Struggling with food cravings or emotional eating? Join Dr Peta
Stapleton—renowned clinical psychologist and the world’s leading
EFT researcher—for a live webinar series on EFT for Food Cravings &
Emotional Eating, exclusively at wisemind.com. With over 12
years of groundbreaking clinical research, Dr Stapleton will guide
you through proven techniques that calm the nervous system, reduce
cravings, and transform your relationship with food.
This engaging series explores how Emotional Freedom Techniques
(EFT), or “tapping,” can break the cycle of emotional eating by
targeting the underlying stress and emotional triggers that drive
cravings. Backed by clinical trials, EFT has been shown to
significantly reduce food cravings, increase self-control, and
support long-term weight management—results that are maintained for
months and even years after treatment. You’ll learn step-by-step
tapping protocols, discover real-world case studies, and see brain
scan evidence demonstrating how EFT changes neural responses to
food cues.
Whether you’re a health professional or seeking personal change,
this webinar will equip you with practical, evidence-based
strategies to help yourself or your clients achieve lasting freedom
from emotional eating. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn
directly from Dr Stapleton and join the revolution in mind-body
approaches to food and wellbeing.
Learning Outcomes from Dr Peta Stapleton’s Live Webinar Series
on EFT for Food Cravings & Emotional Eating Understand the
scientific foundations and over 12 years of clinical research
supporting the use of Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) for
reducing food cravings and emotional eating, including comparisons
with gold-standard treatments like cognitive behavioral
therapy.
Gain practical, step-by-step skills in applying Clinical EFT
protocols to help clients identify and address emotional triggers,
regulate stress responses, and interrupt patterns of emotional
eating. Learn to evaluate and track progress using validated
measures, with insights into how EFT produces rapid and sustained
changes in food cravings, anxiety, and eating behaviors—even months
after