When I received bilateral eye movement therapy and bilateral body tapping therapy and felt the incredibly efficient and fast transformation of my fears into simple events in my past, I was compelled to try eye movement therapy on one of my very spooky and unrideable horses on a dare! He responded so well that I read and studied everything I could about bilateral eye movement therapy and bilateral body tapping therapy, then transformed the human protocol for the eye and mind of the horse and added bilateral body tapping. Body tapping has also been added to human bilateral eye movement therapy and bilateral body tapping therapy since it was first invented in the mid 1980s.
This work began three years ago and included a field study of spooky horses. If you would like information contained in the field study, you can contact me and I will send you the private link to this section of the site, not available on-line for the general public.
bilateral eye movement therapy and bilateral body tapping therapy is the most widely used and probably also the most widely studied PTSD therapy because it works so quickly on humans. That efficiency also garners the most criticism since conventional therapy takes months and years and gives very mixed results. Because bilateral eye movement therapy and bilateral body tapping therapy deals directly with the human brain through the optic nerve and skeletal structure, sending interrupt signals to the brain while the patient is asked to re-live and then re-think his traumatic experience, reprocessing of the harmful memory happens quickly.
In horses, this is even quicker since they don’t have the language overlay and the ego attachment to neuroses that humans have. Neurosis is defined as the unwillingness or inability to make positive changes. Horses want to change and be whole, functioning members of the herd and in their partnership with humans.
ESCT is directly based on an ancient Indonesian eye movement practice, believed to be 5,000 years old. No written record exists prior to that time, so it may even be older than that. In that treatment, the shaman would move his hand in a figure eight configuration in front of his patient's eyes, with a pause at the top and the bottom of each loop before each eye. This infinity loop eye therapy is still used in remote areas of the Indonesian archipelago. ESCT is also based on self-administered human eye movement. The technique for that can be learned from books available to the general public.