EMDR therapy is applicable for a
wide range of psychological problems that result from overwhelming life
experiences. During the processing of difficult memories, a person who has been
abandoned by a spouse may come to realize that she is loveable and is no longer
overwhelmed by negative feelings about her or participate in unproductive
behaviors stemming from those feelings. A person fearful of driving due to a
terrible car accident in the past may end the session feeling safe to drive
again.
EMDR therapy is a cost-effective,
non-invasive, evidence-based method of psychotherapy that facilitates adaptive
information processing. EMDR therapy is an
eight-phase treatment which comprehensively identifies and addresses
experiences that have overwhelmed the brain’s natural resilience or coping
capacity, and have thereby generated traumatic symptoms and/or harmful coping
strategies. Through EMDR therapy, patients are able to reprocess traumatic
information until it is no longer psychologically disruptive.
During this procedure, patients
tend to process the memory in a way that leads to a peaceful resolution. This
often results in increased insight regarding both previously disturbing events
and long held negative thoughts about the self. For example, an assault victim
may come to realize that he was not to blame for what happened, that the event
is really over, and, as a result he can regain a general sense of safety in his
world.
Since the development of EMDR therapy, many
adaptations of the therapy have been established to address particular types of
psychological problems, but all specialized applications rest on EMDR’s basic
protocols and concept of adaptive information processing. The therapist works gently with the client and
asks him/her to revisit the traumatic moment or incident, recalling feelings
surrounding the experience, as well as any negative thoughts, feelings and
memories. The therapist then holds her fingers about eighteen inches from the
clients face and begins to move them back and forth like a windshield wiper.
The client tracks the movements
as if watching ping pong. The more intensely the client focuses on the memory,
the easier it becomes for the memory to come to life. As quick and vibrant
images arise during the therapy session, they are processed by the eye
movements, resulting in painful feelings being exchanged for more peaceful,
loving and resolved feelings. Although a fairly new therapeutic technique, EMDR
is meeting with much success all across the county. EMDR is a natural process.
The client and the therapist become partners on a journey to help move
traumatic and blocked energy. Together they work to transcend and free up the
energy, so the client can return to their natural grounded state of being. The
goal of this work is to help the client heal, so they can return to their life
in peace.
There are number factors to
consider when evaluating the appropriateness of EMDR therapy for a client's
particular situation and history. During your initial consultation with a
trained EMDR therapist, all the relevant factors will be discussed in full to
help you both come to a decision to move forward with EMDR. For more information visit the site http://selfbetter.com/
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