EMDR Case Conceptualization for Fear of Flying in the AANHPI Populations

This article explores the efficacy of using EMDR with Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders who experience fear of flying.

EMDR Phase 1 and Assessment of OCD Subtypes: Meta OCD, Existential, Relational, and Health-Related Concern OCD

This article discusses four subtypes of OCD (meta, existential, relational, health concern) and assessment/client history (EMDR Phase 1).

A Three-Pronged Approach to Treating Anxiety with EMDR Therapy

The experience of anxiety exists on a continuum of mild sensations at one end and a crippling anxiety disorder on the other.

EMDR Therapy Treatment of Anxiety Disorders, Explanation of the Basic Protocol and Case Conceptualization

EMDR Therapy clinicians learn where to begin with treating clients with anxiety disorders through the basic protocol & case conceptualization.

EMDR Therapy and Anxiety (Go With That Magazine™ Issue)

What do EMDR therapists need to know about anxiety to help their clients and patients? Read more in this issue of Go With That Magazine™.

Internalized Sexual Shame in the Treatment of Eating Disorders

Understand shame and eating disorders to allows for better history-taking, case conceptualization, and client success in EMDR therapy.

Resilience: The Intersection of Eating Disorders and EMDR

Resilience is a competency that can be learned and developed through treating trauma and in the context of eating disorder (ED) recovery.

EMDR Therapy & Eating Disorders (Go With That Magazine Issue)

Eating disorders affect at least 9 percent of the population worldwide. With so many people suffering, how can EMDR therapists help?

Counselor’s Corner on Negative Cognitions

How to help a client identify the negative cognition (NC) during EMDR therapy for his trauma history as a first responder.

BIPOC Perspective on Eating Disorders

Examples of how a client’s culture/race was significant in the use of EMDR therapy for eating disorders or disordered eating.

Eating Disorders: What Are EMDR Therapists Missing?

Even if you are not an eating disorder specialist, you will likely see clients with disordered eating as an EMDR therapist.

An AIP Approach to Disordered Eating

EMDR therapy offers an adjunctive approach to disordered eating treatment that heals at the root of maladaptively stored experiences.