•Healing disturbing and
traumatic memories•
•Transforming negative
and self-limiting beliefs and emotions•
•Resolving shame,
anxiety, phobias•
•Performance Enhancement•
•Smoking cessation and habit control•
WHAT IS EMDR?
EMDR is a relatively new
technique used in psychotherapy. It was developed in 1987 by Dr. Francine Shapiro,
a psychologist, for rapid treatment of anxiety and traumatic memories. Since then it has been applied to a
wide variety of issues.
This technique involves
the therapist eliciting rhythmic, bilateral eye movements from the client. At the same time, the client is asked
to focus on an image or memory, feelings and physical sensations created by the
memory, or negative beliefs about the self associated with the memory.
WHAT DOES IT DO?
This procedure is
extremely effective in releasing disturbing images, feelings, and negative
beliefs, resolving traumatic memories, and in eliminating symptoms such as
anxiety, emotional disturbances, nightmares, flashbacks, low self-esteem,
dysfunctional behavior, and phobias.
It helps to integrate “blocked” memories into a healthier self-image and
outlook.
EMDR brings unconscious,
repressed or forgotten information and aspects of a person’s experience into
consciousness quickly. It helps
clients discover answers for themselves by strengthening positive beliefs, feelings,
and experiences and desensitizing negative experiences.
HOW DOES IT WORK?
No one is sure exactly
how it works. It appears to work
by a process similar to what occurs in the brain during REM sleep which is
thought to be a key information processing period. REM sleep helps us cope with upsetting incidents, making
life’s difficulties more manageable by a process still not understood. A shock to the system such as a
traumatic incident keeps us from coping.
When a trauma occurs, that processing gets disrupted and doesn’t
work. The brain goes into shock
and the experience gets frozen in our nervous system and the mind just repeats
the information over and over again.
When we use eye movements, the blocked processing is opened up and
accelerated. It’s like unpacking a log jam. It brings information to conscious awareness quickly. When various aspects of a memory are
retrieved, it allows for integration which enables a person to move forward in
their life.
The EMDR therapist is
specially trained to guide the client through the memories, images, feelings,
body sensations, and negative beliefs until they are resolved. The natural healing ability of the
brain kicks in and transforms what is “negative” into positive.
WHAT KINDS OF PROBLEMS
IS IT USED FOR?
EMDR has been
successfully used to treat:
anxiety, depression, performance anxiety, disturbing or traumatic
memories, smoking, physical, emotional and sexual abuse, nightmares, shame and
low self-esteem, panic attacks, phobias, negative beliefs about the self,
eating disorders, grief reactions, post-traumatic stress disorders, sexual
dysfunction, chemical dependency, dissociative disorders, crime victims, and
other problems. It can also be
used to help people resolve issues that have kept them stuck in dysfunctional
relationships.
HOW QUICKLY DOES IT WORK
AND WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS?
With some problems such
as trauma, it works almost immediately.
People often report relief within hours of the session and usually
within a day or two. With other
issues, the changes are more subtle.
The benefits are
many. They can be relief from
disturbing memories, increased self-esteem, increased energy, relief of various
symptoms, a more positive outlook on life, and positive changes in behaviors.
HOW WAS IT DISCOVERED?
Dr. Francine Shapiro
discovered the process one day while walking in a park. She noticed she was having disturbing
thoughts and that after making bilateral eye movements, recurrent unpleasant
memories and associations were receding from her mind. She was spontaneously doing the eye
movements while concentrating on the images. When she purposely repeated the process---evoking disturbing
thoughts and moving her eyes in the same manner---the results were consistent. The thoughts disappeared. She then refined the eye patterns in
experimental sessions with volunteers.
Then she tested EMDR on rape victims and Vietnam veterans who were
having persistent traumatic memories.
It proved very effective in alleviating the memories’ disturbing
characteristics.
Contact Jan DiSanto
TO SET UP AN APPOINTMENT OR GET MORE INFORMATION
(415) 383-4385