Specialised Therapy

EMDR Therapy

Eye Movement Desensitisation & Reprocessing — a powerful, evidence-based path to healing from trauma, anxiety, and PTSD.
What is EMDR?

A Path to Healing

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a powerful, evidence-based psychotherapy technique designed to help individuals process and heal from traumatic experiences. Using bilateral stimulation — typically through guided eye movements — EMDR helps the brain reprocess distressing memories, reducing their emotional charge and facilitating healthier coping mechanisms.

Whether you’re struggling with trauma, anxiety, depression, or PTSD, EMDR can offer significant relief by transforming negative thoughts and feelings associated with past events. It has been widely recognised for its effectiveness in helping people move past emotional blocks and regain a sense of peace and emotional balance.

Our therapists are trained in EMDR and can guide you through this transformative process in a safe and supportive environment.

Why Choose EMDR?

Evidence-Based

EMDR is recognised by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and Australian Psychological Society as a gold-standard trauma treatment.

Faster Results

Many clients experience significant relief in fewer sessions compared to traditional talk therapies — some see shifts in 6–12 sessions.

Gentle & Safe

You don't need to describe trauma in detail. EMDR allows healing without requiring you to re-live distressing experiences verbally.

Research-Backed

Decades of controlled studies including Shapiro (2001) and van der Kolk et al. (2007) confirm EMDR's effectiveness for trauma and PTSD.

The Process

Research & References

Shapiro, F. (2001). Numerous studies have shown EMDR’s efficacy in treating trauma, anxiety, depression, and PTSD. Shapiro demonstrated its success in significantly reducing symptoms of PTSD in a controlled study. Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: Basic principles, protocols, and procedures (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.

van der Kolk, B. A. et al. (2007). Found EMDR to be highly effective for trauma survivors, particularly in cases where traditional therapies had not been successful. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 20(4), 405–413.

Benefits

EMDR is Suitable For

How EMDR Works

EMDR follows a structured eight-phase protocol. Here are the core phases your therapist will guide you through:

History & Planning

Your therapist gathers background information, identifies target memories and agrees on a treatment plan tailored to you.

Preparation

You learn relaxation and coping techniques so you feel safe and in control before trauma processing begins.

Assessment

Together you identify the specific memory, the negative belief attached to it, and the positive belief you'd like to hold instead.

Desensitisation

Using bilateral stimulation (guided eye movements or tapping), the brain reprocesses the distressing memory, reducing its emotional charge.

5

Installation

The positive belief is strengthened and installed, replacing the old negative belief associated with the trauma.

Body Scan & Closure

Your therapist checks for any residual tension and helps you return to a state of calm before finishing the session.