Jennifer Lawrence, MS, LMFT Lawrence Therapy Services, LLC
Serving those in Colorado since 2010
Call or email for a free phone consultation: 970 541-1016
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Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)

I am currently working with clients who would like to use EMDR as a therapy approach. I am trained in the use of EMDR and find it to be a powerful type of therapy.  Please feel free to call or email any questions you may have about EMDR.  I am extremely excited about being able to offer this well researched therapy to those struggling with a broad range of challenges.  Below is an excerpt from the EMDR International Association (EMDRIA) about EMDR:

"Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an integrative psychotherapy approach that has been extensively researched and proven effective for the treatment of trauma. EMDR is a set of standardized protocols that incorporates elements from many different treatment approaches. To date, EMDR therapy has helped millions of people of all ages relieve many types of psychological stress.

"No one knows how any form of psychotherapy works neurobiologically or in the brain. However, we do know that when a person is very upset, their brain cannot process information as it does ordinarily. One moment becomes "frozen in time," and remembering a trauma may feel as bad as going through it the first time because the images, sounds, smells, and feelings haven’t changed. Such memories have a lasting negative effect that interferes with the way a person sees the world and the way they relate to other people.

"EMDR seems to have a direct effect on the way that the brain processes information. Normal information processing is resumed, so following a successful EMDR session, a person no longer relives the images, sounds, and feelings when the event is brought to mind. You still remember what happened, but it is less upsetting. Many types of therapy have similar goals. However, EMDR appears to be similar to what occurs naturally during dreaming or REM (rapid eye movement) sleep. Therefore, EMDR can be thought of as a physiologically based therapy that helps a person see disturbing material in a new and less distressing way" (EMDRIA, emdria.org, 2013).

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