EMDR therapy in Sydney | Trauma-informed Psychological Care

Read more about EMDR therapy before you dive in.

EMDR Therapy in Sydney

Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an evidence-based therapy used to treat trauma and trauma-related difficulties. At Angela Pak Psychology, EMDR therapy is offered in Sydney as part of a trauma-informed, structured and carefully paced therapeutic process.

EMDR may be helpful for individual experiencing the effects of single-incident trauma, complex trauma, anxiety or longstanding emotional distress linked to past experiences. EMDR therapy is an experiential form of therapy that guides clients to briefly access a traumatic memory while engaging in bilateral stimulation (BLS) usually side-to-side eye movements. Instead of trying to just cope with the effects of trauma, EMDR goes straight to the core problems and works directly on those past events, present triggers, and future worries. EMDR can help reduce trauma-related symptoms such as intense and disturbing emotions, distressing visual images, strong physical sensations, and negative core beliefs. Clients may experience lasting relief from as little as 2-3 sessions for an isolated, single incident to many more sessions for complex trauma.  

Applications

Clinicians have found EMDR to be highly effective when used as a standalone therapy or in conjunction with other therapeutic modalities when treating the following:

  • PTSD and complex PTSD

  • Disturbing memories / nightmares

  • Depression

  • Anxiety / Phobias / panic attacks / performance anxiety

  • Personality disorders

  • Sexual or physical abuse

  • Complicated grief

  • Attachment and relationship issues

  • Stress

  • Dissociative disorders

  • Addiction

  • Pain disorders

Memories and trauma

People may experience a state of “reliving the trauma’’ long after the event has passed and their ability to live in the present and learn from new experiences can become inhibited. EMDR helps create the connections between the brain’s memory networks in a targeted manner by reactivating the traumatic memory using bilateral stimulation, desensitising the distress associated with the memory and reprocessing the experience in an adaptive way.

What happens in an EMDR session?

EMDR is an 8-phase protocol which includes a thorough assessment and preparation phase. During reprocessing, the client watches the psychologist’s fingers move side-to-side across their visual field while thinking about the traumatic memory. Sometimes a bar of moving lights, buzzers or sounds are used as another form of BLS. Clients often report the memory to feel more distant, they experience little to no distress and can connect a more adaptive narrative to the event such as “I am worthy”. Other associated memories may also process at the same time leading to rapid improvement in many aspects of their life.

Can anyone benefit from EMDR?

EMDR can accelerate therapy by resolving the impact of these past events and allowing clients to live more fully in the present. It is not, however, appropriate for everyone. The process is rapid, and any disturbing experiences, if they occur at all, last for a comparatively brief period. Nevertheless, the client needs to be aware of, and willing to experience, the strong feelings and disturbing thoughts, which sometimes occur during sessions. If the client is involved in a legal case and need to testify, it is advisable that the client discusses this treatment with their lawyer and psychologist before starting EMDR therapy.

Learn more: https://www.emdria.org/about-emdr-therapy/

Introducing EMDR

What does healing look like?

Fascinating look into EMDR

EMDR in the media

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Yes. EMDR therapy is offered at a Sydney practice located in the lower north shore. Telehealth options may also be available where clinically appropriate.

  • EMDR is commonly used in the treatment of trauma, PTSD, anxiety and distress linked to adverse life experiences. Even if an event is not interpreted by you as traumatic but elicits distress when you remember it, EMDR can be effective in reducing the distress, help you see it in a more adaptive way and can shift those deep negative core beliefs.

    Suitability is assessed as part of the initial consultation.

  • EMDR therapy focuses on how traumatic memories are processed in the brain and nervous system, rather than relying solely on verbally describing what happened. It is experiential, which means in the session we will touch on many facets of an experience, that is your thoughts, emotions, physical sensations, core beliefs, and visual images linked to the issue we are focussing on.

  • Compassionate, non-judgemental, honest, and straightforward. Your goals for each session and for the entirety of the treatment will be a priority. I work fairly systematically when we are clear of what the main issues are. I also allow time for exploration of the layers of problems especially when the trauma is complex and the material is hidden or behind defenses or dissociation.