The Healing Thread


EMDR therapy, EMDR Meghan Bowden EMDR therapy, EMDR Meghan Bowden

When EMDR Helps(and When It Might Not Be the First Step)

Sometimes the hardest part of healing isn’t what happened — it’s how your body learned to survive. This post explains why trauma responses make sense, and how healing can begin without forcing yourself to relive the past.

1/25/25

If you have been hearing about EMDR and wondering whether it is right for you, you are not alone.

Many people come to therapy knowing something is wrong but feeling unsure about what kind of support they actually need.

EMDR is often talked about as a powerful trauma therapy, which can make it sound like the obvious next step. But ethical, effective

EMDR work is not about rushing into trauma processing.

Sometimes EMDR is incredibly helpful.

Sometimes it is not the first step.

And both can be true without anything being wrong with you.

What EMDR is actually designed to help with

EMDR works best when distress is connected to unprocessed memories that are still activating the nervous system in the present.

EMDR may be especially helpful if you experience:

  • Strong emotional reactions that feel bigger than the situation

  • Repeating patterns in relationships that you cannot seem to change

  • Flashbacks, nightmares, or intrusive memories

  • A sense that your body reacts before your mind can catch up

  • Longstanding anxiety that does not respond to insight alone

In these cases, EMDR helps the brain reprocess experiences that were never fully integrated at the time they happened.

Why EMDR is not always the first step

This part matters.

If someone is overwhelmed, dissociating, or living in constant survival mode, going straight into trauma processing can feel destabilizing instead of helpful.

EMDR is not about pushing through.

It is about working within what your nervous system can tolerate.

Before EMDR processing begins, many people need support with:

This is not a delay.

This is preparation.

Signs your nervous system may need more support first

EMDR may not be the first step if you notice:

  • You feel emotionally flooded very quickly

  • You shut down or go numb when emotions come up

  • You struggle to stay present during stressful conversations

  • You feel unsafe in your body most of the time

  • Daily life already feels barely manageable

In these cases, therapy often focuses first on helping your system feel more resourced and regulated.

This is how EMDR becomes effective later instead of overwhelming now.

What ethical EMDR therapy actually looks like

Thoughtful EMDR therapy is paced, collaborative, and responsive.

A trauma informed therapist will:

  • Assess readiness rather than assume it

  • Spend time in early phases when needed

  • Adjust based on your responses, not a rigid timeline

  • Pause or slow down if your system needs it

  • Help you build skills alongside insightThere is no prize for starting EMDR quickly.

If you are wondering whether EMDR is right for you

It is okay not to know yet.

A good starting place is asking:

  • What am I hoping will change

  • How does my body respond to stress right now

  • Do I feel safe enough to explore the past

  • Do I trust my therapist to go at a pace that feels manageable

EMDR can be incredibly effective when used at the right time, with the right support, for the right reasons.

Ready to take the next step

If you are considering EMDR or trauma focused therapy and want help deciding what approach fits you best, you do not need to have everything figured out.

I offer a free introductory call where we can talk through what you are experiencing, what support might help, and whether EMDR is appropriate right now or later in the process.

Trauma informed therapy meets you where you are and helps you move forward when your nervous system is ready.

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