Be Set Free Fast[BSFF]

BASIC BSFF STRATEGIES Part 1 By Larry P. Nims, Ph.D.

In response to many questions about BSFF that I have received, here are some ideas that will help clarify procedures and strategies that I use with BSFF. I wish you the very best with BSFF. I am quite certain that you will see some excellent BeSetFreeFastLarrycutout2aand highly consistent results with BSFF.

A. First, by definition, recall that all treatable problems must have a set of emotional roots combined with a single belief system. Problems are the lowest common denominator in BSFF.

B. Combinations of problems are called “issues.” Therefore, issues often require multiple treatments, one for each problem, until the entire issue is resolved. However, I have found that many issues can be eliminated in one treatment. Muscle testing or assessing your SUDs level will show when this is possible and when the treatment is completed.

Even if you get a weak muscle test result on a statement like “I can eliminate all of the problems (or remaining problems) in this issue in one treatment,” just treating that subconscious block (problem) will remove it. Then you will likely be able to go ahead and eliminate all problems in that issue in one final treatment.

C. I believe that all psychological reversals (PRs) are merely a particular category of “problem.” Since PRs respond to the BSFF treatments just like any other problem, I find no reason to view them in any other way. They are just treatable problems.

D. I am often asked what to do about what have been called “energy toxins” that supposedly prevent thorough treatment Actually, I never find “toxins” as treatment problems. Perhaps that happens with methods that rely on using meridians, but I don’t see them with BSFF. The subconscious controls the meridians, so I suspect that we are automatically going beyond such problems in BSFF treatments.

By the way, several years ago I demonstrated that I could balance my meridians simply by using my cue word. This was measured and recorded on a computer program. Two of my meridians were out of balance at that time. I had to use my cue only twice to bring them back into complete balance. Don Elium was present when I did this in a busy hallway at an ACEP Conference

E. In psychotherapy, reference to “the presenting problem” is a very vague term. Often the presenting problem (the problem that a client tells us is bothering them in some way) is really a whole complex of individual problems (that is, an issue) or a combination of issues and separate individual problems.

Clinical diagnostic categories are comprised of several sets of issues, which are called “diagnostic criteria.” These diagnoses are elaborated in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) from the American Psychiatric Association. Each criterion that manifests in an individual may have multiple problems to treat. That means, in BSFF terms, that it is an issue, rather than being just one individual problem.

This manual can be very helpful as a guide for possible problems. Muscle testing for these criteria as individual statements can be quite useful as a guide to help identify possible problems. However, note that it requires several of these criteria operating together to qualify as an actual clinical diagnosis. So don’t get paranoid about these diagnoses. You are probably only an “ambulatory neurotic” like most all of us.

I trust that these ideas will be helpful to you. It is my joy to help you learn how you can skillfully set yourself and others free.

Warmly,

Larry

 

Copyright 2008, Larry P. Nims, Ph.D., Goodyear. Arizona, USA. All rights reserved.

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