EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. EMDR therapy is an integrative psychotherapy approach and has been developed and proven effective for trauma, anxiety, and depression through extensive research. EMDR therapy has been recognized as an effective treatment by national and international organizations, such as the American Psychiatric Association, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), and World Health Organization (WHO).
EMDR therapy is an evidence-based psychotherapy method based on the Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) Model. The AIP Model suggests that our ability to effectively cope with our current experiences is heavily influenced by the way past experiences are stored in our brain. Generally, our brains are able to process life experiences fully, allowing us to cope with and respond effectively to the events in our lives. However, when we experience trauma and other stressful experiences, our brains sometimes become overwhelmed, leading us to process those experiences in an incomplete way. This in turn causes the memories to be stored as if we are still in those experiences, including feelings, images, thought patterns and bodily sensations. As a result, these past memories are triggered by our daily experiences, causing us to behave in ways that are ineffective for us.
So what does this all mean? You have probably seen an action movie where the main character is driving and being chased by bad guys. Imagine you are the main character and your partially processed memories are bad guys. You keep driving in your effort to get to safety, away from the bad guys. This is comparable to you not being able to be fully present in your current experience, because you always feel you are running from the bad guys. It may feel like they are hitting your car from behind as they catch up to you. Because you are primarily looking for ways to get to safety, you are only able to look in your rearview mirror momentarily, catching glimpses of what is going on behind you. And you certainly don’t have many resources that allow you to enjoy the present moment, or look forward to the road ahead of you. The only thing you can do in those moments is to try to outrun the bad guys, never being able to feel safe, until after they are somehow stopped.
EMDR therapy is a proven and effective way to stop those “bad guys” and allow you to drive your metaphorical car in the present with peace, handling problems as they arise, but no longer living in the past. As you heal you will be able to see the bad guys getting farther away through the rearview mirror, no longer creating a threat to you. You will be able to more fully experience the present, and you will also be able to more clearly see the road ahead and the possibilities that are before you.
Just as the main characters in the movies have courage and tools to take care of their problems and reach places of peace and safety, EMDR therapy, along with your courage, may be the tool to finally help you see more clearly your past, present, and future, as you begin your healing process.
At Brookhaven Counseling, we have the tools to help you deal with your trauma, including EMDR. Schedule a free consult with one of our skilled and caring therapists today!
Phone: 385-220-0770
Email: hello@brookhaven.co
Address: 2578 West 600 North Suite 102, Lindon, Utah 84042