Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWhat to Do When You Don't Think Tapping Will Work for You
Description
If you have ever sat down to tap and thought, "this isn't going to work for me," you are not alone. That single thought stops more people from healing than any technique ever could. Knowing what to do when you don't think tapping will work is the first step toward getting unstuck.
TL;DR: Key Takeaways- The thought "tapping won't work for me" is almost never about tapping. It is a protective story your subconscious is telling to keep you from a deeper fear.
- Five specific fears tend to hide behind this doubt: losing your last hope, worrying things will get worse, having to admit you could have healed sooner, feeling weird, and believing you are too broken.
- The fastest way through this resistance is to tap on the doubt itself, not on the original issue.
- Treating each fear as a part of you that is trying to keep you safe, rather than something to argue with, dissolves resistance faster than logic ever will.
When you ask whether tapping will work, you are usually not asking about tapping. You are asking whether it is safe to hope.
In nearly two decades of working with clients, I have noticed that people who genuinely believe a tool is useless do not ask follow-up questions about it. They simply move on. The fact that you are still thinking about tapping, still wondering, still circling back, means a part of you suspects it might actually help. That suspicion is what makes the question feel risky.
Key Insight: "Believing something might work sometimes feels better than actually trying it and having it fail."
This is the hidden mechanic behind most resistance to any healing tool. The doubt is not the obstacle. The doubt is the disguise.
Why Asking If Tapping Will Work Means Part of You Already Believes It MightIf your subconscious had completely written tapping off, you would have stopped reading by now. The act of asking the question is evidence that something inside you is still open.
That is good news, because it means the work in front of you is not convincing yourself tapping is real. The work is meeting the part of you that is afraid of what happens if it is. People are often unwilling to tap on the original issue, but they are willing to tap on their doubt about whether tapping will help with that issue. That willingness is the doorway.
This is also why I do not recommend white-knuckling your way past the resistance. Forcing yourself to tap when a part of you is convinced it will not work just teaches that part of you that its concerns are being ignored. It usually digs in deeper.
The Five Hidden Fears Disguised as Doubt About TappingDoubt about tapping almost always traces back to one of five protective fears. Each one feels like a reasonable opinion about a technique, but each is actually a story about what might happen to you if the technique succeeded. If you have ever found yourself afraid tapping might actually work, one of these is likely doing the talking.
Fear #1: Losing Your Last HopeSome people resist tapping because tapping is the last thing on their list. If it fails, there is nothing left to try.
I had a client say this to me directly years ago. "Gene, I don't want to tap because tapping is my last hope. And if I try this and it doesn't work, then I have no hope." For her, holding onto an untested possibility felt safer than testing it and watching it fail. As long as she did not try, hope stayed intact. This is one of the most common forms of resistance I see, and it almost never sounds like fear on the surface. It sounds like skepticism.
Fear #2: Worry That Better Will Actually Be WorseHealing has consequences. For some people, those consequences feel more dangerous than the original problem.
Consider someone who is afraid o