EMDR Therapy in Scottsdale

EMDR has shown to produce rapid and often dramatic change, especially for survivors of trauma.

Though it may seem like magic, the EMDR therapy offered in Scottsdale yields positive results that cannot be ignored; testimonials from therapists show it can work in dramatic fashion.

A client-centered therapy, EMDR (Eye movement, sensitization and reprocessing) sometimes produces rapid and often dramatic change, especially for survivors of trauma.

What Is EMDR Therapy?

EMDR therapy combines images, sensory perception and related thoughts. The subject concentrates on a therapist’s repeated back and forth hand motion. The treatment exposes the patient to traumatic memories, while it simultaneously desensitizes neural messages. The end result can be decreased anxiety and depression, and replacement of these negative feelings with more positive, reinforcing messages.

More than simple desensitization though, EMDR is considered to be rapid mental information processing.

History of EMDR Therapy

EMDR was discovered in 1987 by Francine Shapiro, a graduate student studying psychology, while she was walking in a park in California. Shapiro, a former high school teacher, had developed cancer in 1979: moved to California: divorced: and studied meditation, imagery, hypnosis, and NLP (neurolinguistic programing, another therapy technique). Beset by disturbing thoughts and old memories as she walked, Shapiro began moving her eyes rapidly back and forth, and found the thoughts and memories has disappeared.

This chance discovery led to further experimentation. Initially, Shapiro worked with volunteers, later she did a formal study with survivors of rape, childhood sexual abuse and war. Her subjects suffered from flashbacks and sleep disturbances, and had low self-esteem and relationship problems. In what became her doctoral thesis, Shapiro reported that her subjects’ memories had lost their negative impact and that positive self-statements were significantly more believable after only a single 60-minute session.

Now thousands of therapists, including myself, have been trained in EMDR. It is a standard treatment at more than a dozen VA medical centers. 

Why It Works

It may seem somewhat preposterous to think that simply flickering one’s eyes back and forth while calling up trauma will result in a cure. Actually, the process is more complex than that: many components in addition to high clinical standards are needed for full effectiveness.

Based on testimonials from therapists, EMDR has sometimes been known to work in dramatic fashion. Shapiro believes that EMDR activates a neuropsychological survival mechanism that permits people to resume their lives after sever trauma. She also calls the method, “accelerated information processing,” to explain the sometimes remarkably fast clinical results), and believes it may allow survival-related data to be rapidly processed, perhaps similar to what happens during rapid-eye-movement stages of sleep.

In short, EMDR is thought to quickly open pathways within the brain (pathways which may not be as quickly accessed through conventional therapy), and to release mental blocks (an aftereffect of trauma) caused by brain chemistry changes.

The relationship between eye movement and the neural action is largely a mystery Shapiro theorizes that the traumatic memories frozen in the brain are quickly thawed by the eye movements. This thawed “memory package” then reconnects to the rest of the brain, from which it was previously isolated.

Outcomes

One compelling outcome of EMDR treatment is a reassuring realization, sometimes philosophical, sometimes spiritual, of a greater power or another dimension, often ending with patients experiencing a peaceful, nonthreatening visualization. It is here that EMDR becomes especially intriguing. Based on reports, the experience of each person successfully treated is unique, while outcomes are similar: decreased levels of anxiety, depression and flashbacks, and replacement of these with something more positive.

Reclaim Your Peace with EMDR Therapy in Scottsdale

Ready to overcome trauma and rediscover emotional balance? Dr Brad Shamis offers EMDR therapy sessions – a safe, effective way to process distressing memories and promote lasting healing. Schedule your session today and take the first step toward a more grounded, empowered you.

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