Tapping Q & A - Getting the most out of tapping and EFT podcast

How Long Should You Tap on an Issue? When to Stop Tapping and Move On (Pod #699)

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If you have been tapping for any length of time, you have probably asked yourself: when am I actually done? You get some relief, the intensity drops, but the issue is not completely gone. Knowing when to stop tapping on an issue is one of the most common questions I hear, and the answer is simpler than most people think.

TL;DR: Key Takeaways

  • Knowing when to stop tapping is not about reaching a SUDS (Subjective Unit of Distress) level of zero; it is about reaching the functional outcome you defined before you started.
  • Before every round of EFT tapping, ask yourself one question: "What is the goal of this round of tapping?" and name a specific, measurable outcome.
  • You do not need to eliminate fear or resistance completely to take action; you only need to reduce the emotional intensity enough to do what you need to do.
  • For complex, layered issues like negative self-image, the same goal-and-metric framework applies across multiple tapping sessions over days or weeks.
  • The three-step process for knowing when to move on is: name the outcome, name the metric, and stop when you reach it.

Why Knowing When to Stop Tapping Matters

Most people who learn EFT tapping go through a predictable arc. First comes the honeymoon phase where you want to tap on everything and you try to get everyone in your life to tap with you (I am speaking from lived experience here). Then the enthusiasm settles and you are left staring at a giant laundry list of things you could work on.

That laundry list creates its own kind of overwhelm. What do I tap on first? How long do I stay with it? When is it "enough"? Without a clear framework for knowing when to move on, many people either keep grinding on one issue long past the point of diminishing returns or they hop between issues so quickly that nothing gets meaningful traction.

Key Insight: "It's not about completely eliminating something. It's about putting ourselves in the position so we can think, feel, believe, and act in the ways that we want to."

This reframe changes everything about how you approach your tapping practice. The finish line is not the absence of all discomfort. The finish line is functional freedom.

What Is a SUDS Level and Why It Is Not the Finish Line

SUDS stands for Subjective Unit of Distress, and it is a zero-to-ten scale used to measure emotional or physical intensity before and after tapping. If I have a pain in my shoulder, I rate it: zero to ten, how intense is this pain? I do a round of tapping, then I check again. If the number dropped from a seven to a five, I know the tapping is working.

SUDS is an excellent tool for tracking your tapping progress. The problem is that most people were taught to treat zero as the only acceptable endpoint. And the reality is that some issues will never reach a zero. Even when they could, chasing zero is not always the best use of your time and energy.

Key Insight: "There are some issues we are never going to get to a zero. And there are some issues where, even if we got it to a zero, it isn't necessarily the most useful thing for us to do."

Think of SUDS as a speedometer, not a destination. It tells you how fast you are moving, but it does not tell you where to stop.

The One Question to Ask Before Every Round of Tapping

Before every round of tapping, I ask myself what I call Question One from my Tapping Mastery Blueprint: What is the goal of this round of tapping? Not "how much distress am I feeling" but "what is the outcome I want right now?"

This single question transforms the entire tapping experience. Instead of an open-ended session with no clear endpoint, you have a specific target. The goal might be to reduce frustration enough to get back to work. It might be to lower resistance enough to send a difficult email. It might be to shift the internal story that runs through your head when you look in the mirror.

When the goal is clear, you will recognize the moment you reach it. That recognition is how you know when to stop tapping and move on with your day.

How to Set a Measurable Tapping Goal

A useful tapping goal has three parts: the outcome you want, the metric you will use to measure it, and the action that proves you have arrived. Here is how this works in practice.

Reducing frustration to refocus. If my frustration is sitting at a seven on the SUDS scale, I cannot concentrate. But if I can bring it down to a three, the moment I engage with my next task, I will be so focused on what is in front of me that I will forget what I was frustrated about. My metric is: can I clearly think about the work in front of me? When the answer is yes, I stop tapping.

Clearing resistance to take an action. The goal is not to feel zero fear. The goal is to feel safe enough to take the action with the energy and engagement it requires. My metric is: am I actually doing the thing? I have had clients working through resistance who, 23 minutes into a 30-minute session, suddenly say "I need to get off this call because I need to go do the thing right now." That is success. The tapping round is done because the goal was the action, not the absence of fear.

Key Insight: "The goal was not to get rid of the fear. The goal was not to get rid of the resistance. The goal was to take the action."

You Do Not Need to Be Fearless to Take Action

I want to share a story that illustrates this perfectly. About 16 or 17 years ago, I was making my very first real offer to my email list. I was asking for the princely sum of \(97 or \)147, which at that point in my life felt like asking for $100 million.

I had the email written. I had it loaded into my email software. I was sitting in a Starbucks in Charles Village in Baltimore. And I hit send. The moment I hit send, I slammed my laptop shut and went for a 90-minute walk on a beautiful spring day because I was terrified of what was going to happen next.

When I got home, one or two people had bought and one or two people had unsubscribed. That was the entire consequence. I did not need to be fearless. I just needed to reduce the fear enough to press the button. And here is the important part: even if the fear had come rushing back 20 minutes later, it would not have mattered because the action was already taken.

This is why outcome-based tapping goals are so powerful. Once the email is sent, the conversation is started, or the decision is made, the fear and resistance become irrelevant to that particular action.

What About Issues That Take More Than One Session?

Not every issue resolves in a single round of tapping. Some struggles, like the story you tell yourself when you look in the mirror or a deep pattern of self-doubt, require sustained work across days, weeks, or even months.

The framework stays exactly the same. You name the outcome: I want to change the internal narrative I hear when I see my reflection. You name a metric: what words do I hear in my head when I look in the mirror right now versus what I want to hear? You tap, check in, and notice whether you are closer to the outcome than you were before.

If you are closer, that session was a success, even if you are not all the way there yet. If you are not closer, that is useful information too. It might mean you need to approach the issue from a different angle, address a deeper layer of resistance, or simply give yourself more time.

The trap to avoid is treating these longer-term issues with the same urgency as an in-the-moment frustration. You would not expect one gym session to transform your body. Give your tapping practice the same patience.

How to Know You Are Done Tapping on an Issue

Here is the simple three-step framework you can use every time you sit down to tap.

  1. Name the outcome. What do I want to think, feel, believe, or do differently as a result of this tapping session?
  2. Name the metric. How will I know I have reached that outcome? What will I notice in my body, my thoughts, or my behavior?
  3. Check and move on. When you reach the metric, stop tapping on that issue. If you have not reached it and you have run out of time, note where you are and come back to it next session.

This process works whether you are tapping for five minutes on midday frustration or working through a years-long pattern of self-criticism. The scale changes but the structure does not.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I always need to get my SUDS level to zero?

No. A SUDS level of zero is not required for a successful tapping session. The goal is to reach the functional outcome you set before you started, whether that is being able to concentrate, take a specific action, or shift an emotional pattern. Many highly effective sessions end at a three or four on the SUDS scale.

How long should a single tapping session last?

There is no fixed time requirement. Some sessions take five minutes and others take thirty. The length depends on the complexity of the issue and the specific outcome you are working toward. Focus on reaching your defined goal rather than watching the clock.

What if the emotion comes back after I stop tapping?

That depends on whether you completed the action you were tapping toward. If the goal was to send an email and you sent it, the fear returning does not undo the result. For longer-term patterns, returning emotions simply mean there is more work to do in future sessions.

How do I choose what to tap on when I have a long list of issues?

Start by asking which issue is most affecting your ability to function right now. Tap on the issue that is blocking the most important action or causing the most immediate distress. You do not need to resolve your entire list before you get relief.

Can I tap on the same issue every day?

Yes, especially for deep or layered issues like self-image, grief, or long-standing patterns. Use the same goal-and-metric framework each session and track your progress over time. You should notice gradual shifts even if individual sessions feel incremental.

What is the Subjective Unit of Distress (SUDS) scale?

SUDS is a zero-to-ten self-rating scale used in EFT tapping to measure emotional or physical intensity before and after a round of tapping. Zero means no distress at all and ten means the maximum intensity you can imagine. It is a progress-tracking tool, not a mandatory endpoint.

What should I do if tapping does not seem to be working?

First, check whether your tapping goal is specific enough. Vague goals like "feel better" are hard to measure. Second, try approaching the issue from a different angle or addressing a related emotion that might be underneath the surface issue.

Episode Details
Tapping Q&A Podcast, Episode 699: How Long Should You Tap on an Issue?
Host: Gene Monterastelli
[Listen to Episode 699]

Related Episodes:
- Pod #689: When Your Expectations Sabotage Your Tapping Progress
- Pod #674: The Myth of the One Big Tapping Breakthrough
- Pod #648: What to Do When Your Tapping Transformation Feels Slow or Stuck

If you want a simple, structured way to build a consistent tapping practice, check out 365 Tapping Lessons for a guided daily tapping experience.

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