Ongoing IFS-Informed EMDR Therapy
Do you want to do IFs-Informed EMDR at slower, more consistent pace?
Are you unsure whether you’re ready for the time or financial commitment of a multi-day IFS-Informed EMDR Intensive?
Maybe you have a talk therapist you love but you want to add adjunctive IFS-Informed EMDR support weekly or biweekly to address what feels stuck?
If you answered yes to any of these questions and you are located in Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, or Pennsylvania, Katy Levine is likely a fit for you!
Katy offers extended sessions 90-120 minutes twice a week, weekly, or biweekly and Adjunctive 1-day intensives (3+ hours) biweekly or monthly.
Ongoing IFS-Informed EMDR FAQS
-
We utilize the powerful benefits of EMDR, IFS-Informed EMDR, Ego States, Attachement Focused EMDR, Developmental Needs Meeting Strategy (DNMS), Polyvagal theory and more!
We use these models to create custom treatment plans for clients who are ready to live without anxiety, depression, dissociation, phobias, addiction, and post-traumatic stress (PTSD). As a client, you will receive your own, client-centered therapeutic process.
Our approach is relational, and integrates what we know about neurobiology, parts, and attachment in order to understand symptoms and move toward healing.
Research has shown that above all else the quality of the therapeutic relationship heals, so we take the time to get to know you and build safety in the therapeutic space. Being immersed in a retreat setting helps create a sense of safety faster.
Have a therapist already? An IFS-Informed Intensive can be done in collaboration with existing therapy. It can help you get unstuck and provide faster relief to clients when used in conjunction with their regular therapist.
-
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an evidence based psychotherapy technique developed by Francine Shapiro to help individuals cope with and overcome the emotional distress and symptoms associated with traumatic experiences. EMDR is particularly effective for individuals who have experienced post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Complex PTSD (CPTSD), other trauma-related conditions. EMDR addresses the psychological and physical symptoms stemming from adverse life experiences. However, EMDR is not just for trauma; it is also utilized for performance enhancement.
Overall EMDR is used to help people who are dealing with present day symptoms that might be related to experiences in the past. EMDR helps reprocess or digest the distressing stuff and helps reduce the emotional intensity. Learn more about the EMDR Phases here.
-
Adjunctive EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is an approach to incorporating EMDR into an existing treatment plan, rather than EMDR being the primary treatment. It is often used alongside traditional talk therapy, somatic therapy, or other trauma-informed modalities to help clients process distressing memories, beliefs, emotional reactivity or behavioral cycles, and accelerate healing.
This approach is especially beneficial for individuals who feel stuck in therapy, as EMDR can target and resolve underlying issues that may be blocking progress.
-
IFS-Informed EMDR is an integrative approach that combines Internal Family Systems (IFS) and EMDR, to help clients heal from the symptoms and emotional distress from trauma and past stressful events. These modalities provide a compassionate, non-judgmental way to understand blocks, defenses, and stuck things in your life. Learn more here.
-
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is highly effective for processing a wide range of traumatic experiences. Originally developed to treat PTSD, EMDR is now used to help individuals heal from both big “T” traumas (events where there is a before and after) and small “t” traumas (distressing experiences that are repetitive and accumulate over time).
Katy specializes in supporting women heal from trauma, CPTSD, anxiety, perfectionism, overfunctioning, and dysfunctional family dynamics.
Adjunctive EMDR might be for you if…
You have been in therapy for years but getting nowhere or moving too slowly.
You long for healing and to feel light and free for once in your life.
You’ve been trying everything and practicing good coping strategies, yet you still feel stuck.
You cognitively understand new things, yet your body is still reacting or feeling confused.
You’re curious about how EMDR therapy can help as you work with your primary talk therapist.