
energy system. The cognitive
conflict is compounded by a disruption in your body's energy system
whenever you bring your goal to mind. Pursuing a conscious
intention that is in conflict with
an underlying psychological
reversal can cause, or reflect, a disruption in the meridian system,
which in turn interferes with the person’s
thinking and functioning.
On the other hand, when an action you take is in line
with a psychological schema that is energetically more deeply embedded than your
conscious intention, your energies might return to a more optimal flow,
making you feel better and operate more effectively. This is, of course,
baffling to the conscious mind, and it is part of the reason that
certain addictive or compulsive habits that make little sense in terms
of obvious rewards and punishment are still so difficult to break.
Does this cognitive
and energetic quagmire require years of deep analysis to
resolve?
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Based on an understanding of both the cognitive and
energy dimensions of psychological reversals, energy-oriented clinicians
have developed some deceptively simple yet apparently effective
interventions for working with them. While talk, introspection, and
analysis can address the dynamics that are at play, they do not easily
counter the energetic structures that maintain the pattern. Energy
methods intervene at precisely that level.
Clinical reports from a spectrum of energy-oriented
practitioners strongly suggest that when psychological reversals
undermine well-formulated treatment goals, they can be corrected
relatively easily and quickly using a straightforward combination of
cognitive and energetic techniques.
You have already been introduced to a simple
procedure which will correct for some of the most basic psychological
reversals that tend to interfere with treatment.
Review this Procedure
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You were shown a simple method for working
with psychological reversals in the EFT set-up affirmation
(Basic Basics module). The two parts to the set-up
affirmation are the affirmation
and an energy intervention
that involves stimulating specific points on the body
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THE AFFIRMATION
includes a few words that are "filled in," based on the target problem.
The form of the affirmation is as follows:
Even though I have this _____________,
I deeply love and accept myself.
The blank is filled in with a brief description of
the problem being addressed. For example:
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Even though I
have this fear of dogs, I deeply love and accept myself.
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Even though I
get a headache when I think of confronting my boss, I deeply
love and accept myself.
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Even though I
have this obsession about my daughter’s biological clock, I
deeply love and accept myself.
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Even though I
have this habit of interrupting people, I deeply love and
accept myself. |
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This is, of course, only a partial list, keyed to the
earlier examples. Virtually any psychological or behavioral problem or
goal can be inserted into this format.
The affirmation is best stated out loud and with
feeling and emphasis. It does not matter whether or not you believe it
to be a true statement, it is a self-suggestion that becomes more true
in the process of saying it and stimulating specific energy points.
While the phrase "I deeply love and accept myself" may seem like
an overly simple and pat self-affirmation, it may, as discussed below,
actually penetrate to the
heart of the psychological reversal.
Various alternative wordings are possible within this
general format, acknowledging the problem and creating an affirmation of
self-acceptance despite the existence of the problem. The format shown
here, however, is easy to memorize and has been used widely with good
reports. Alternatives might include "I deserve to feel good," "I know
that God loves me," or "I know deep down that I am a good and worthy
person." Choose an affirming phrase that resonates for you. An alternative to the phrase, "I deeply love and accept
myself," when working with children, might be along the lines of "I know
I’m a great kid deep inside."
As described in the Basic Basics module and
reviewed here, other formats have also been used. A
popular one, psychologist Patricia Carrington’s "Choices method,"
emphasizes choice rather than self-acceptance, e.g., "Even though I have
neglected my body, I choose to know that I deserve to have the time for
regular, enjoyable exercise," or "Even though I still focus on my son’s
shortcomings, I choose to know that I deeply and completely accept him." The
strategy is to stimulate energy points that help pair a statement about
a negative situation with a positive cognition. This reprograms the
thought about the negative situation to become an anchor or trigger for
a positive choice.
Writing to her colleagues the day after 9-11 on how
to help people deal with the psychological aftermath of the attack, Dr.
Carrington suggested using phrasings such as "Even though I am stunned
and bewildered by this terrible happening, I choose to learn something
absolutely essential for my own life from this event" or "Even though .
. . , I choose to be a still point amidst all the chaos" or "I choose to
have this dreadful event open my heart" or "I choose to sense the Divine
intent for a greater good in all this."
An ENERGY INTERVENTION
is the second part of the set-up affirmation. As you will be learning
throughout this program, the body’s energy system can be affected by
rubbing, tapping, stretching, holding, or tracing specific points or
areas on the surface of the body.
The effectiveness of the set-up affirmation can be
increased substantially by rubbing either or both of two points, called
the "sore spots."
Located in the upper left and right portions
of the chest, you can find them by pressing in on various
points until you find one or more that are sore. This is
the area you will rub while stating the affirmation 3 times.
You may want to rub an area on each side simultaneously.
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The "sore spots" are neurolymphatic points where
toxins tend to accumulate, thus blocking the flow of the body’s
energies. Soreness is felt as clusters of toxins are broken apart by
rubbing the points, dispersing them for elimination and opening a flow
of energy to the heart, chest cavity, and entire body. You may want to
rub both sides simultaneously.
Rubbing the sore spot should not cause more than a
little discomfort. If it does, lighten your pressure a bit. Also, if
you've had an operation in that area of the chest or if there is any
medical reason that you shouldn't be probing in that specific area,
switch to the other side.
Will
this procedure correct all forms of psychological reversal?
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By continuing with this module, you will learn to
distinguish among four types of psychological reversal that tend to
interfere with treatment. You will learn how to resolve each using
relatively simple methods that combine cognitive and energetic
techniques.
You are, however, again at a choice point about
whether to go into greater depth within this module or jump to the next
module. This is the last such choice point. The subsequent modules
should be studied in their entirety in the order they are presented.
Developing skills in energy checking,
correcting neurological disorganization, and
resolving psychological reversals,
however, can be more meaningful once you see how they fit into the
overall treatment approach.
If you jump to the next module at this point, you
will already have a good idea of what is meant by the term
psychological reversal, and you will already know a simple generic
correction procedure. The program will make it evident when you need a
more advanced understanding and you may return to this module at those
times. Either way will work.
Return to
Interactive Questions Within This Module
or
Jump to next module: Opening
Phases of Treatment
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While all psychological reversals interfere with a
person’s capacity to achieve a desired goal, there are two basic types:
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Global PRs
are linked to the desire to be happy or fulfilled. All other treatment
goals can be undermined if they are operating.
"I want to be happy"
(conscious desire) vs. "I don’t want to be happy" (agenda
that is outside of awareness and often enmeshed with one’s
self-concept and early programming)
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Specific-context PRs
are linked to the desire to solve a specific problem or reach a
specific goal. When that problem or goal is the focus of the therapy,
treatment will be compromised.
"I want to quit
smoking" (desire with which the person identifies) vs. "I don’t
want to quit smoking" (desire with which the person does not
identify).
Global PRs are involved with large thematic issues,
such as esteem, self-concept, core attitudes, and basic lifestyle
choices that globally impact many aspects of the person’s life.
Specific-context PRS are specific to a more concrete problem or
goal that might be the immediate focus in psychotherapy. Both global and
specific-context PRs appear in two variations.
Describe these
two variations.
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VARIATION 1:
CRITERIA-RELATED PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSALS emerge when secondary
issues conflict with the desired goal. Rather than involving ambivalence
about the desire to achieve the goal ("I want to . . ."), they
focus on a conflict around an underlying issue: "It is not
safe to be happy" (safety vs. happiness); "I am not capable of
quitting smoking" (ability vs. inability). The conflict hinges on a
criterion that is more delimited (e.g., safety, ability, deservedness,
permission, identity) than simply the desire to maintain well-being or
achieve a specific goal. A criteria-related PR will always be a
variation of a global PR or of a specific-context PR. That
is, it will either involve general well-being (criteria-related
global PRs) or specific problems or goals (criteria-related
specific-context PRs).
VARIATION 2: INTERVENING PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSALS appear after any
PRs detected at the outset of treatment have been resolved and progress
toward treatment goals has been observed. They usually involve a
specific tangible treatment goal (intervening specific-context
PRs), but may also involve the person’s general well-being (intervening
global PRs).
Return
to Questions
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Types of psychological
reversal (PR) that may appear during the diagnostic phase
of treatment
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Global Psychological Reversal
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Describe |
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Specific-Context Psychological
Reversal |
Describe |
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Criteria-Related Psychological
Reversal |
Describe |
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Jump
to Practice Session 1
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Most of the psychological reversals you will work
with during treatment sessions are specific
to the problem being focused upon (specific-context PRs).
GLOBAL PRs, on the other hand, operate more
generally, subsuming specific issues and impacting many
aspects of the person’s life.
Describe
several verbal statements that might be used in energy checking
for a global PR.
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The presence of a GLOBAL
PR can be confirmed, or ruled out, by energy checking:
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a
statement such as "I want to be happy," "I want to be
fulfilled," or "I want my life to be gratifying." If the
indicator muscle loses firmness, the reversal exists; if it
stays firm, the reversal is not operating.
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statements such as "I don’t want to be happy" or "I want to have
a miserable life." A global PR is indicated if the muscle stays
firm. |
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Return to List
of Psychological Reversals
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SPECIFIC-CONTEXT PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSALS appear
within a given type of situation. They are of particular concern when
the situation is related to a treatment goal because they involve a
conflict regarding the desire to reach the goal or solve the designated
problem.
Once the treatment goal or target problem has been
specified, the presence of a specific-context PR can be confirmed, or
ruled out, by energy checking a statement such as: "I want to get
over this problem."
If the indicator muscle
loses firmness, a reversal exists; if it stays firm, a
reversal is not operating.
What
are some other statements that might be used when checking
for this kind of
reversal? |
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A specific-context psychological reversal is
operating if an indicator muscle loses firmness with the following types
of statements:
I want to get over this
problem.
I want to get over
[specifically describe the problem, e.g. "my anxiety around powerful
men"].
I want to be able
[describe specific goal, e.g., "to create more time for spiritual
development."].
A specific-context PR is also indicated if the muscle
stays firm with the following sorts of statements:
"I want to keep this problem."
"I want to keep [specifically describe the
problem]."
"I don’t want to get over this problem."
"I don’t want to be able to [describe
specific goal]."
Return
to list of Psychological Reversals
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A
criteria-related
psychological reversal is like a
rider on the client’s good intentions. The
client might want to be happy or want to get
over the problem, but might feel or deeply believe that
he or she does not deserve
to get over the problem, or that it is not
safe to get over the problem. The reversal
is organized around specific criteria, such as deservedness
or safety, thus
the term criteria-related.
Criteria-related PRs might operate only in a narrow area of the
person’s life (criteria-related specific-context
PR) or might
have a more widespread impact (criteria-related global
PR).
Name several
statements that could be used to check for criteria-related
PRs that might
be interfering with the treatment.
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Statements that will, based on an energy check show
whether criteria-related psychological reversals are operating include:
I deserve to . . .[get over this problem,
attain this goal, be happy, etc.]
It is safe for me to . . .
It is safe for others if I . . .
It is possible for me to . . .
I will feel deprived if I get over this
problem. [PR indicated if
muscle stays strong].
Getting over this problem will be good for
me.
My getting over this problem will be good
for others.
I
WILL
get over this problem.
It is my duty/role/job to have this
problem . . . [family of
origin issue, PR indicated if muscle stays strong].
I will allow myself to get over . . . [the
issue is permission].
I will still be me if I get over . . .
[the issue is identity].
The statements can also all be worded in the negative
(e.g., "I do not deserve to . . ."). A PR is indicated if a
positive statement loses strength or a negative statement keeps the
muscle strong.
Some practitioners make the statements in both their
positive and negative forms to distinguish between psychological
reversals and neurological disorganization. If the results of the two
checks are inconsistent (e.g., yes to "I want to be over this problem,"
and yes to "I don’t want to be over this problem"), neurological
disorganization is probably present.
Return
to List of Psychological Reversals
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Practice Session 1:
Checking for Psychological Reversals |
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Qualify an indicator muscle on a colleague with
whom you can delve into psychological issues. Energy check the global
statement, "I want to be happy." Then proceed through the various
possible qualifying criteria: "It is safe for me to be happy," "I
deserve to be happy," etc. If you find any global or
criteria-related global PRs (based on an energy check of an indicator
muscle done immediately after completing the statement), remember them or
write them down to be used in the practice session on correcting for
psychological reversals.
Review basics about global and
criteria-related psychological reversals.
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Ask the person to describe a habit, an emotional response, a
behavioral pattern, or a way of thinking he or she would like to change.
Energy check a statement in the form of "I want to [change this
pattern]." Proceed through the various possible qualifying criteria:
"It is safe for me to . . . ," "I deserve to . . . ," etc.
If you find a specific-context or a
criteria-related
specific-context PR (based on an energy check), remember it for the
practice session on correcting for psychological reversals.
Review basics about
specific-context psychological reversals.
- Reverse roles. You become the "client" and guide your partner in
checking for psychological reversals.
Return
to Questions
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INTERVENING PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSALS,
by definition, appear only after treatment
is underway. This type of PR is distinguished by when it emerges.
Where a PR about the presenting problem or treatment goal detected at
the outset of treatment is called a
specific-context PR, an intervening
PR appears after gains have been
made in the treatment. The energy techniques that had been working no
longer result in subjective improvement or in positive energy shifts as
revealed by energy tests. It is as if an invisible
barrier has been hit. Progress may cease or there may be a
resurgence
of the problem, as if the treatment is bouncing off the barrier.
Describe
the kind of statement that might be used in checking for
an intervening PR.
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An intervening psychological reversal is operating if
an indicator muscle loses strength during statements that emphasize the
idea of completely overcoming the
problem:
I want to get
completely over this problem [or
specify problem, e.g., my obsession for cars I can't afford].
I want to
completely reach my goal [or specify
goal, e.g., master this program].
The statement can also be worded in the opposite way. If an
intervening PR is present, the muscle will stay firm during statements
such as:
I want to keep some
of this problem [or, some of my
obsession for cars I can't afford].
I do not want to
completely reach my goal
[or, completely master this topic]
The appearance of an intervening PR can be
discouraging to both the client and the practitioner, and it might be
caused by a variety of factors.
Name four
possible causes for the resurgence of a problem that was
improving.
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A problem that
was improving may stop improving or completely return because:
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new stresses
or other changes in the client’s life are undermining the
treatment
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environmental
substances (particularly found in food, medications, shampoo,
chemicals in synthetic clothing or rugs or from dry cleaning,
electromagnetic fields) are disrupting the client’s energies
(see websites concerned with environmental toxins, allergies and
other substance sensitivities, and health and mental health:
www.allergyantidotes.com,
www.naet.com, and
www.alternativementalhealth.com/articles).
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another
aspect of
the problem has emerged
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an intervening
PR has emerged |
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Next Question
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A
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVERSAL has occurred when a
psychological schema outside of the person’s conscious
awareness engages
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emotions
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thoughts
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behaviors |
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that do not conform to the person’s intentions.
What can
be done to resolve a psychological reversal?
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Interventions for resolving a psychological reversal
have both cognitive and
energy components.
While the cognitive dimension of the intervention
strategy has many varieties, these variations tend to share a common
format.
What is that format?
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In working with a psychological reversal, an
affirmation or self-suggestion along the lines of "I deeply love
and accept myself" is paired with an acknowledgement of the
problem that has been targeted for change.
Give an example
for a specific-context PR and for an intervening PR.
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Affirmations
for addressing a pattern in which a person collapses around certain
authority figures might be:
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Even though I
become anxious around powerful men, I deeply love and accept myself (specific-context
PR).
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Even though I
still
become
somewhat
anxious around powerful men, I deeply love and accept myself
(the words "still" and "somewhat"
were added so the statement addresses an
intervening
PR). |
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What makes these
potentially effective interventions?
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We can
speculate on how this statement, made with
focus and intention,
signals to the part of the psyche that manages inner conflict that the
person is:
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attuned to the
conflict
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speaking
directly to aspects of the psyche that were not being
consciously addressed
(also the mechanism of paradoxical intention)
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accepting and
prioritizing the needs of the "deeper self" rather than focusing
narrowly on the conscious agenda |
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This reframes the issue from a polarized conflict,
where only one side can win, into a negotiation where the issues of
concern to both sides can be considered. The reasons for the conflict
may or may not come to light. Perhaps the fear of authority traces to a
specific incident of humiliation, a pattern of abuse, or an unresolved
issue with a parent.
The heart has its reasons which reason does not
know. Whatever the etiology of the conflict about the stated
goal, the side with which the person is not consciously identified can
move out of a defensive posture when it is acknowledged and accepted.
Are there other
ways this reframe helps a person move out of the snare of
a psychological
reversal? |
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The reframe seems to address another key issue involving
psychological interventions for emotional, cognitive, or behavioral
change. Every human culture shapes the thoughts, feelings, attitudes,
and behavior of its young through a system of reinforcements and
punishments. Parental and social injunctions then become internalized.
Many of these reinforcements and punishments target
the child’s self-esteem. When these injunctions are violated,
self-negating internalized statements follow, from the toddler’s "Bad
Robbie, spilled the milk. Bad. Bad!!!" to all variations of adult guilt
and self-recrimination.
When, as an adult, you target something about
yourself for change, this mechanism of self-judgment and self-negation
tends to become engaged. You have the idea "I want to exercise more
regularly," and your self-esteem is held ransom when you do not carry
out the desired behavior (or bring about a desired internal change).
The correction for such a psychological reversal, as
we’ve seen, includes a statement in the form of "Even if I"
or "Even though I" (followed by a description of a mental
state or behavior targeted for change—for example, "Even if I never
exercise regularly" or "Even if I’ll always be afraid of people
in authority"), "I deeply love and accept myself."
A statement of this nature, made with focus and intent tends, we can
speculate, to
circumvent the entire self-negating sequence.
While this in itself shifts the energy system, the
effectiveness of this cognitive technique is substantially enhanced when
it is paired with an intervention that energetically supports the
affirmation (i.e., pairing the self-affirming cognitive statement with
an energy intervention that
simultaneously optimizes the flow of the meridian energies).
Next
Question
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The basic energy principle
to understand when faced with a psychological reversal is that when a
conflict between a consciously held intention for change and an
unconsciously held intention to resist change is activated, there will
be a corresponding conflict in the meridian energies.
The psychological issues involved in a PR may involve
any of the rich and varied dimensions of the psyche. Within the energy
system, however, the issue is simple: mobilize the body’s energies to
resist a consciously initiated change or to
support that change. In a psychological reversal, the
conscious intention is to initiate change while the body’s energies,
driven by inner conflict, are mobilizing to
resist it.
Such internal conflict is not unusual. Initiating
change, even constructive change, is fundamentally disruptive to the
homeostasis of the body’s energy system.
Why would this be?
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Established codes of behavior, patterns of emotion,
and habits of thought are hard-won compromises among many competing
agendas and possibilities. The body’s energies constellate themselves to
support and maintain these established solutions.
When the conscious mind says, "I want to make a
change," the energy system charged with maintaining established patterns
is immediately engaged.
What is this energy
system called?
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TRIPLE WARMER controls the activation of the
immune response, the
fight-or-flight response, and the
body’s habitual responses to stress
or threat.
Its primary concern is
survival. When triple warmer
goes on alert, its "authority"
supercedes most other energy systems in the body.
What are the implications
of this for initiating psychological and behavioral change?
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When you decide to initiate change, triple warmer is
instantly activated and poised to resist any changes you intend to
initiate. After all, the status quo has worked until now.
You have survived!
Triple warmer is not concerned with your
happiness, sense of
meaning, or
fulfillment— only your survival. It is oriented to fight
change, and it can mobilize the meridians and other energy systems to
maintain established patterns of thought and behavior.
It may sound as if triple warmer is being personified
here, but few reading these words have not been impressed by the
"intelligence" of the immune system or elegance of the fight-or-flight
response, both governed by triple warmer. All you really need to know if
you are not familiar with Traditional Chinese Medicine is that triple
warmer is the energy system that governs the adrenals and the amygdala. When threatened, triple warmer
can take control of your mood, combat your will, even extinguish
your memory about what you were resolved to do. It is a powerful though
largely unrecognized force within the body’s energy system
Summarize
the energetic dynamics brought into play by triple warmer
the moment a client
identifies
a treatment goal? |
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The energy system is aligned with established
patterns. Desired changes, however worthy, are unfamiliar and jarring,
and triple warmer is instantly activated to protect the existing
energetic alignment.
Next
Question
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The basic approach to working with a psychological
reversal involves an affirmation or self-suggestion paired with the
stimulation of an energy point.
Describe the
format of an affirmation designed to address a psychological
reversal.
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Affirmations
designed to address psychological reversals:
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Begin with "Even if" or "Even though."
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Describe or acknowledge the target problem or the
goal that is to be achieved.
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End with words similar to "I deeply love and accept myself," "I fully love and accept myself,"
etc.
The self-suggestion also uses qualifiers and syntax
that mirror the format of the
statement used to energy check for the psychological reversal being
addressed.
Provide an
example for each of the basic types of PR: Global, Specific-Context,
Intervening,
and Criteria-Related. |
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A
self-suggestion worded for a GLOBAL PR:
"Even if I don’t want to be happy, I
deeply love and accept myself."
A self-suggestion worded for a SPECIFIC-CONTEXT PR:
"Even if I am the one at
work who keeps getting confused, I deeply love and accept
myself." (This differs from a global PR in its focus on a specific
issue.)
For INTERVENING PRS, the self-suggestion will include the words
"still" or "some" or "somewhat":
"Even if I am still
the one in the group who keeps getting confused,
I deeply love and accept myself."
For CRITERIA-RELATED PRs, the self-suggestion includes a description
of the criteria:
"Even if it
is my role to be the one in the group who
gets confused [or "Even if it is not safe
not to be confused," or "Even
if
I deserve to be confused,"
etc.], I deeply love and accept myself."
Self-suggestions designed to address criteria-related
PRs may focus on a global issue or a specific context.
State
an example of a self-suggestion for a criteria-related global
PR and for a criteria-
related specific context PR. |
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CRITERIA-RELATED GLOBAL PR:
"Even if I deserve to be
unhappy, I deeply love and accept myself."
For an INTERVENING GLOBAL
PR, insert "still" and/or "somewhat":
"Even if I still deserve to be
somewhat unhappy
. . . ."
CRITERIA-RELATED SPECIFIC-CONTEXT PR:
"Even if I deserve to
be intimidated around powerful men, I deeply love and accept
myself."
For an INTERVENING
SPECIFIC-CONTEXT PR, insert "still"
and/or "somewhat": "Even if I
still deserve to be intimidated
around powerful men, I deeply love and accept myself."
For other criteria, substitute "I deserve to
be" with:
it’s still not safe if I were no longer .
. .
it’s still not safe for others if I were
no longer . . .
it’s still not possible for me to no
longer be . . .
I still won’t allow myself to no longer be
. . .
I still won’t do what’s necessary to no
longer be . . .
it still won’t be good for me to no longer
be . . .
it still won’t be good for others for me
to no longer be . . .
I still would be deprived if I were no
longer . . .
I still would lose an essential aspect of
who I am if I were no longer . . .
Is it really
necessary to memorize all these formulas?
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This of course appears formulistic when you are first
learning it. The "formulas" are simply devices to keep your intuition
alert to the presence of psychological reversals, which can be decisive
obstacles to a successful treatment outcome.
In practice, it is not necessary to track whether you
are checking, for instance, for a specific-context or an intervening
psychological reversal. If the check is performed prior to other energy
interventions, you are not checking for an intervening PR. If the check
is performed after treatment that had been progressing becomes stalled,
you are. Being able to label the distinctions is most important in
coming to understand the nature of PRs in their various forms.
Once you have this understanding, your focus while
working with PRs will be on the intricate dance between you, your
client’s conscious intention, and your client’s unconscious dynamics in
relationship to that intention. Rely on your intuition while keeping the
formulas in your back pocket.
For example, an 85-year-old man, whose mind has
remained very sharp, is nonetheless increasingly unable to think of
common words. This experience, which happens several times each week,
has become the cause of considerable anxiety and concern about declining
mental abilities. Assurances from others that he is "just fine" make him
feel worse and his own attempts at self-assurance also make him more
anxious and deeply convinced that senility is setting in. The
affirmation "Even though I sometimes cannot remember the correct
word, I know my mind is still strong and clear," combined with the
stimulation of an energy point, rapidly shifts the constellation so that
he is able to keep the occasional mental lapses in perspective and
appreciate the preponderance of ways in which his mind is still robust.
The second phrase could be "I deeply love and accept myself,"
but the phrase "I know my mind is still strong and clear" speaks
more directly to the issue. You do not have to be limited by the
formulas. A sophisticated and less "canned" approach to formulating an
affirmation that addresses a psychological reversal is the "Choices
Method."
Still, having the wording for energy checks of the
most common PRs in your back pocket can be quite handy. Prior to the
energy interventions you will learn in subsequent modules, you might
routinely energy check for a number of likely psychological reversals,
using statements such as:
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Before focusing
on the problem or goal:
"I want to be happy." "It is safe to be happy." "It is safe
for others if I am happy." "It is my role to be unhappy." "I deserve to be happy." "I will be happy."
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After the problem
or goal has been specified:
"I want to get over this problem," "It is safe to get over
this problem." "It is safe for others if I get over this
problem." "It is my role to have this problem." "I deserve to
get over this problem." "I will get over this problem." |
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Your intuition might suggest other criteria, such as:
"I will lose my identity
if I get over this problem," "I will allow myself to get over this
problem," "Others do not deserve to have me get over this problem,"
etc.
If treatment stalls, you can check for a variety of
intervening psychological reversals by simply inserting the word
"completely":
"I want to be
completely over this problem."
Of course it is not just a matter of mechanically
applying the formulas. The client’s history and the relationship of the
client’s life context to the treatment goals remain in your mind as you
stay alert for psychological reversals. Once you have internalized the
principles, you will be able to easily devise protocols individualized
for the situation. Nonetheless, practitioners who are new to energy
psychology frequently express surprise at how easily and how often the
simple formulas alone result in the detection and demonstrable
resolution of psychological reversals.
What are the three
parts to the basic "formula"?
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With the limitations of over-reliance on formulas
duly emphasized (it should also be noted that not all energy-based
psychotherapists address psychological reversals in the explicit manner
outlined in this module), the basic approach to working with a
psychological reversal is:
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Identify the presence and type of psychological
reversal via an energy check.
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Formulate an "Even if [. . .], I deeply
love and accept myself" self-statement worded for the type
of PR that has been identified.
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Use an energy intervention that can help overcome
a PR while stating the self-suggestion, with focus and intention,
several times.
Next Question
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In the opening
module, you learned to massage the chest sore spots in the
treatment of psychological reversals. Energy interventions
that have been found to be effective with psychological
reversals (performed while stating the affirmation) include
:
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"Hooking up" the third eye and
navel with the middle fingers, gently pushing in and pulling
up. |
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Tapping the
"karate chop" points. |
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How do you
know which treatment to use when working with a PR? |
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Any of these techniques is likely to be effective.
Many of their actions are identical—they all pair a self-suggestion that
embraces both sides of the reversal with an energetic boost—but each
also has special strengths.
The procedure might, for instance, stimulate the
electrical connections among all the meridians and between the front and
back portions of the brain (the hook-up),
metabolize contradictory information (spleen tap), work
with the fight-or-flight response (the gamut
point), resolve psychological reversals related to stress,
grief, or pride (the sore spots), or
support choices about what information to incorporate (small intestine
meridian, one of the karate chop
points).
The simplest approach is to apply one of the methods
and then do another energy check of the statement that identified the
psychological reversal. If it has not been corrected, try another energy
treatment while repeating the same affirmation (also, consider that the
affirmation may need to be adjusted). Whether a particular energy
technique is going to be effective in a specific instance varies from
one case to the next, but any of the five techniques will work most of
the time.
Jump
to Practice Session 2
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Practice
Session 2: Resolving Psychological Reversals |
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Begin with the psychological reversals you and your
partner identified during Practice Session 1. Formulate the affirmations
and experiment with the above energy interventions for resolving each of
your partner’s PRs. Then instruct your partner on how to carry out the
procedure for you. Enlist several other people to check for
psychological reversals and correct any you identify.
With the completion of this module, you have been
introduced to several of the fundamentals of energy psychology. In the
following module, you will see how skills in
energy checking, detecting and correcting for
neurological disorganization, and
identifying and resolving psychological
reversals come together in the opening phases of treatment.
Jump to next module: Opening
Phases of Treatment
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