The Mechanics Of The FasterEFT Addiction Program

Most of our problems are borne out of our inability to deal with our problems. It’s because we don’t know how to deal with our problems, so we are addicted to feeling bad. So if you’re upset, angry, frightened, etc., what do you do? You can yell at someone, beat them up, light a cigarette, get a drink, do drugs, or complain to a friend. You can even cry while watching a sad movie. You can do all those things. But where do all those negative emotions really go? The FasterEFT addiction program has a permanent resolution.
Why do some people become addicted?
Addictions are programs. Addictions, like all our unconscious behaviors, are due to our subconscious programs. They include our desires, fears, and compulsions. These programs are the result of your past. The reason you have problems in your life is because of your experiences with people in the past. People like you, with their own problems, couldn't find a way to deal with them. They could be your mother, father, sibling, aunt, grandparent, or a school bully. Anyone.
The FasterEFT addiction protocol knows the subconscious links. It uses the substance to feel joy, peace, relief, and love.
Your brain and body now produce endorphins when you abuse opioids, heroin, or cocaine. Others may not have that connection. They may link exercise or food to those positive feelings.
The FasterEFT Addiction Protocol
An important key to realize about addiction is that it is physiological, not mental. That is why willpower and using conscious reasoning don’t work. To stop the urge to abuse substances, you must change its cause. That cause is in the subconscious. It prompts your brain and body to produce chemicals that create the urge.
You know, on some level, that drugs are bad for the body. But it can be very hard – even impossible – to break the habit using willpower. Even the available treatments, like drug rehab centers, help some. They don't work for everyone.
The FasterEFT addiction protocol knows that, for some, it can seem hopeless. They have tried to stop using drugs but have not succeeded in breaking the habit. The truth is, there is something else going on besides a physical addiction to drugs.
The conscious mind wants to quit drugs. It has good intentions. Physical treatments aim to break the addiction. But the subconscious has "proof" that the body needs a drug-induced rush. And the conscious mind is no match for the subconscious. To stop doing drugs, you must change your subconscious. It supports your craving for them. The FasterEFT addiction protocol lets you do that.
For example:
Laura has been trying to quit doing drugs for a year. Willpower didn’t work for her. Neither did rehab, going to church, or moving to another city. Yet, each method worked for a short time (to varying degrees). But she couldn't help but go back to abusing drugs.
She found that she was most likely to start the habit again when she was feeling stressed. She argued that doing drugs helped to calm her nerves and made her feel more in control. As far as Laura was concerned, drugs immediately calmed her body with a physical effect.
Laura's conscious mind is unaware of her subconscious. It is connected to something that is causing her drug dependence. It's not what she would think.
When she was a little girl, she struggled at school and was bullied. Although neither of her parents was a drug addict, she had an aunt who used to do drugs. Since both of Laura's parents worked, she went to her aunt's home after school until her parents got home.
Laura had a close bond with her aunt. Though her aunt did not stop the bullying, she comforted Laura as she described it. Laura would feel great relief, comfort, and love. She sat on the couch with her aunt, looking into her kind, caring eyes. Her aunt would have one arm around the little girl and be doing drugs simultaneously.
Years later, as a teenager, Laura had a drug-using boyfriend. She felt the same comfort and love as her aunt.
Her conscious mind had not connected her aunt's love and comfort to the drugs. But, her subconscious had made a strong link. Laura did not do drugs while with her boyfriend. But, after he broke up with her, she felt a strong urge to try them. She found it helped her feel better – calmer. And so, her addiction began.
Here are a few resources to get you started:
- Hybrid Live/Online Level 1 Training: Get it Here!
Skills to Change Institute - eutaptics® FasterEFT™ – Skills To Change Institute