Evidence-based trauma therapy, explained in plain terms.
You don't need to know the clinical language to start. Here's what the work actually involves, why it helps, and what a session is really like, so you can decide if it's right for you.
Processing what's stuck
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing
Some experiences get stuck. The memory still carries the same charge it did the day it happened, and it can surface without warning. EMDR is a structured, well-researched method for helping the brain finish processing those memories so they lose their grip.
In practice, you briefly bring a difficult memory to mind while following a back-and-forth motion or tapping. That gentle, rhythmic focus seems to free up the brain's own ability to reprocess the event, the way it does during deep sleep. You stay in control the whole time, and you don't have to narrate every detail out loud.
People often describe the result as the memory still being there, but no longer hijacking them. It becomes something that happened, rather than something that keeps happening.
Working with the body, not just the story
Body-based, nervous-system-aware therapy
Trauma is not only a memory. It lives in the nervous system, in the clenched jaw, the shallow breath, the constant scan of every room. That alarm can be very hard to switch off.
Somatic work helps you notice what your body is doing and learn to settle it, in real time. Instead of only talking about stress, you build the practical skill of bringing your own system back down, which is often what's missing when talk therapy alone hasn't been enough.
It's grounded, not mystical. The goal is simple: to feel safe in your own body again.
Making peace with the parts of you
IFS: a parts-based approach
We all have different parts. The part that stays hard and in control. The part that goes numb to get through. The part that carries the anger, or the grief. After hard seasons, those parts can end up running the show.
Internal Family Systems is a respectful way of getting to know those parts instead of fighting them. Each one, even the difficult ones, originally formed to protect you. When they feel understood, they relax, and you get more access to the steady, grounded core that was there all along.
It's not about being broken into pieces. It's about leadership: helping the calm, capable part of you lead the rest.
Your first few sessions
We start with a conversation
No technique on day one. We talk about what's bringing you in and what you want to be different. You set the pace.
We build some footing first
Before going near the hard material, we make sure you have tools to stay steady. Safety comes before depth, always.
We work at your pace
Whether that's EMDR, somatic work, IFS, or a mix, we use what fits you. Nothing is forced, and you can stop anything at any time.
We track what's changing
You'll start to notice the charge coming out of old memories and more room to live in the present. We adjust as we go.
Questions people often ask
Is this confidential?
Yes. What you share stays between us, within the limits the law requires. Seeking help here is your private decision.
Do I have to relive everything?
No. These approaches are designed to lower the charge of hard memories without forcing you to recount every detail.
I've tried talking before and it didn't help.
That's exactly why these methods exist. They work with the brain and body directly, not just the conversation.
Will you actually get it?
I've spent years close to trauma, not reading about it in a textbook. I get it, and I won't be shaken by your story.
Ready when you are.
The first step is a conversation, not a commitment. No waitlist.