What is EMDR?
EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and
Reprocessing and was developed by Dr.
Francine Shapiro in 1987. She began using this process on veterans who were suffering
from post traumatic stress and found this treatment worked extremely well in relieving
trauma. To date, this remarkable therapy has relieved complex symptoms in more than
one million sufferers worldwide with a rapidity that almost defies belief!
With the therapist's help, the client revisits a traumatic moment or incident, and the feelings
and beliefs about the incident. The therapist moves his/her hand back and forth (like a
windshield wiper) and has the client watch the therapist's finger (like watching ping pong)
while recalling the event. Through the eye movements, the painful incident and feelings are
replaced with calmness, feelings of peacefulness and empowerment. It works quickly to end
or significantly lessen many symptoms including:
- Depression
- Chronic Anger
- Grief and Loss
- Self-esteem Problems
- Relationship Problems
- Fear, Panic or Anxiety
- Test or Performance Anxiety
- "Blocks" to Achieving Peak Performance
- Recurring Thoughts of Sexual and/or Physical Abuse, Abandonment
EMDR Theory
A traumatic incident upsets the biochemical balance of the brain's information
processing system. Because the normal excitatory/inhibitory balance is disturbed
causing over-excitation, the imbalance prevents normal adaptive resolution leaving
the incident locked in the nervous system in its original anxiety-producing form.
Subsequently, negative self-assessments and their accompanying despairing affect
keep a person "stuck." The eye movements seem to be the body's automatic
process (similar to REM sleep) for resolving, diffusing and neutralizing traumatic
information. People who are more than likely to benefit from EMDR:
- Accident victims
- Phobia sufferers (fear of flying, fear of spiders, etc.)
- Police and fire fighters who are bombarded by traumatic
memories
- Those who have experienced loss (through divorce, death,
being fired, etc.)
- Those who have experienced or witnessed a disaster (violence,
fires, earthquakes, sexual assault, molestation)
How Does EMDR Create Peak Performance?
EMDR replaces the feelings of fear and anxiety before a performance with
positive images, emotions and beliefs. It is most effective for enhancing
performances of actors, producers, athletes, musicians, test takers, public
speakers and executives.