Maggie, I understand that on the inside of this therapy relationship you might be perceiving only that you feel trust in her, how much she's working to help you, how she has stayed with you when the NHS hasn't helped, how she's affordable and you feel other options aren't and so on.
From the outside, I've got to be honest and say the situation sounds alarming and concerning. There are red flags everywhere. It isn't just about her not having all the tools. From what you say, she doesn't have the experience or judgement. A therapist needs to be monitoring, pacing, guiding, putting on the brakes where needed. Instead, she has put you in a very risky position doing EMDR the way she did. Even if you wanted to do it, she shouldn't have gone ahead.
I can't even start to understand the decision for her to train in EMDR for your sake. As Abstract has pointed out, the first thing to think about EMDR with a client such as yourself is that the therapist should be experienced. The second is that the client should be stable enough. Neither of these things seem to have come into her thinking, and I'm surprised she didn't pick up on any of this during the training she did.
More than anything, it seems to me she isn't being responsible about her own limitations. I fear that she may be over-involved in your case - that she wants to help you to an extent that's muddying her perspective and professionalism. I don't see healthy therapist-client boundaries, and the roles seem to be getting very blurred with you informing her of things about your condition, sending her information and the two of you planning to attend a workshop together.
Her being willing to learn new things isn't the point, except to make it alarming that she's willing to try working with you in ways that are so new to her. I can't feel that this is responsible. If the idea of sensorimotor therapy is that she'll learn it then do it with you, I would warn you not to.
I'm sorry, but I can't feel there's anything right about her actually treating you in any way or doing trauma work with you. If you see her for support only, and are getting other help, then I could understand that. But for her to be actually leading you in these kinds of approaches that she knows little about (or are you leading her?) is seriously worrying.
From the outside, I've got to be honest and say the situation sounds alarming and concerning. There are red flags everywhere. It isn't just about her not having all the tools. From what you say, she doesn't have the experience or judgement. A therapist needs to be monitoring, pacing, guiding, putting on the brakes where needed. Instead, she has put you in a very risky position doing EMDR the way she did. Even if you wanted to do it, she shouldn't have gone ahead.
I can't even start to understand the decision for her to train in EMDR for your sake. As Abstract has pointed out, the first thing to think about EMDR with a client such as yourself is that the therapist should be experienced. The second is that the client should be stable enough. Neither of these things seem to have come into her thinking, and I'm surprised she didn't pick up on any of this during the training she did.
More than anything, it seems to me she isn't being responsible about her own limitations. I fear that she may be over-involved in your case - that she wants to help you to an extent that's muddying her perspective and professionalism. I don't see healthy therapist-client boundaries, and the roles seem to be getting very blurred with you informing her of things about your condition, sending her information and the two of you planning to attend a workshop together.
Her being willing to learn new things isn't the point, except to make it alarming that she's willing to try working with you in ways that are so new to her. I can't feel that this is responsible. If the idea of sensorimotor therapy is that she'll learn it then do it with you, I would warn you not to.
I'm sorry, but I can't feel there's anything right about her actually treating you in any way or doing trauma work with you. If you see her for support only, and are getting other help, then I could understand that. But for her to be actually leading you in these kinds of approaches that she knows little about (or are you leading her?) is seriously worrying.