facebook logo

The Insight Clinic: Assessments, Psychotherapy, ABA Therapy

Eye Movement Desensitization
and Reprocessing

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing

Reduces emotional distress triggered by memories and requires much less “homework” for clients.

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, or EMDR, is a type of psychotherapy that helps people recover from the symptoms and emotional distress brought on by traumatic life events. EMDR is a proven treatment for PTSD, applicable to anxiety disorders and OCD, phobias.

It’s a common belief that intense emotional pain takes a long time to heal. The use of EMDR therapy demonstrates that, like the body, the mind is capable of recovering from psychological trauma. Your body works to heal the wound when you cut your hand.
EMDR therapy shows that mental processes follow a similar course of action.
The way the brain processes information naturally leans toward mental wellness.
If the impact of a disturbing event blocks or unbalances the system, the emotional wound festers and can result in severe suffering.
Healing can resume once the block has been removed.

Clinicians assist patients in triggering their innate healing processes by applying the specific protocols and techniques they learned in EMDR therapy training sessions.

The therapy is to teach the client coping skills first and then we focus on working with the big fear or traumatic experience. In that stage, during session, we choose to focus on an image, a memory, a bad dream or any other symbol that represents the fear of the client while using bilateral stimulation which is associated with a reduction of the emotional discomfort. This allows the fear to be processed in the background of the mind while we play and reprocess in a symbolic way.
Clients are recommended to commit to 6-12 sessions on a weekly or bi-weekly basis. Best suited for clients who experience recurring negative memories, vivid flashbacks, phobias or OCD.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is EMDR?

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is an evidence-based trauma therapy that helps the brain process distressing memories that were not fully integrated at the time they occurred. When an experience is overwhelming, the nervous system may store it in a fragmented, threat-based way. EMDR helps those memories move from a state of emotional reactivity to one of adaptive resolution.

For example, an adult who was in a car accident may intellectually know they are safe, yet their body reacts with panic when driving. EMDR helps the brain update that memory so the present no longer feels dangerous.

EMDR is most well-known for treating PTSD, but it is also effective for anxiety disorders, phobias, panic attacks, grief, attachment wounds, and distressing life experiences such as medical trauma or childhood emotional neglect. It can also help with negative self-beliefs like “I’m not safe,” “I’m powerless,” or “Something is wrong with me,” which often develop after repeated stress or trauma.

EMDR uses bilateral stimulation—such as guided eye movements, tapping, or tones—to activate both sides of the brain while the client briefly accesses a distressing memory. This process supports the brain’s natural ability to reorganize and integrate information.

As reprocessing occurs, memories tend to lose their emotional intensity. Clients often report that the memory feels farther away, less vivid, or emotionally neutral, even though they still remember what happened.

Not necessarily. EMDR does not require clients to describe their trauma in detail or relive it verbally. The focus is on internal experience—sensations, emotions, and beliefs—rather than storytelling. This can feel especially relieving for clients who find talking about trauma overwhelming or retraumatizing.

Yes. EMDR is adapted for children using developmentally appropriate tools such as play, drawing, movement, and imagination. Sessions are paced carefully, and children are never pushed beyond what their nervous system can tolerate.

Some clients notice significant shifts within a few sessions, while others benefit from longer-term EMDR, especially when trauma is complex or developmental. The timeline depends on history, nervous system stability, and current stress levels.