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About Tapas Fleming and TAT®
Tapas Fleming began her passionate search for truth at age 15. For many
years her focus was on enlightenment, interpersonal relating and emotional
release. In 1974, Tapas was initiated into natural meditation, a yoga-meditation
for purification and liberation. After losing premature twins and coming
close to dying herself, she went to school to learn acupuncture and focus
on her own healing. In 1993, Tapas came up with a new simple and elegant
way to serve her patients -- Tapas Acupressure Technique (TAT). She is
a leading force in the emerging field of energy psychology. Tapas lives
in Redondo Beach, California where she has a private practice and travels
worldwide to give TAT trainings.
THE TAT® STORY (HOW I CAME UP WITH TAT®)
Both in my own life and as a practitioner of Traditional Chinese Medicine,
I have often wondered how to get myself or a patient out from under the
negative influence of past events. However much therapy or meditation
or other forms of healing one undertakes, certain issues never seem to
get resolved once and for all.
I cannot claim to have painstakingly arrived at a solution to
this dilemma. Tapas Acupressure Technique (TAT) came to me after taking
a nap in my office one day. I woke up with the thought of a particular
acupuncture point and how it could be used for healing a person's whole
system. I was specializing in allergy work at the time, using a combination
of acupressure and acupuncture, based on the methods of Dr. Devi Nambudripad
of Buena Park, California. The acupuncture point is called Urinary Bladder
1 (UB1) or "Eyes Bright" as it is called in Chinese.
I immediately began to incorporate this point
in my treatment of allergy patients with great success. After several
months, a new patient told me, "My T'ai Chi master told me to use that
point with one other for headaches and other problems." Although my insight
was based on my training and experience as an acupuncturist, this simple
confirmation of my own experience meant a great deal to me. I added the
third point the yT'ai Chi master mentioned.
After another few months, I was contemplating
the fact that the occipital area of the brain is the vision center and
that the points I was using for treatment were related to vision. I
thought that perhaps if I included the brain's vision center in the
treatments I was doing, it would enhance the treatments. It did. An
entire layer of complication in my allergy treatments (combining an
allergen with other substances in order to achieve a complete clearing)
was no longer necessary with the addition of placing the back of the
hand on the occipital area of the head. The healing was more complete
with less steps.
What I have discovered from using TAT goes beyond what I learned as part of
my professional training. I discovered in my acupuncture practice that
our bodies, not just our minds, have memories. Not just our memories, but the
memories of our ancestors. If we stop and think about it for a minute, it becomes
obvious that our bodies are the product of our parents' bodies. We look like
our parents, and often have similar health problems as our parents. Well, to
take it many steps further, our parents' bodies came from their parents' bodies,
whose bodies came from their parents' bodies, and so on for a long, long way
back. The color of your hair and your eyes, the shape of your hands and feet,
your bone structure, and some of your health problems are the legacy of both
your recent and ancient ancestors. Just as car manufacturers base new models
on a long line of previous designs rather than reinvent the wheel, you are
the latest model of your ancestry.
Again, I did not come to this conclusion through study and thought, but through
experience in my clinical practice. For example, I was working on a patient
who was allergic to dust. As I was treating her I "saw," you might say psychically,
a farmer pushing a plow and breathing in copious amounts of dirt. Big clouds
of dust rose all around him as he followed his plow. Without mentioning the
complete image I was seeing, I just talked to the patient about the dust of
the land where she was living, and in her conversation to me she revealed that
she came from a long line of German farmers. What was coming to me from her
body was what I would call the cellular history of her present life in this
body. Our bodies have living histories which we could call cellular memory.
When an ancestor experienced something traumatic, that memory seems to be stored
and passed down at a cellular level.
I was inspired to explore cellular memory more deeply when I worked with a
patient who, by her early 30's, had been in nine car crashes which she hadn't
caused. She had suffered a concussion and other major traumas to the head,
and was suffering from constant neck and headaches with a couple of migraines
a week. The story I "saw" was about a young boy of eight or so who was in a
mountain cabin with his father. A crazy mountain man came in and killed his
father, smashing his head open. When I mentioned this, my patient was silent
for a few moments, then told me that her father had fallen, smashed his head,
and she was there when it happened. She then told her sisters about what had
come up, and her sisters told her that they knew of two men in the family who
had been murdered by people smashing their heads in. The sisters also talked
about the fact that their young children had already suffered an inordinate
amount of concussions and blows to the head in the course of their growing
up.
I began to realize that I had been given the gift of seeing the history of
the cells of a human body and a way to heal the traumas that had been passed
down from generation to generation: TAT. What I have learned from working with
many friends and patients in these last several years is that when the story
of those cells is heard, they release the stored trauma they have been holding
and are able to rejoin the organism they are part of and get on with this business
of living. Using TAT, a person doesn't have to have a conscious or psychic
vision of what happened. The TAT pose itself along with your focus on a trauma
creates a connection between the cells' memory and your function of vision.
You "re-view" the trauma and it is integrated in a few moments.
WHAT IS A TRAUMA AND WHAT DOES TAT® DO?
A trauma occurs when life becomes unbearable and you tell it "No." Or variations
on the theme which could include: "Hold it right there." "This is too much
for me." "If this happens, I won't survive." This is not necessarily a conscious
choice. It is a natural response to your life in that moment. This response
sets up patterns of mental, emotional, and physical behavior and health. A
blockage, or energy stagnation has just been put in place and your life has
been impacted. It seems like a good idea at the time, but you lose the ability
of distinguishing the difference between a truly life-threatening event and
an event that merely has certain aspects that resemble the original traumatic
event. It is as if life were a flowing stream, and at one point, out of fear,
you roll a boulder into it to try to dam the flow in order to keep a traumatic
event from happening to you. The water, of course, simply flows around the
boulder, but in your life - in your body, mind and emotions - there is a blockage
that wasn't there before.
From the view of Traditional Chinese Medicine, a blockage of energy flow creates
disease. If you consider the blockage as a boulder in your body's life flow,
you can easily imagine that the life energy that would naturally be flowing
along certain streams is going to be diverted. On the upstream side of the
boulder, there will be dammed up energy, on the downstream side you will find
a lack of energy. This creates emotional, mental and physical disharmony which
is also known as a yin-yang imbalance. On one side is too much, on the other
is not enough. The goal of Traditional Chinese Medicine is to achieve balance.
TAT is a way of saying to your whole body-mind: "Have another look at this." It
is an opportunity to change, based on taking a new look, rather than continuing
to look away. By taking another look, within the context of TAT's direction
of the body's energy flow, the charge that is still being held is removed from
the past event and the event can now be integrated into your whole system.
What has that charge been? It's traumatic stress which is simply the stress
to your system of continually trying to hold off a trauma. That event really
did happen. Working to deny its existence or hold it away from you is stressful.
Traumatic stress ends when the trauma is no longer resisted. TAT accomplishes
this in moments.
I would say that TAT reunites a person with parts of himself or herself that
have been locked away or frozen in time. There are many ways to describe the
results of TAT. Integration, harmony, peace, unity, connectedness, relatedness,
oneness and wholeness are a few of the terms people have used to express how
they feel after doing TAT.
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