What is TAT?
TAT or Tapas Acupressure Technique was developed in 1993 by Tapas Fleming, an Acupuncturist in California. Whilst doing allergy work she came up with a wonderful new way to help her patients end allergic reactions and traumatic stress. Over the years, TAT has been used hundreds of thousands of times by individuals world-wide to achieve better health and greater happiness. We are honored to offer these treatments at the Energy Therapy Centre. The TAT ‘procedure’ is very gentle with very powerful potential. A person doesn’t have to have vision of the origins of their pain or disharmony in order to use TAT. The procedure, together with your focus on the trauma for example, creates a connection between the cell’s memory and your function of vision. The TAT procedure (pose) itself generates energy in your brain’s vision centres. When you review the trauma, it becomes physically, mentally and emotionally integrated within moments. The transformational experience of TAT has a meditative quali
Leejay, Smart Dalek is not correct in this instance. Religious tat in the sense you are probably seeing it discussed by Anglicans is absolutely not “slang for spiritual tchotchkes”. Tchtochkes are tat per se – tat as in the kind of stuff you find in seedy souvenir stalls but when an Anglocatholic writes about seeing ‘superb tat’ at a church he/she does not mean that the church was tasteless or kitsch but the very reverse – that they had excellent elaborate vestments and ecclesiastical paraphernalia suitable for High Anglican worship. Hence a ‘tat-box’ is slang for a certain sort of High anglican church and ‘tat queens’ are priests or servers who like dressing up in elaborate vestments. Here’s a thread from Ship of Fools which has some discussion of tat on it – and a