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How to Use Tapping for Fear and Anxiety – The 4-Question Process

How to Use Tapping for Fear and Anxiety – The 4-Question Process

Episode 711 Published 2 weeks, 3 days ago
Description

Tapping for fear and anxiety was my own entry point into EFT almost 20 years ago, when I was struggling with social anxiety. In this post I want to walk you through exactly how I use tapping to right-size fear and anxiety so they stop running the show. The method is simple, it works in the moment, and you can use it the next time worry shows up.

TL;DR / Key Takeaways
  • Tapping for fear and anxiety is a process of right-sizing the feeling, not eliminating it, so your alarm system stays accurate instead of overactive.
  • Anxiety is about a threat in the present moment, while fear is about a threat in the future, and naming which one you are facing changes how you approach it.
  • The core method is three rounds of wordless tapping to calm the nervous system, followed by four questions answered out loud while you tap.
  • The four questions are: What could go wrong? What proof do I have? How likely is it? What would I tell a friend?
  • Success means the feeling becomes proportionate to the actual threat, so you can either engage safely with what is in front of you or stay present despite worry about the future.
Why Fear and Anxiety Are Not the Enemy

Fear and anxiety are not malfunctions; they are your internal guidance system pointing you toward danger so you can stay safe. Every emotion you feel carries specific information about your situation. Frustration signals that a need or desire is not being met. Anger signals that you perceive an attack. Fear and anxiety signal danger.

When you understand the information an emotion is carrying, you can respond to it instead of just reacting. That is the whole foundation of using EFT for anxiety effectively.

Key insight: "For every single emotion you have, it is your internal guidance system giving you information to navigate the world."

The mistake most people make is treating fear and anxiety as enemies to be silenced. They are not. They are messengers. The work is not to fire the messenger but to make sure the message is accurate.

What Is the Difference Between Fear and Anxiety?

Anxiety is about a threat happening in the present moment, while fear is about a threat located in the future. People often use the words interchangeably, and you do not have to adopt my definitions for the process to work. But making this distinction sharpens how you approach the problem.

The reason the distinction matters is that you respond differently to something in your immediate proximity than to something that may happen later. If a threat is right here, you need to handle the thing in front of you. If a threat is in the future, you need to settle yourself so you can stay present now.

Key insight: "Anxiety is about the thing that is happening in this particular moment, where fear is about the thing that is in the future."

The tapping itself looks identical for both. What changes is the target. Naming whether you are dealing with worry about an uncertain future or a present-moment stressor tells you what you are actually solving for.

What Does Success Look Like When Tapping for Anxiety?

Success is making the feeling proportionate to the actual threat, not switching it off entirely. Before you tap, it helps to define what a good outcome looks like, because that definition is different for anxiety than it is for fear.

When I am anxious, success means the anxiety turns down enough that I can safely engage with the thing in front of me. When I am afraid, success means I turn down the fear of a future event enough to be fully present to what is happening right now.

So when I solve the problem of anxiety, I am dealing with the thing I am anxious about. When I solve the problem

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