
Approved for 3 EMDRIA Credits
It is well-established in both the EMDR therapy and complex trauma-dissociative disorders literatures that self-state/parts-focused work with clients is frequently not only helpful but also necessary to achieve stabilization/containment, trauma resolution, and integration of treatment gains into how a person functions in day-to-day life. With limited exceptions, interventions both within and outside the EMDR therapy tradition focus on certain tasks in working with perpetrator-imitating parts, often referred to in the psychodynamically-influenced literature as perpetrator ‘introjects’. With limited exceptions, interventions both within and outside the EMDR therapy tradition focus on particular tasks in working with perpetrator introjects: 1) orienting the introject to the realities of the present, the body, and the whole self; 2) persuading the introject to ‘stand down’ or reconsider what ‘protection’ could look like; 3) and, helping other states feel less afraid of the introject.
Presenter: D. Michael Coy, LICSW
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