EMDR: Therapy Of The Future by Valerie Sheehan
EMDR (Eye Movement
Desensitisation and Reprocessing) is a powerful and relatively new form of
psychotherapy that is challenging everything we believe or have assumed about
emotions and the nature of change.
The subject in the Pictures at the following link
received four 90 minute EMDR sessions to desensitize her trauma. The red
areas indicate over activity in the brain. Photo by Dr.
Daniel Amen. Click here
to go to see pictures of a brain before and after EMDR: BRAIN
PICS
Where once it was accepted
that psychotherapy often took years, depending on the nature of the problem
(and even then outcomes were less than wonderful), therapists and clients are
finding that problems that were resistant to years of psychotherapy are being
resolved in a very short amount of time.
Sometimes, within a few sessions.
Tom was a professional who
freelanced, and was quite successful at what he did, but he was terrified of
making a mistake in public and drawing attention to himself. As a result, he avoided eating in restaurants
with his colleagues. During EMDR therapy
Tom thought about this fear and noticed the thoughts, emotions and physical
sensations he was having. The therapist
began to move her hand from side to side in a horizontal direction and asked Tom
to follow with his eyes and simply notice what was “coming up”, and to report
this whenever the therapist stopped.
Without conversation, the
therapist began moving her hand, and again Tom followed with his eyes and
reported what he noticed. The session
continued like this for 60 minutes until Tom was experiencing only positive
feelings and thoughts. At the next
week’s session he reported that he had had lunch out with his co-workers every
day and only experienced the slightest anxiety.
Ellen entered therapy
complaining of lifelong depression. As a
child she was abused emotionally, physically and verbally. Her mother was so
incredibly sadistic that it was difficult to listen to her stories. If Ellen had been in traditional
psychotherapy it may have taken ten or more years to make significant
progress. When she began EMDR she began
to notice differences in her self-esteem, behaviour and outlook after only two
sessions. Ellen worked through many of
her worst traumatic memories and ten months later she felt she was ready to
stop therapy. She felt and acted like a
new person.
So what is EMDR, how was it
developed and how does it work? In 1987,
Dr. Shapiro began testing
this scientifically, first with war veterans suffering from PTSD (Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder). Some of
these men had been in traditional therapy for 15 to 20 years and yet they
continued to have nightmares and flashbacks that felt as if they were reliving
the horrors of war. PTSD had completely
incapacitated some of these men, but when they received EMDR treatment, many
found that years of PTSD symptoms disappeared within a few sessions.
These incredible results
were repeated when EMDR was tested with rape victims and victims of other types
of trauma. What is remarkable is that
during her research, Shapiro found that not only does EMDR desensitize painful
memories but people spontaneously began to view themselves and the event in a
healthier and more positive way. So,
“I’m worthless” became, “I’m a good and lovable person and deserving of love
and respect”.
Exactly how EMDR works is
not really known. We do know from memory and brain research that painful or
traumatic experiences are stored in a different part of the brain than pleasant
or neutral ones. Normally, if we’re
troubled by something, we think about it, talk about it, perhaps dream about it
and eventually we are able to come to some sort of adaptive resolution (We find a way to come to terms with it in a
healthy way, enabling us to put it behind us.)
Something happens that
interrupts this process when we experience a trauma or very painful event.
Instead, the traumatic material gets *stuck* in the brain and remains in its
original form, with the same thoughts, feelings, bodily sensation, smells and
sounds. It’s as though it is sealed off
from the healthy, functioning brain.
That’s why it’s not uncommon for a person who’s had years of traditional
talk therapy to find that they still hurt and haven’t changed as much as they
had hoped. This is because the dysfunctional stored material still has not been
processed.
What researchers think is
that EMDR in some way is able to *nudge* that material so that it
neurologically reconnects with the healthy brain and then is reprocessed and
integrated at an accelerated speed. The
most popular theory is that when the eyes move back and forth it creates brain
activity similar to that which occurs during REM (rapid eye movement)
sleep. It’s during this REM phase (when
we dream) that we resolve conflicts, process information and consolidate
learning and memory.
More simply put,
information processing takes place. By creating
similar brain activity, while thinking about the painful event, it appears that
EMDR is able to help the brain finally process the *stuck* material, enabling
the person to arrive at an adaptive resolution.
The painful event or trauma becomes an unfortunate memory but is no
longer produces the emotional pain that it did before.
Since Dr. Shapiro took that
walk through the park in 1987 and chanced upon this discovery, nearly 30,000
licensed therapists, throughout the world have taken the EMDR Institute’s
training program. What’s wonderful is
that over the past ten years many accomplished therapists have found that EMDR
is helpful in treating many other problems besides PTSD. Some of these include other anxiety
disorders, depression, sexual abuse issues, work related problems and low
self-esteem.
Furthermore, some EMDR
therapists have found that EMDR can enhance the performance for athletes,
performing artists and writers, to name a few.
It is important to understand that EMDR is not merely a technique using
eye movements, but a complex, integrative method that utilises a very precise
protocol. Nor is it a “miracle cure” as
some people have been led to believe.
Most long term problems are not cured in three sessions, however
treatment is generally much shorter than traditional talk therapies, which is
an advantage in the age of managed care. (Something the
EMDR has changed the face
of psychotherapy and continues to do so.
As scientists learn more about the brain, using new and sophisticated
methods such as brain imaging, we may gain a deeper understanding of how the
brain and EMDR works.
Valerie A. Sheehan, CSW
is a licensed psychotherapist, EMDRIA
Certified in EMDR She has a private
practice in Huntington, NY USA Visit these sites for more info on
EMDR www.emdrportal.com www.emdr.com