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Why Do I Yawn After Tapping? The Nervous System Science Behind It (Pod #707)

Why Do I Yawn After Tapping? The Nervous System Science Behind It (Pod #707)

Episode 707 Published 1 month ago
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If you have ever finished a round of EFT tapping and found yourself yawning uncontrollably, you are not imagining things. In 18 years of working with clients, this question lands in my inbox almost every single month. It is actually one of the top search terms that brings new readers to TappingQandA.com.

TL;DR / Key Takeaways

  • Yawning, burping, and stomach gurgles after a tapping round are all signs that your body shifted out of fight-or-flight mode and into its natural rest-and-restore state.
  • The human nervous system operates in two distinct modes: the sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight) and the parasympathetic nervous system (rest and digest). EFT tapping moves you from the first into the second.
  • When the digestive system comes back online after a stress response, it produces physical signals including yawns, burps, farts, and stomach rumbles.
  • You do not need to yawn for tapping to have worked. The absence of a yawn is not evidence that nothing changed.
  • These physical responses are among the most common questions people search before finding this site, which tells us that tappers everywhere share this experience and wonder what it means.
Why Do I Yawn After Tapping? The Short Answer

Yawning after a round of EFT tapping means your nervous system just made a real, measurable shift. It moved out of sympathetic activation (the stress state) and into parasympathetic activation (the recovery state), and your body is announcing that transition out loud.

EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques), commonly called tapping, involves tapping on specific acupressure points on the face and upper body while focusing on an emotional issue. Some of the earliest peer-reviewed research on tapping demonstrated that it reduces cortisol, the primary stress hormone produced during fight-or-flight activation. When cortisol drops and the sympathetic response de-escalates, the parasympathetic nervous system takes over. That handoff produces a cascade of physical changes, and yawning is one of the most visible.

Key insight: "The yawn is your body's way of resetting its state. It is the system literally changing shape from the inside to signal that the danger has passed."

What Are the Sympathetic and Parasympathetic Nervous Systems?

The human nervous system runs in two modes that cannot operate simultaneously. Your body is always choosing between them based on its read of your environment.

The sympathetic nervous system governs fight or flight. When the brain perceives a threat, physical or emotional, it floods the body with adrenaline and cortisol. Heart rate climbs. Pupils dilate to take in more visual information. Oxygen is pushed to your limbs so you can run or fight. Digestion shuts down almost entirely, because processing food is a waste of resources when a threat is nearby. Some people experience the extreme version of this when they go blank before a presentation or job interview. The capillaries in the brain constrict as oxygen is rerouted to the muscles, which is why all the answers you forgot come flooding back the mome

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