What is
EMDR intensive therapy?
Because EMDR therapy is designed to support the brain’s natural healing capacity, intensive sessions can help accelerate the therapeutic process. Many clients are able to experience deeper work, meaningful shifts, and more focused treatment progress.
Even the busiest people can take time for healing and not juggle the demands of finding time for weekly therapy. There has been an increase in demand for focused, intensive treatment, and research shows that it can provide relief from suffering and reduce the need for symptom management between sessions. Having a safe, designated space to focus on a client’s needs, without other life demands and distractions that pull focus and energy away from healing, is supportive of the healing process.
Focused Treatment,
Meaningful Progress
Choosing an EMDR intensive can be an intentional investment in your performance, mental health, overall well-being, and personal growth. EMDR therapy is recognized as an evidence-based treatment approach that supports the brain and nervous system’s natural healing processes.
Many clients appreciate the intensive format because it allows for deeper, more focused work without long gaps between sessions. Clients may notice shifts in emotional regulation, self-awareness, confidence, relationships, focus, or overall performance and well-being. While each person’s experience is unique, intensive therapy can provide meaningful momentum and support lasting therapeutic work.

Improve your performance and reach
your maximum potential
EMDR intensive therapy have been used in the sports, arts and performance fields to help treat blocks, public speaking phobias, address the trauma of an injury or series of injuries and setbacks, as well as to strengthen the flow state and enhance peak performances. To identify and resolve limiting beliefs, anxiety, and fears through EMDR treatment opens athletes, professionals, and people in creative fields and leadership roles up to fulfilling optimal performance. Often, there is a past experience or experiences that get stuck and create mental blocks, and this can be treated with EMDR therapy.
Many times, such blocking experiences are not seen as traumatic, and this leads to more frustration and confusion. These blocks can be identified in many ways, through the intake and evaluation process and using somatically focused EMDR intensives. Understanding interpersonal neurobiology often strengthens a client’s ability to have self-compassion for an injury, a setback, or a stressor they cannot think their way through. By understanding the nervous system and different state responses (that happen below conscious awareness), people feel more empowered to heal. We often see that our body’s response has guided us to a place that needs support. For example, many athletes struggle with a freeze response in their nervous systems and are unable to perform at their optimal level.

Would an intensive be
a good fit for me?
If you answer yes to any of these
- you are wanting deep work that can transform your life
- you are wanting to address traumatic memories and move through the work instead of re-opening the memories and experiences in multiple weekly appointments
- you have experienced a traumatic event or painful experience that is impacting your daily living
- you have been in therapy and have been feeling stuck
- you have a busy calendar and limited time for your needs
- you have been wanting therapy but not wanting to go week after week and are unsure how long it would take to get the change you are hoping for in treatment
- you live in an area where you have limited access to the care you need .
- you have recently experienced or will be experiencing a significant life change and want support
- the demands of travel make it hard to connect for weekly or regular appointments and you are needing therapeutic support
- you are not performing to best of your abilities, are experiencing a slump, the yips, the twisties, are not sure what has happened to your performance or why, and are anxious or afraid to re-enter the competitive arena after an injury, surgery, or time away for other needs
There is a screening process to make sure that an EMDR intensive is the best fit for each client. It is not crisis work and is not appropriate for all treatment needs, yet for most people, it offers incredible results.

