hen a person is involved in a distressing event, they may
feel overwhelmed and their brain may be unable to process the information like
a normal memory. The distressing memory seems to become frozen on a
neurological level. When a person recalls the distressing memory, the person
can re-experience what they saw, heard, smelt, tasted or felt, and this can be
quite intense. Sometimes the memories are so distressing; the person tries to
avoid thinking about the distressing event to avoid experiencing the
distressing feelings.
Some find that the distressing memories come to mind when
something reminds them of the distressing event, or sometimes the memories just
seem to just pop into mind. The alternating left-right stimulation of the brain
with eye movements, sounds or taps during EMDR therapy, seems to
stimulate the frozen or blocked information processing system.
In the process the distressing memories seem to lose their
intensity, so that the memories are less distressing and seem more like
'ordinary' memories. The effect is believed to be similar to that which occurs
naturally during REM sleep when your eyes rapidly move from side to side. EMDR therapy helps reduce
the distress of all the different kinds of memories, whether it was what you
saw, heard, smelt, tasted, felt or thought. For more information visit the site
http://selfbetter.com/.
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