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EYE MOVEMENT DESENSITISATION & REPROCESSING (EMDR)

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EMDR is a structured psychotherapy that aims to reduce the impact of past distressing experiences on current daily life. EMDR is highly evidence-based and recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) as a treatment of choice for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, it is effective and widely used for all manner of other difficulties like depression, anxiety, phobias, grief, and stress.

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According to EMDR theory, the cause of most forms of distress is unprocessed memories. When something threatening, distressing, or otherwise overwhelming happens to us, the part of our brain that can "digest" the experience in a useful way shuts down and the part that drives the fight, flight, and freeze response takes over. As a result, the memory of that event (the sights, sounds, feelings, bodily sensations, etc.) often gets stored in a raw and unintegrated way, and is easily triggered later in daily life. If you had a car accident years ago, for example, the sound of a car braking now might lead to panic or a flashback, as if the car accident were happening all over again.

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In EMDR therapy, we identify your current difficulties and key distressing memories that might be linked to them. We "process" these memories one-by-one by inviting you to bring to mind the memory while following a form of "bilateral stimulation", for example eye movements or gentle tapping. This is thought to encourage the brain's natural healing mechanism to become active, allowing it to make sense of the memory more adaptively through the perspective of your present, adult, growth-oriented self. Memories become much less emotionally intense, they are re-stored in an integrated way in your memory networks, and daily life becomes less activating.

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To learn more, visit the EMDR Association UK website or watch the useful videos below.

 

https://emdrassociation.org.uk/discover-emdr/the-basics

EMDR SESSIONS
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I am a trainee EMDR therapist undergoing EMDR Europe Association accredited training. I am currently offering a discounted course of EMDR to a limited number of adult clients. Sessions can be online or face-to-face (Hove, East Sussex).

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  • Initial assessment – Free

 

This 50-minute session is a chance for us to explore your history, current difficulties, resources, suitability, and readiness, to ensure we are a good fit for the kind of work I’m able to offer.

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  • Up to 10 EMDR sessions – £30 per 50-minute session

 

If we decide to go ahead, we’ll agree on a short course of EMDR sessions, up to 10. Sessions can be weekly or more frequent depending on availability. After this, we can review how things are going and if you'd like to continue EMDR together this is certainly a possibility (at my standard rate of £60-90 per session).

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If you experience or have experienced any of the following and are interested in working through this in EMDR, you are most welcome to get in touch:

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  • Anxiety, panic, or other difficult feelings relating to an isolated traumatic event experienced or witnessed in adulthood. For example, an accident, medical procedure, rape, or assault

  • A phobia

  • Grief or difficulty grieving

  • A distressing work-related event, such as witnessing or being involved in an emergency or conflict

  • An incident of public humiliation or bullying that remains painful to recall

  • Generally feeling well in yourself but curious to process some mildy difficult adulthood experiences in EMDR.

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As a trainee, I would not be the right therapist for you at this time if you experience or have experienced:

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  • A physical health condition (e.g. epilepsy, heart disease) that might make stress or gentle eye/body movements risky

  • PTSD, complex PTSD (C-PTSD), or trauma involving multiple or ongoing experiences

  • Childhood abuse (physical, sexual, or emotional)

  • Relationship or attachment-related trauma

  • Dissociative disorders, or if you regularly dissociate (e.g. memory loss, feeling "unreal")

  • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) or significant emotional instability

  • Current crisis, such as ongoing domestic abuse, homelessness, or suicidal ideation

  • Substance addiction

  • Psychosis

 

If any of these apply to you, EMDR can still be very effective, but you would need to contact a fully qualified EMDR therapist.

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