
Why I Don't Use The EFT Tapping Set-Up Phrase (Pod #701)
Why I Don't Use the EFT Setup Phrase (And What I Do Instead)
If you've watched any of my tap-along videos, you've probably noticed something: I never start with the classic EFT setup phrase. That's a deliberate choice, and I get asked about it all the time. In this post, I want to explain exactly why I skip it and what I use instead.
TL;DR / Key Takeaways
- The traditional EFT setup phrase ("Even though I have this issue, I deeply and completely accept myself") can backfire by activating unresolved self-acceptance issues when you only need quick emotional or physical relief.
- For many people, the self-love claim in the setup phrase triggers inner resistance so strong that they avoid tapping altogether.
- My alternative opening, "I recognize the fact," names present reality without demanding a self-acceptance leap, making it easier to start tapping immediately.
- Accepting that something is happening is completely different from declaring it acceptable. You can acknowledge the problem without endorsing it.
- Self-acceptance work is genuinely important and deserves its own dedicated sessions, with adequate time, space, and emotional safety.
What Is the EFT Setup Phrase?
The EFT setup phrase is a verbal statement used at the beginning of a tapping round to acknowledge the problem and introduce an element of self-acceptance. EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) is a practice developed by Gary Craig that involves tapping on specific acupressure points on the face and body while focusing on a particular issue.
When Gary Craig gave us his original Basic Recipe, tappers would begin either by rubbing what he called the "sore spot" on the chest or tapping the side of the hand. While doing that, they would say: "Even though I have this issue, I completely and deeply accept myself." As EFT spread and teachers adapted it, the most widely taught version became: "Even though I have this issue, I deeply and completely love and accept myself."
That phrase has been around so long that many people assume it is an essential, non-negotiable part of tapping. It isn't. And I want to explain why I've moved away from it.
Why the EFT Setup Phrase Can Create Problems at the Start
Starting a tapping round with "I deeply and completely love and accept myself" can backfire by pulling your subconscious attention toward unresolved self-acceptance issues when you only need relief from something much simpler.
Here's what I mean. When I sit down to tap in the middle of a busy day, I ask myself one question first: what is the goal of this round? Sometimes I'm overwhelmed and just need to take the edge off so I can get back to work. Sometimes I have a nagging physical pain that's become a distraction. In those moments, I'm doing emotional first aid or physical first aid. I'm not doing deep healing work. I'm reaching for the equivalent of an aspirin.
So imagine I sit down to tap on a headache and I say: "Even though I have this headache, I deeply and completely love and accept myself." And then my subconscious responds: "No, you don't. Here are seventeen reasons why you are unacceptable."
Key insight: "I've gone from trying to respond to my frustration to bringing up all of these self-acceptance issues that were not at the front of my mind. Now I'm dealing with not being able to love and accept myself instead of the thing I actually sat down to tap on."
That's friction. That's introducing a problem I wasn't trying to solve.
The Two Barriers the EFT Setup Phrase Creates for Tappers
The setup phrase creates two distinct barriers that can interfere with effective tapping, and understanding both helps explain why I stopped using it.
Barrier one: Scope creep. When the phrase introduces self-acceptance into a session that isn't about self-acceptance, it pulls focus in a direction you don't have the capacity to handle right now. You came to tap on frustration. Now you're wading into deeper water than you prepared for.
Barrier two: Avoidance. For many people, the phrase "I love and accept myself" feels emotionally charged or even frightening. It bumps up against years of evidence their inner critic has collected. So rather than feel that discomfort at the very start, some people simply won't tap at all. The setup phrase becomes a wall rather than a door.
Key insight: "The setup phrase can either create a speed bump going into a tapping session, or it can create a wall that stops you from tapping at all. Neither of those outcomes is useful."
In my 18+ years of working with clients and tappers, I've seen both patterns play out constantly. Someone sits down to tap on something manageable and the very first phrase they're supposed to say sends them into emotional territory they weren't ready for. Or they skip the session entirely because they already know how that opening phrase is going to feel.
What "I Recognize the Fact" Means and Why It Works
My alternative to the setup phrase is simple: I start with the words "I recognize the fact," followed by whatever I'm actually trying to address.
This idea came from the work of Ormond McGill, a legendary hypnotherapist who taught that "all transformation starts by stating what is." That principle hit me hard the first time I encountered it, and it's shaped how I approach every tapping session since.
So instead of declaring self-love, I name the present reality:
- "I recognize the fact I'm overwhelmed right now."
- "I recognize the fact I'm in a lot of pain."
- "I recognize the fact I'm beating myself up for a poor decision."
Key insight: "When I recognize the fact, I'm accepting the current circumstance. That's not the same as accepting myself. It's accepting what is going on around me. And when I accept the reality of the circumstance, I can actually do something about it."
This kind of opening also does something practical: it narrows my focus. It answers the question I asked myself at the start of the session. It says, here is the specific thing I am tapping on right now. That clarity makes every round more purposeful and more effective.
I've actually created a setup phrase generator on TappingQandA.com that produces around 2,500 different phrase variations for people who want options. But for my own practice, "I recognize the fact" is almost always where I begin.
The Difference Between Accepting What Is and Calling It Acceptable
This distinction matters a great deal, and I want to make sure it lands clearly.
Accepting what is happening is not the same as declaring it acceptable. I can acknowledge that I am overwhelmed without endorsing overwhelm as okay. I can recognize that I am in pain without resigning myself to staying in pain.
Think of it this way: I cannot fix my car unless I first accept that my car is not working. That acceptance isn't defeat. It's the accurate starting point that makes problem-solving possible. The same is true for emotional work. I cannot transform my overwhelm unless I acknowledge that I am, in fact, overwhelmed.
The traditional setup phrase conflates two different things. It asks you to simultaneously identify a problem and declare that you love yourself anyway. Both of those might be true. But they're not always what the moment calls for.
Key insight: "It is not acceptable for me to be overwhelmed, because it's getting in the way of my work. But I accept the fact that it is happening. That acceptance is what makes it possible to tap on it."
When you say "I recognize the fact," you're engaging honestly with your present experience. You're not rubber-stamping it. You're not bypassing it. You're simply seeing it clearly enough to work with it.
When Self-Acceptance Work Does Belong in a Tapping Session
I want to be clear: I am not anti-self-acceptance. Not even close.
Self-acceptance work is some of the most important tapping work you can do. Over the course of eight weeks, I offered a dedicated self-acceptance tapping program through my Tapping Mastery Academy. We met every other Saturday for 75-minute sessions, which came out to five full hours of tapping focused entirely on the work of accepting ourselves. That's how seriously I take this topic.
The point isn't that self-acceptance doesn't belong in tapping. The point is that it deserves the right container.
Key insight: "There is no work more tender than moving to a place of self-love and self-acceptance. Because of that, I want to make sure I have the time, the space, the resources, and the sense of safety to engage with it properly."
When you're doing a quick five-minute session to knock down midday stress, that's not the container for deep self-acceptance work. When you've carved out real time, you feel emotionally resourced, and you've intentionally set up to go deep, that's when self-acceptance tapping is most likely to move the needle.
Timing matters. Context matters. The setup phrase doesn't account for either.
How to Apply This to Your Own EFT Setup Phrase Practice
If you want to try this approach, the shift is simple.
Before you start any tapping round, ask yourself: what is the goal of this session? Be specific. Are you trying to reduce physical pain? Calm frustration? Process a difficult conversation? The more clearly you can name the target, the more effective your session will be.
Then begin with: "I recognize the fact [what you're actually experiencing]."
A few examples of how this sounds in practice:
- "I recognize the fact I'm dreading this conversation."
- "I recognize the fact my shoulders are tense and I don't know why."
- "I recognize the fact I'm scared about what the results might show."
You are naming reality. You are not judging it, endorsing it, or fixing it yet. You are simply stating what is so you can work with it.
If you find that sessions exploring self-love and self-acceptance are important to you (and I believe they are), schedule time specifically for that work. Don't squeeze it into every round as a required preamble. Give it the space it deserves.
For help with knowing where to begin on any tapping round, Pod #684, The one question you MUST ask before you start a round of tapping, goes deeper on that intention-setting habit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it wrong to use the EFT setup phrase?
No. Many skilled and experienced EFT practitioners use the setup phrase every single time they tap, and their work is excellent. This is about what works best for you. If the phrase helps you connect to a session and doesn't create resistance, use it. I'm sharing my reasoning, not a rule.
Why does saying "I love and accept myself" sometimes feel impossible?
Because for many people, that statement bumps directly into years of evidence to the contrary. The subconscious doesn't just agree with positive claims. If you have unresolved material around self-worth, self-love, or self-acceptance, asserting "I love myself" can trigger all of it at once, precisely when you were trying to address something else.
What if I don't know what "the fact" is when I sit down to tap?
Start as specific as you can. "I recognize the fact I feel unsettled right now" is a perfectly valid opening. You don't need to have the precise emotion mapped out. You just need an honest statement about what you're actually experiencing. The round will often help you get clearer as it progresses. For more on this, see How to tap when you can't put your finger on the exact emotions you are feeling.
Does the "I recognize the fact" phrase work for deep healing sessions too, not just quick relief?
Yes. It works at any depth. For a quick midday reset, it keeps you on target. For a deep dive, it still grounds you in honest acknowledgment of what you're working with. The difference is in how much time you give the session and how far you're willing to go, not in the opening phrase.
What did Gary Craig originally intend with the setup phrase?
Gary Craig included the setup phrase in his Basic Recipe as a way to introduce acceptance and reduce psychological reversal, a term in EFT for the inner resistance that can block healing. His original version used "completely and deeply accept myself." The self-love framing is an adaptation that became widespread as teachers built on his work.
Can I modify the setup phrase instead of dropping it entirely?
Absolutely. Many practitioners use variations like "I'm open to the possibility of accepting myself" or "I'm doing my best." If a softer version feels more honest than a full self-love declaration, that's a meaningful improvement. What matters most is that your opening statement is something your subconscious can actually get behind.
What if I've been using the setup phrase for years and it has been working for me?
Keep using it. Seriously. The goal is effective tapping that you'll actually do consistently. If the setup phrase is working for you, there's no reason to change. I'm sharing the reasoning behind my own practice, not prescribing a single right approach for everyone.
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