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EMDR Therapy

A Brain-Based Approach to Healing

EMDR is an evidence-based, brain-based therapy that helps people process and move through trauma and distressing memories, rather than simply talking about them.

EMDR is recommended in Australian clinical guidelines for the treatment of PTSD and is endorsed by the Australian Psychological Society, alongside leading international bodies including the World Health Organization.

EMDR - Your Questions, answered

EMDR can be hard to understand from the outside. If you're curious about how it works, what to expect, or whether it might be right for you, explore below.

What happens in your brain during EMDR - Video

Your brain already knows how to process difficult experiences. It does it every night during REM sleep. EMDR works by tapping into exactly that same mechanism. Watch this short video to understand how.

About EMDR Therapy

The evidence for EMDR is robust and well-established, with the World Health Organization, Phoenix Australia, and the Australian Psychological Society all recognising it as an effective, frontline treatment for PTSD.

Real People. Real Results.

EMDR isn’t fringe. Some of the most high-profile people in the world have spoken openly about it, and what they’ve shared cuts right to the heart of what makes this therapy different from anything they’ve tried before.

Sandra Bullock
Click to watch

After a stalker broke into her home in 2014, Sandra Bullock developed PTSD and couldn’t explain why she’d suddenly burst into tears when glancing left while driving. What pushed her to act was simple: “I’m a single parent, and this child is going to absorb nothing but fear and trauma and shame from me… I don’t want to drop that load of baggage onto my beautiful child.” She called EMDR the most healing thing she’d ever done.

Miley Cyrus
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In a New York Times interview, Miley described a single EMDR session that used a floatback technique, bringing her not just to her own pain, but to generational trauma she had been carrying for her mother. She traced her performance anxiety back through her own childhood and into her mother’s experience of adoption, uncovering a core feeling “I just want them to love me so bad” and realising it wasn’t even hers to carry. She has called EMDR therapy life-saving.

Jameela Jamil
Click to watch

Jameela Jamil has openly credited EMDR with saving her life. Struggling with depression, anxiety, eating disorders, and PTSD, she shared her experience publicly on Instagram and YouTube, emphasising that seeking help is neither shameful nor embarrassing. In her own words, EMDR “goes right to the core of the problem” removing the conditioning of irrational thought rather than just talking around it.

What these stories have in common

These aren’t people who couldn’t cope. They’re high performers carrying hidden weight, the kind that shows up in the body, in relationships, in the patterns you can’t break no matter how much you understand them. That’s exactly what EMDR is built to reach.

Brainspotting - Your Questions, answered

Brainspotting is less well known than EMDR, but for many people it is the more profound experience. If you're curious about what it actually involves and whether it might be right for you, explore below.

A Look Inside a Brainspotting Session

How do I choose between EMDR and Brainspotting?

Choosing between EMDR and Brainspotting is something we can explore together. Both are powerful pathways and either can support you in reaching your goals for therapy.

EMDR


Follows a structured eight phase model

Works best when there is a specific memory, experience or belief you want to target

Involves more dialogue and verbal check ins throughout the session

Uses bilateral stimulation through eye movements, tapping or auditory sounds

You will explore the images, emotions, beliefs and body sensations connected to the memory

Builds safety and trust gradually before moving into deeper processing


Brainspotting


More open and less structured, largely led by you

You don't need a specific memory to begin, we can start with a feeling or sensation in the body

Much less talking during the session

Uses a fixed eye position, sometimes with bilateral music

Works deeply with body sensation and somatic experience

You don't need to share your full story for it to be effective


Frequently asked questions: