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Does Anyone Have Experience Of EMDR?

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Thanx Linasmom..that was all great info. I think that it took two sessions with me was because we knew each other and have not seen each other in about three years. She has booked me every week with the exception of my next epidurals because then i am on bedrest.

We do a lot of talk therapy and I am always counteracting my own thoughts with all the CBT I have had......some days are better than others but much better for the situation I am in right now, I think.

Thanks!!!
 
Just a few things I'd like to mention about EMDR, that my therapist and I have discussed:

1.) - it's very important while doing EMDR that you are monitored very closely, which is why my therapist insists that whenever we do EMDR he sees me the very next week. He refuses to do any EMDR work with me if for some reason we will not see each other the following week.

2.) Personally, and from what my therapist agrees with - it's also important to not just go through EMDR without also engaging in CBT or Talk Therapy during that time. To endure EMDR without those things can be dangerous as you, the patient, are experiencing feelings that you will need help sorting out.

3.) And maybe this should have been number one - the person doing EMDR should assess the patient thoroughly before proceeding. Personally, I do not believe that any Professional can assess a patient in one session.

Just my thoughts...

Best,
Rachel

Well, if that's the case my therapist failed on all three counts. And I've been wondering if somehow I was to blame for the therapy being unsuccessful. The more I hear from other people about their experiences, the more I get annoyed that my therapist put me through absolute hell, because she didn't do her job properly.
 
There is no-one else locally who does EMDR, that I know of. If there is, they would be private clinicians, that I can't afford. To be honest, at the moment, I'm feeling pretty dis-trustful of any type of therapy, so I'm going to try to give myself a break, and concentrate on getting back to work. I'm planning to reassess my options again in a month or so.
 
I just had my first 'long' EMDR session on Thursday. My counselor is someone I very much trust and respect, and that I have at least a short history with as she also does marriage counseling and my husband and I were/are seeing her for that. Her other speciality is PTSD. She's well-trained in EMDR, and has also worked with other dogbite victims.

We'd been doing talk therapy since April, and discussed EMDR early on as an option. She wanted to make sure I was 100% comfortable with the idea, and that we did it at a good time. Well, with me changing jobs the first week of June, and trying to adjust to living here with my husband full-time (I worked out of town), we agreed it was poor timing initially and that we'd hold off. This gave me a chance to talk to her a lot more, as my life has been a rollercoaster with no shortage of major changes and traumas over the last few years. We didn't start the EMDR until I felt ready, like I could potentially handle dealing with stuff that might crop up. It felt like the right time. I guess the concept of EMDR made a lot of sense to me because even as a child, I've always processed stress during my sleep. It made sense to me to engage in an activity that essentially mimics REM sleep, since that's when I'm already trying to process things.

We did a number of long sets, starting with the most charged image from the dogbite (wow, I'm physically reacting right now just thinking about that...) then moving on to the next set with an image or feeling or thought from the previous set. Sometimes an actual image popped into my head, but mostly it was physical responses. I'd notice that I felt afraid and alert, or very still, or agitated. It was like my brain wasn't telling me *what* exactly it was processing, but I was feeling the physical reactions to it...very interesting. I felt tired after, but better...and I have slept better since. I had bad nightmares several nights in a row leading up to it; the dreams are vivid and weird, but haven't been scary. I have another session this coming Friday.
 
I had no luck with it whatsoever. I went for about 7 - 8 sessions and felt my time would have been better spent in regular therapy, to which I returned and from which I have received great benefits.
 
I had my second session and the next one she actaully booked one and a half hours. It was weird...my body went completely numb, I cried alot as I went through the images that were popping into my mind and at the end of the sesssion...I had to visualize a casket and bury all the memories. It was a trip...it felt very weird, since the session...I felt like I have been run over by a truck. I have more intense body aches, dreams, insomnia, decreased appetite....I hope it works and these physical things go away...I just feel exhausted, as usual. During the session....my stomach was on fire and I let the tears flow and did they ever...my shirt was wet. I actually felt so angry that I wanted to throw the paddles across the room.....it was very emotional and a complete mixture of denial, anger, bargaining, depression and sadness....I hope I reach acceptance soon.
 
Bumping this thread because I am still doing EMDR in about half my sessions, and wanted to share that I have found it really, really helpful. Sometimes it's just like flipping an emotional switch. I'll be vaguely bothered by something, whether old or new, and we'll do a long set on it. Inevitably, I'm able to release and process - if not in the first set, then the second or third. Sometimes I'll just burst into tears, or if it's anger, punch the pillows, then burst into tears and acknowledge the hurt behind the anger. And so many other physical reactions occur; it's astounding how the body knows what's going on in the subconscious mind. For me, it's such a good technique. It's enabled me to say, "That hurt," or, "That was hard," or, "I didn't deserve that," and acknowledge long-buried things in my past. I feel like it's enabled me to see situations for what they really were...something my long-time friends have always done, but that I minimized as a defense mechanism.

Just recently I noticed that the initial trauma with which we started EMDR, the dogbite, has become far less difficult to think about and talk about - and I don't dream about it now. I had nightmares for the first time in a while last week, and although there was a lot of other scary stuff, the dog/wolf figure was conspicuously absent.

I've found it does work better when T is alternately tapping on my knees and I have my eyes closed. I have a hard time following her fingers going back and forth and back and forth with my eyes...I start counting because it reminds me of a metronome from when I played piano.

I am sometimes a mess afterward because of everything it stirs up and unearths, but am learning how to combat or deal with that better. It's really difficult sometimes, but worth it.
 
I find EMDR evokes a strange and uncanny atmosphere - well, I guess that is not the EMDR, but my own subconscious. Its flow of free association is really rich with meaning.

I have experienced amnesia, and EMDR has been very helpful in drawing me closer to those issues of memory and enabled me to map/understand my life. It is tough too, really tough.

Mina: I agree, it is amazing how the body connects to the subconscious isn't it?
 
I've been doing EMDR for three years now. I too have multiple traumas, so we started doing work around some issues that my brain "could" handle. Sometimes I can actually feel myself disconnecting when my brain has had enough.

Over the past year in particular I have noticed that some issues now only illicit a 3 on the scale, when two years ago they were a 10.

We keep building the smaller muscles so that when it comes time for me to talk about cancer (which I haven't been able to do yet), my brain will have a greater resource pool from which to draw upon.

One important note with EMDR - Please ALWAYS remember to take time towards the end of your session for your therapist to put you back into your "safe place". If you just finish up and leave, it can leave you with excruciating emotions. Always take the time to put yourself back in the safe place.
 
Good point, Mouse! At the end, we always do a couple short sets on something positive, or at least something I don't have negative feelings about.
 
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