Move beyond just talking about your trauma.
EMDR therapy in Texas and Florida
Experience a powerful, evidence-based approach that helps your brain and body actually process and release what's been stuck.
You’re tiiiired of talking about your trauma over and over and overrrrr.
You can explain exactly how that thing from your past is affecting your relationships, why you freeze up in certain situations, or how your childhood shaped your anxiety. But knowing all this hasn't stopped your body from going into panic mode when triggered, right?
That's where EMDR comes in. At The Réal Heal Collective, I help Gen Z and Millennials across Texas and Florida who are tired of being trauma experts but still feeling stuck in the same patterns. EMDR offers a different path - one that actually helps your nervous system process what your mind already understands.
…but what even is “EMDR”??
Let me break it down.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is basically a way to help your brain process stuck trauma without having to relive every painful detail. Unlike traditional talk therapy where you might spend months dissecting your trauma story, EMDR works directly with how your brain stores these memories.
Here's the deal: when something traumatic happens, sometimes your brain doesn't file it away properly. It's like having a computer file that won't close - it just keeps running in the background, draining your battery. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (fancy term for side-to-side eye movements, tapping, or sounds) to help your brain finally process and file these memories where they belong - in the past, not hijacking your present.
Who's This Actually For?
While EMDR started as a ptsd treatment, it’s proven effective for way more than that:
Trauma & PTSD: Whether it's one terrible thing that happened or years of ongoing trauma
Anxiety That Won't Quit: Especially when it's tied to specific memories or experiences
Depression: When it's connected to past losses, failures, or accumulated negative experiences
Those Stubborn Negative Beliefs: "I'm not good enough," "I'm unlovable," "I can't trust anyone" - the greatest hits that play on repeat
Specific Fears: That thing you can't do because of what happened that one time
Performance Blocks: When past criticism or failure is keeping you stuck
Grief: When loss feels too big to process
“Okay, but I need some more details”….I got you
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EMDR isn't some quick fix where I wave a magic wand. It's a structured approach, but we go at your pace:
Getting the Lay of the Land: We'll map out your history and figure out what memories need attention
Building Your Toolkit: Before we dive deep, you'll learn coping skills to handle any intensity that comes up
Targeting the Memory: We identify the specific memory and all the junk attached to it - the feelings, thoughts, body sensations
Processing Time: This is where the bilateral stimulation happens. You focus on the memory while following my fingers (or taps, or sounds) until it loses its charge
Installing the Good Stuff: We strengthen positive beliefs to replace the negative ones
Body Check: Making sure your body got the memo that this memory is processed
Wrapping Up: Every session ends with you feeling grounded and stable
Checking In: Next session, we see how things settled and what needs attention
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Réal talk: EMDR can feel weird at first. You're used to talking through everything, and suddenly I'm asking you to notice what comes up while moving your eyes back and forth. But here's what my clients say: it works where other things didn't.
You're always in control. We can stop anytime, slow down, speed up - whatever you need. Sometimes intense stuff comes up, but that's actually your brain doing its healing thing. I'm here to guide you through it safely.
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Your trauma symptoms actually decrease (not just your understanding of them)
That memory stops controlling your reactions
Negative beliefs about yourself shift to more realistic ones
You feel calmer and more in control
You can finally move forward instead of feeling stuck in the past
Here’s What The Science Says
EMDR Explained Simply
Is EMDR right for you?
EMDR is a good fit for you if you…
You keep having the same fight with your partner about trust, even though you KNOW it's because your ex cheated - Like when they don't text back for a few hours and suddenly you're spiraling, checking their Instagram likes, and picking fights about nothing because your body remembers betrayal
That thing from college still makes you freeze up in certain situations - Maybe it was assault at a party, and now crowded bars make your skin crawl, or you can't date anyone who drinks whiskey because that's what they smelled like
Your mom's critical voice lives rent-free in your head - You intellectually understand she was projecting her own stuff, but you still hear "you're getting fat" every time you eat, or feel like a failure when you rest because she called you “lazy”
You can't shake that car accident from two years ago - You know statistically you're safe, but your heart still races on the highway, you white-knuckle the steering wheel, or you make excuses to avoid driving certain routes
Your body reacts before your brain even processes - Like when someone raises their voice and you instantly feel small and scared like you're 7 again, or how certain smells, sounds, or situations send you into panic mode even though you're "over it"
Ready to get unstuck for réal?
Questions?
FAQs
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Yes, and no. While we might agree that EMDR is the right approach for you, the actual bilateral stimulation (the eye movement part) won't happen in session one. First, we need to build your toolkit, understand your history, and make sure you have solid coping skills (which is the start of EMDR). Think of it like this - we don't dive into the deep end until I know you can swim. The prep work is just as important as the processing.
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EMDR works for all kinds of experiences that got stuck in your system - not just the obvious traumas. It's great for those "death by a thousand cuts" situations like growing up with an emotionally unavailable parent, being the only Black kid in your school, or years of being called "too sensitive." If something from your past is messing with your present, EMDR can probably help.
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Good news - you don't need to remember everything for EMDR to work. We can work with what you do remember, even if it's just fragments, body sensations, or general feelings. Your brain knows what it needs to process. Sometimes people actually remember more as we go, but having a perfect play-by-play isn't required for healing.