EMDR, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, is a structured, evidence-based therapy that helps the brain reprocess trauma and distressing memories so they lose their emotional charge. Rather than asking you to talk through a painful experience again and again, EMDR works with the way memory is stored, helping the mind file the past where it belongs: in the past.
It’s one of the most researched approaches to trauma, and it reaches, for many people, what talk alone cannot. EMDR is recognized by the World Health Organization as a first-line treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder, and it is endorsed by the American Psychological Association and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
How EMDR works
When something overwhelming happens, the brain can struggle to process it fully. The memory gets “stuck,” stored with the original emotion, sensation, and belief intact, so that a sound, a smell, or a thought can bring it rushing back as if it were happening now.
EMDR uses guided bilateral stimulation, often gentle side-to-side eye movements, while you briefly hold a target memory in mind. This appears to help the brain do what it couldn’t at the time: process the experience and integrate it, so it becomes a memory rather than a live wound.
What EMDR can help with
EMDR is best known for trauma and post-traumatic stress, but its reach is wider:
- Trauma and PTSD, from single events to longstanding experiences
- Intrusive or distressing memories that won’t settle
- Anxiety and panic rooted in past experience
- Grief, loss, and painful transitions
- Experiences that talk therapy alone hasn’t resolved
What to expect in EMDR
Good EMDR begins with safety, not the trauma itself. The work unfolds in phases: first, your clinician takes time to understand your history and build a sense of steadiness and resource. Only then do you turn, gently and at your own pace, toward the difficult material.
Many people find that a memory which once felt overwhelming gradually feels more distant and manageable, less charged. The number of sessions varies: a single recent event may resolve in a handful of sessions, while layered experiences take longer.
You are always in control. A skilled clinician will never push you faster than you’re ready to go.
EMDR vs. talk therapy
Both help. They just work differently. A quick comparison:
| EMDR | Traditional talk therapy | |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Reprocesses stuck memories using guided bilateral attention | Explores thoughts and patterns through conversation |
| Talking about the trauma | Minimal, you don’t have to recount every detail | Often central to the work |
| Best for | Specific traumatic memories, PTSD, stuck distress | Ongoing patterns, relationships, broad goals |
| Typical pace | Can move quickly once preparation is done | Unfolds over time |
Many people do both, or move between them, which is exactly why we match the approach to the person.
Is EMDR right for everyone?
No, and that’s worth saying plainly. EMDR is powerful, but it isn’t the only path. Some people do their deepest work through body-based approaches; others through traditional individual therapy. The right approach depends on the person, which is why we match it to you rather than the other way around.
If you’re curious whether EMDR fits your situation, the clearest next step is a conversation. You can learn more about how we offer EMDR therapy and the rest of our trauma and PTSD care in the South Bay and online across California.
If you are in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or go to your nearest emergency room.
References
- American Psychological Association, EMDR therapy and PTSD
- World Health Organization, Guidelines for the management of conditions specifically related to stress (EMDR recommended for PTSD)
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs / National Center for PTSD, EMDR for PTSD