EMDR PDF Print E-mail

EMDR stand for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing

The foundations for EMDR as a method were outlined by Francine Shapiro in 1987. EMDR is a fast and effective healing method, in which eye movements can help to heal suppressed memories and unprocessed events, without everlasting talking sessions. EMDR can provide a solutions in PTSD cases (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), behavioral problems, anxiety attacks, phobias, addictions and other more common complaints as stress, moodiness, sleep- and concentration disturbance, all of which are the result of a stressful event.

EMDR is applied to help to stimulate the ‘information management system’ in the brain to access the acceptance of stressful events through the selfhealing power of the brain. The client thinks/focuses on the unprocessed event and makes meanwhile eye-movements, stimulating both brainhalfs separately and thus making them work together better.

The purpose of the treatment is to make the client think back at the original event without causing the tension of the event. One comes free of the emotion and the automatic reaction that the memory calls forth. The originally stressful event is processed or integrated as well as all experiences and triggering mechanisms that were caused by it.

Last Updated on Friday, 02 January 2009 15:06
 
Joomla Templates by Joomlashack