What is EMDR? EMDR is a therapy now endorsed under the Veterans Affairs/Department of Defense's clinical practice guidelines in treatment for soldiers affected by posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It is a therapy that guides the patient to vividly recall the trauma (war, sexual, physical abuse, etc) while gaining a new understanding of the event while reprocessing the emotional and bodily feelings, thoughts, and self-images that go with it. Even though we do not know exactly how it works, the eye movement aspect involves the patient to move their eyes rapidly back and forth while recalling the events. This creates a direct affect on the thalamus-amygdala-neocortex cascade. This cascading responds to stored memories of their experienced traumatic event. For my sessions, we use bilateral stimulation in which I hold buzzers in each hand and they correlate with alternating tones I hear through headphones. This produces the same result as the rapid eye movements.

Once we had my safe place secured, Akeso asked me to think about the traumatic memory and just notice what feelings came up while I was holding one buzzer in each hand. I was to envision myself watching this as if a passenger on a train looking out at the passing landscape. The first thing I psychically felt was difficulty breathing while my insides stood still. My eyes began to tear and my heart was heavy. After a few minutes, Akeso brought me out of the memory and evaluated what I felt and thought.
After the first round, I thought to myself, "That wasn't too bad. I can handle this without too much emotional distress." Oh the lies we tell ourselves to attempt to trick the mind. It was time for round number two. Round number two started like the first round. I was to go back to the memory and just experience the feelings. Akeso slowly sped up the pace of the bilateral stimulation. Before I knew it, I was crying uncontrollably. It was as if a scab was ripped off and the puss and granular tissue of a chronic wound became revealed.

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