What Is EMDR
Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) is a bottom-up therapeutic model neurobiologically grounded trauma therapy developed by Dr. Frank Corrigan. Rather than focusing solely on narrative memory, DBR works with pre-verbal, deeply held brainstem responses — the earliest “orienting” reactions your nervous system made when trauma first occurred.
This method helps you safely process the shock-level, implicit memories that reside deep in the brainstem — rather than just working with the stories you remember.
How Does EMDR Work?
Our brains are wired to process experiences and move on. However, sometimes, particularly with painful or overwhelming events, processing gets interrupted. The memory becomes stuck, and the distress attached to it stays alive in the body and mind. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation and eye movements to gently re-engage the brain’s natural processing system. This allows stuck memories to be reprocessed at a deeper level, so they can be integrated rather than relived. Many people find that experiences which once felt impossible to approach begin to feel more distant, more manageable, and less defining.
How does Brainspotting work?
The brain holds onto distressing experiences in ways the thinking mind can't always reach. Brainspotting works on the understanding that the eyes are a direct gateway to where trauma, pain, and unprocessed emotion live in the brain and nervous system. Finding the right eye position can unlock what's been held there. In a Brainspotting session, you don't need to find the right words or tell a coherent story. The process works largely beneath conscious thought, allowing the nervous system to do what it's naturally designed to do process and integrate. Brainspotting bypasses the need to analyze, explain, or make sense of an experience and instead works directly with the brain and body, where so much of our pain actually lives.
Book a 20 Minute Consultation
Meet with Lauren for an EMDR consultation or Rachelle for a Brainspotting to find the right fit for you.
