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What is an
EMDR® session like?
First, client and therapist
work together to collect basic information about the traumatic
experience. The most disturbing part of the incident is
identified and becomes the processing target. Example: Image of
the rapist’s face. The negative belief connected to the trauma
is identified. Example: I’ll never get over this. And a
preferred, positive belief is named. Example: It’s over, I can
move on with my life now. Next, client is asked to rate (on a
1-7 scale) how true the positive belief feels when paired with
the target. Usually it does not feel very true at this point.
Client is asked to name the emotions the target elicits, to rate
the associated distress level (on a 0-10 scale), and to locate
the disturbance in the body. Example: Fear and shame, with
disturbance level 10, in belly and chest. Then, client is asked
to hold in awareness the target, the negative belief, and the
disturbing body sensations. At the same time, the therapist
guides the client’s eyes to move rapidly back and forth. This
is done in sets, which may last from a few seconds to a few
minutes. During each set the client is instructed to just notice
whatever changes occur in mind and body, without controlling the
experience in any way. Very often, in the first few sets there
is an increase in the disturbance level. After awhile, with each
new set, the target becomes less and less disturbing and the
positive belief feels more and more true. The target is
completely processed when recall of the image no longer brings
up disturbing emotions, and the preferred positive belief feels
totally true. Example: Client recalls that the rapist’s face
was threatening then but does not feel threatened by the image
anymore. (Bilateral audio tones are an alternative to eye
movements)
How does EMDR®
work?
Research to answer this
question is now in progress at The Human Resource Institute’s
Trauma Center in Brookline, MA. Researchers there are using
SPECT brain-scan imaging to map the changes that occur after
EMDR ® treatments. It is known that the brain has a natural
mechanism for processing disturbing events, however, when a
traumatic experience is overwhelming the brain may not be able
to process it in the usual way. That is why severely traumatized
people often find themselves stuck in disturbing memories long
after the traumatic event. Research suggests that an important
part of the natural trauma processing happens during REM (rapid
eye movement) sleep, which provides alternating stimulation of
the right and left hemispheres of the brain. This may help
explain why EMDR therapy seems to jump-start the brain’s
natural healing ability, allowing the traumatic memory to become
less and less disturbing.
Has EMDR ®
been researched?
EMDR ® is now the most
researched treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Many scientific studies have shown it is effective and
long-lasting. For example, in December 1995 a study by Wilson,
Becker, and Tinker was published in the prestigious Journal of
Consulting and Clinical Psychology. The study showed that 80
subjects diagnosed with PTSD showed significant improvement
after EMDR therapy. At a 15-month follow-up, treatment benefits
were unchanged. For more information about EMDR ® research
contact the EMDR International Association (512) 451-5200.
Books
about EMDR
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An EMDR®
Story . . .
Summarized from Chapter 9 in
EMDR: The Breakthrough Therapy for Overcoming Anxiety Stress
& Trauma (Shapiro & Forrest).
Mia was a single mother
whose 12-year-old son and only child was killed by a train when
his shoe became stuck in the track. For a year after his death
she had obsessive thoughts and nightmares about the accident.
Her depression was intense and she often thought of suicide. Mia
took a disability leave from work because she couldn’t
concentrate or function well. She was treated with Prozac,
Ativan, and weekly "talk" therapy, but 13 months after
her son’s death she felt even more hopeless and distressed.
Running out of money, her doctor suggested she enroll in a free
PTSD research study at Yale Psychiatric Institute. There she was
seen by psychiatrist Steve Lazrove for three sessions of EMDR.
In the first treatment session she described the worst part of
the story and rated it a "10" on a 0-10 disturbance
rating scale. Mia reported the emotion was a terrible pain in
her chest, and a sense that "my heart was stolen from
me." She said, "I feel guilt. He was my
responsibility." Lazrove elicited a more positive belief,
that it was an accident and not her fault. Then he had her focus
on the most disturbing images and thoughts and guided her eyes
to move back and forth. Gradually, over the course of about an
hour, and after 23 sets of eye movements, the details of the
memory became less disturbing. By the end of the first session
she reported she could think about the accident scene and it no
longer felt distressing. "I feel relieved. I feel more
comfortable, like a weight has lifted off me. When I think about
that the way I did before, it was really hard, it was really
painful. But I don’t see it like that anymore. The painful
part is gone out of that." By the end of the three sessions
she came to feel that it had neither been her fault nor her
son’s fault. At the 8-month follow-up visit Mia reported she
had returned to work. She was sleeping well and was no longer
having obsessive thoughts about the accident.
For more
information about EMDR® contact:
Brian J Nuttall
MSc & PG Dip Psychotherapy
EMDR & BAC Accredited
Therapist
Email: CompanyWebmaster
Web: www.affectivetherapy.co.uk
Tel: 0044 (0)1372 450572
EMDR Association
UK & Ireland
PO Box 32283 LONDON W5
3YB Tel: 0208 752
0429 email: emdr.enq@btopenworld.co.uk
Web Site:
www.emdr-practitioner.net
EMDRIA
EMDR
International Association
PO Box 140824
Austin Texas 78714
Tel: (512) 451-5200
Web Site:
www.emdria.org
Email: emdria@aol.com
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