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What is EMDR therapy?

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a specialized, evidence-based therapy designed to help people heal from the emotional and psychological distress caused by traumatic experiences. Unlike traditional talk therapy, EMDR focuses on helping the brain reprocess painful memories so they are no longer overwhelming or disruptive.

Why EMDR works for trauma survivors

When someone experiences trauma, the brain can become "stuck," causing disturbing memories, emotions, and body sensations to resurface again and again.

EMDR uses bilateral stimulation, such as guided eye movements or tapping, to help the brain unlock and reprocess those memories in a safer, more adaptive way.

This does not erase what happened. It can reduce the emotional charge and allow people to move forward without being triggered by the past.

How survivors often describe the impact

"It helped me feel like the trauma was finally behind me, not constantly in front of me."
"I still remember what happened, but it doesn't hurt in the same way anymore."
"For the first time in years, I could sleep peacefully."

Backed by research

EMDR is recognized as an effective treatment for trauma and PTSD by organizations including:

  • World Health Organization
  • U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
  • American Psychological Association

EMDR may be helpful for

Childhood trauma

Persistent memories from early-life experiences.

Abuse or neglect

Emotional, physical, or psychological harm.

Sexual assault

Survivors of any age, gender, or circumstance.

Grief and loss

Including traumatic, unexpected, or compounded loss.

Narcissistic abuse

Long-term patterns of manipulation and emotional harm.

Domestic violence

Recent or historical exposure.

Medical trauma

Hospitalizations, diagnoses, procedures, birth trauma.

Natural disasters

Floods, fires, displacement, loss of home.

Other distressing experiences

Anything that leaves the nervous system stuck in survival mode.

EMDR is not a guarantee or a quick fix. Healing is personal and unfolds at each survivor's pace. Always work with a licensed, EMDR-trained, trauma-informed provider.