EMDR therapy has been around for more than 30 years, and in that time it has helped many people heal from trauma, anxiety, panic, distressing memories, and other experiences that continue to feel unresolved in the nervous system. EMDR stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, but despite the long name, the heart of the work is actually quite human. It is about helping the mind and body process what got stuck so the present no longer feels shaped by the emotional intensity of the past.
As an integrative therapist, I think it is important to understand EMDR not only as a technique, but as a structured therapy model that respects the whole person. It takes into account the nervous system, emotional safety, attachment history, current life stress, internal resources, and the pace at which a person can truly do healing work without becoming overwhelmed. That is one of the reasons EMDR is organized into 8 traditional phases. These phases are not random steps. They are meant to create enough safety, preparation, and structure for deeper processing to happen.
At the same time, EMDR has evolved. Because it has now been used for decades, newer approaches and adaptations have developed around the traditional 8-phase model. Clinicians today may work more flexibly, especially with complex trauma, dissociation, chronic anxiety, attachment wounds, or highly activated nervous systems. In other words, the 8 traditional phases still matter deeply, but many therapists now apply them with more nuance than a strictly linear model might suggest.
Here Is How The 8 Traditional Phases Of EMDR Are Generally Understood
Phase 1: History Taking and Treatment Planning
This phase is where the therapist gets to know you, your story, your symptoms, and the experiences that may be contributing to what you are struggling with now. We are not only identifying past events. We are also looking at present triggers, recurring beliefs, patterns in relationships, how your body responds under stress, and what healing goals make sense for you.
From an integrative perspective, this phase matters because healing is not only about what happened. It is also about what is happening now in the whole person. This includes the nervous system, the body, current stress load, coping patterns, and the meaning you have made of your experiences.
Phase 2: Preparation
This is often one of the most important phases of EMDR, and one that people do not always hear enough about. Preparation involves helping the client build internal and external resources before moving into memory processing. This can include grounding, containment skills, calming strategies, imagery, nervous system regulation, and developing more confidence in one’s ability to stay present.
Some clients stay in phases 1 and 2 for several sessions. Some stay there for several months. It really depends on the case. A person with a single-event trauma and strong internal resources may move through these phases more quickly. Someone with developmental trauma, chronic anxiety, panic, dissociation, or a long history of feeling emotionally unsafe may need much more time here. That is not a failure. That is often good therapy.
In integrative work, we do not rush past preparation just to get to the “real” EMDR. Preparation is real EMDR. It is part of helping the system trust the process.
Phase 3: Assessment
In this phase, a specific target memory is identified for processing. The therapist and client work together to notice the image connected to the memory, the negative belief attached to it, the preferred positive belief, the emotions that come up, and where the distress is felt in the body.
This phase helps organize the experience so it can be approached with clarity. Rather than staying in a vague sense of emotional flooding, the work becomes more focused. We begin to identify what the nervous system is still holding and how the mind has organized meaning around it.
Phase 4: Desensitization
This is the phase most people picture when they think of EMDR. Bilateral stimulation is used while the client notices what comes up related to the target memory. Bilateral stimulation can consist of eye movements (eyes following a hand, light bar, or wand), hand-held tappers (providing alternating gentle pulses), or left-right audio stimulation. Sometimes clients use one of these and sometimes clients use a combo of them. Thoughts, emotions, sensations, insights, and associations may shift over time as the brain begins to process what was previously stuck.
This phase is not about forcing a memory away or pretending it did not matter. It is about helping the experience move through the system differently so it no longer carries the same charge. The memory may still be remembered, but it often begins to feel less immediate, less overwhelming, and less defining.
Phase 5: Installation
Once the distress connected to the memory decreases, EMDR shifts toward strengthening the positive belief the client wants to hold instead. This might be something like “I am safe now,” “I am enough,” “I can handle this,” or “It was not my fault.”
From an integrative perspective, this matters because healing is not only about reducing pain. It is also about making room for something truer and more grounded to take root.
Phase 6: Body Scan
In this phase, the client notices whether any residual disturbance remains in the body when thinking about the target memory and the positive belief. Sometimes the mind feels more resolved before the body fully catches up, so this phase helps bring attention to what may still be lingering somatically.
I deeply appreciate this phase because it reflects something central to integrative therapy. That the body matters. Healing is not only cognitive. It is also physical, emotional, sensory, and relational.
Phase 7: Closure
Closure happens at the end of the session, whether processing was completed or not. The goal is to help the client leave the session feeling grounded enough to return to daily life. This might involve orienting back to the present, reviewing coping tools, or simply helping the nervous system settle.
Once clients are further along in EMDR sessions, a lot of sessions look like phases 3 through 7. In other words, once the foundation has been built, sessions often move through target identification, processing, strengthening adaptive beliefs, checking the body, and closing the work in a contained way.
Phase 8: Reevaluation
At the beginning of the next session, the therapist and client reevaluate. Has the target remained less distressing? Has anything new surfaced? Does the positive belief still feel true? Are there other layers, memories, or present-day triggers that need attention?
This phase reminds us that healing is not always perfectly linear. Sometimes one target clears cleanly. Sometimes a memory opens into other material that also needs care. Reevaluation helps the work stay responsive rather than rigid.
A More Flexible View Of The 8 Phases
Although these 8 traditional phases remain the foundation of EMDR, many therapists today work with them in more flexible and individualized ways. Over the years, newer approaches have emerged that adapt the pacing and structure depending on the client’s nervous system capacity, trauma history, and clinical needs.
That means EMDR is not always a quick movement from preparation to memory processing. For some clients, especially those with complex trauma or high nervous system activation, the early phases may take much longer. For others, the process may move more quickly. Good EMDR is not about speed. It is about readiness, pacing, and helping the system process without becoming overwhelmed.
The 8 traditional phases of EMDR offer a helpful framework, but they are not meant to be rushed through mechanically. At its best, EMDR is thoughtful, relational, and deeply attuned to the whole person. From an integrative therapy perspective, that means honoring not only the memory, but also the body, the nervous system, the pace of trust, and the conditions that help healing actually take hold.
If you are curious about EMDR and wondering whether it might be a good fit for you, you do not have to figure that out alone. Therapy can be a place to move at a pace that feels respectful to your nervous system while building If you would like support, I invite you to schedule a phone consult to learn more about working with me.
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