Did you know your level of stress can be determined by your saliva? It’s true! But can it be used to determine the effectiveness of EFT Tapping? Keep reading to find out.
If you think of a time in your life when something stressful or frightening happened, you can probably remember physical changes in your body that went along with it.
The classic responses are increased heart rate, sweaty palms, shallow breathing, and often a tightening in the chest or stomach area.
But there are also changes that happen on a biochemical level. And if the stressful or fearful event is an extreme one, or if it recurs over time, those biochemical changes can lead to serious long-term health consequences.
One of the most important hormones in our body’s stress response is cortisol. This hormone actually regulates other hormones, and is therefore important to many critical aspects of a healthy functioning body.
When we are stressed, anxious, or frightened, our cortisol levels increase, and this spells trouble for our bodies. Prolonged high levels of cortisol impair the heart, immune system, sexual function, sleep, digestion, respiration, circulation, and can even be responsible for premature aging.
Can Tapping Change My Hormones?
Researchers have cited numerous studies concluding that EFT results in a reduction of anxiety symptoms in people across a wide spectrum of circumstances. This has led to the formulation of theories about what exactly is happening in the body during a Tapping session.
It’s well known, and can easily be experienced by anyone using Tapping, that outward physical changes take place after a series of tapping rounds. This could be noticed by a reduction of pain, the loosening of rigid joints, or perhaps the relaxation of muscles.
But there are those who believe that changes are also taking place on the level of cellular biology and genetic expression. It’s also the foundational work in the field of epigenetics.
To help prove this theory, one step is gathering physical evidence of such a change.
In previous studies, MRI and EEG readings that measure a person’s brain activity have shown that acupuncture or pressure on the acupoints result in visible changes (decreases) in hyper-arousal of the nervous system.
These researchers of this study wanted to take another step in this direction to see if there were corresponding dips in cortisol levels after EFT treatment.
Studying Saliva
Researchers recruited study participants (aged 18-80) from an online site advertising a free cortisol test; they were neither current patients nor did not have any clinical diagnoses.
They were then divided into three groups corresponding to the type of treatment received: tapping, supportive listening, and no treatment.
The cortisol levels of each participant were taken initially with a saliva kit, and all were asked to fill out one of the standard psychological questionnaires that measure anxiety & stress symptoms, rating their symptoms on a scale of 1-5.
The 3 groups then had individual 50-minute sessions of treatment.
The sympathetic listening group met with a licensed therapist who empathized with the person and challenged his or her negative thoughts. The tapping group had a session with a coach certified in EFT. The non-treatment group waited in the waiting room.
After the individual sessions were complete, a second saliva kit sample was taken and a second questionnaire filled out. All test sample kits were then sent to be analyzed at the lab.
Incredible Results: EFT Actually Lowers Cortisol Levels
When all the elements of the study were analyzed, the researchers calculated that the cortisol levels of the two control groups had been reduced by 14%, but the EFT group had been reduced by 24%.
For the psychological symptoms, one questionnaire showed a 42% decrease for EFT, a 13% decrease for the non-treatment group, and a 17% decrease for the sympathetic listening group.
On another questionnaire, EFT showed a 51% reduction vs 14% in sympathetic listening and 17% for non-treatment.
Your saliva doesn’t lie! 😊
The evidence that EFT actually leads to physical changes in the body is growing, thanks now to another piece of research.
Until next time…
Keep Tapping!
Nick Ortner
Have you experienced a shift in your physical symptoms after Tapping? I'd love to read your comments below!
It’s Measurable: Tapping Reduces the Body’s Stress Hormones was originally published to: The Tapping Solution
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