A Powerful New Therapy
for Relief From Trauma and Intrusive Memories
BY SUSAN QUINN M.A., M.F.T.
EMDR, a powerful new therapy modality, is becoming more widely used by therapists,
as more and more people have experienced its ability to help them change painful
emotions and self-limiting beliefs. With this modality, people are finding that
they don't need years of psychotherapy to get the results they want. Often only
a few sessions of EMDR can give a person relief from intrusive thoughts and memories
that had been effecting and limiting their lives for years.
EMDR, or "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing" was first
developed in the late 1980s. It originally was used in PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress
Disorder) to desensitize memories and flashbacks from traumatic war experiences.
People who had been in therapy for years with no success in desensitizing their
Viet Nam war scenes, found relief with this type of therapy in a short amount
of time. It then became widely used in disaster situations such as the Oklahoma
City bombing of the Federal building where it was used with the surviving victims
and their family members.
Not everyone has had major trauma in their past, but we all have had hurtful
experiences growing up, as a part of life. These experiences cause us to develop
certain beliefs about ourselves, and what we can accomplish and expect from life.
As I use EMDR with clients, I find that many of the limiting beliefs a person
has about themselves disappear, because they were based on these hurtful experiences
of the past (formed by the child that existed then). Once the pain around these
experiences is desensitized, they are free from the limiting cognition, or belief
that they formed about themselves as a result of that belief. They now get a
more realistic, and adult belief about the self, because the emotional charge
which held the original, child view of the self, in place has been removed.
So how did this new modality of psychotherapy come about? A psychologist in
Northern California, Francine Shapiro,was walking in the park one day, thinking
about something that was troubling her. She noticed at some point, that her eyes
started moving spontaneously back and forth, and that this seemed to take the "disturbing
quality away from the issue that was troubling her. She developed this further
by working with war veterans and the astounding successes she had with them attracted
much interest among psychological researchers.
Researchers believe that material which is too painful to be processed consciously
is processed by the brain during REM sleep. What is thought to be happening with
EMDR is that it is similar to REM (rapid eye movement) sleep processing, and
that the eye movements move the material along, causing it to process through
the brain/body, leaving the person free of the strong feelings that were originally
attached to the trauma, opening a space for new perceptions about the reprocessed
issue. It is also thought that the bilateral nature of the stimulation (across
the midline of the brain) facilitates right brain-left brain communication.
There are about 40,000 licensed psychotherapists throughout the world who are
trained in this procedure. Due to a wider public demand for this treatment, therapists
are finding and developing more and more uses for this powerful therapy modality.
I use it for self esteem enhancement, trauma resolution, anxiety, and depression,
amd just about any issue people have, due to its effectiveness. I even use it
to desensitize cravings for food and cigarettes.
In working with my clients, I find that it is essential to clear past hurts
from the family of origin in order to have intimate, satisfying relationships
with the people in their lives now. This process moves people along toward accomplishing
their goal faster than anything that I have ever used. I take a developmental
approach, clearing traumas from key past events and transition points in the
clients life.
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