THERAPIES

EMDR

A man with beard

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), developed by Francine Shapiro, is a form of psychotherapy that has become a powerful tool against trauma. EMDR works by unlocking the nervous system and allowing the brain to process the experience and visualize disturbing material in a new, less distressing way.

With EMDR, the process appears accelerated. Symptoms consistently are brought down to a level that they are less intrusive and easier to manage. To date, EMDR has helped an estimated half-million people of all ages relieve many types of psychological distress.

Somatic Therapy

Foundational to this work is a deep understanding of our “drive for completion,” on every level.  Inherent dilemmas arise in many forms, such as competition between “drives for completion” and “drives for survival”.  Full engagement in the dynamics that are evident, moment-by-moment, with a strong somatic focus brings the details to life.  These vital dynamics are then more accessible to processing.  Use of bilateral stimulation further enhances the client’s ability to grow towards resolution.

Natural Processing Somatic therapy, developed by Craig Penner allows therapists to pace the work, track resiliency, and deepen processing that engages the therapist in the nature of healing capacities.  We can set the conditions for growth, and then closely nurture and “trust the process.”

Depth Therapy is also known as insight-oriented therapy. It focuses on both the conscious and unconscious processes as they show up in a person’s present behavior.

It also addresses how past and current relationships affect both your feelings and the choices you make today, in the here-and now.

Together, we look at how those choices affect you and your family as a whole, and work together to reduce stress and conflict and increase communication between family members.

Psychoanalysis

Dr. Kerry O’Reilly is a Psychoanalyst and Fellow of the International Psychoanalytic Association. She completed her Doctorate in Psychoanalysis at The Psychoanalytic Center of California. (PCC). www.psycc.org

Should you consider

psychoanalytic treatment?

Clients in psychoanalysis typically come to sessions three to four days a week. This may seem like a lot, but the intensity and concentration of this approach has two benefits: we can focus on issues immediately as they arise and treat problem areas in greater depth.

Most anxiety, depression, and other psychological symptoms are the result of an individual’s enduring patterns of coping with their internal mental life and the outside world. These coping patterns form the character or personality styles and organizing principals that develop in childhood and continue, often unconsciously, throughout our lives.

Many of these unconscious, automatic patterns influence both how we perceive and how we experience life.

Psychoanalytic treatment explores how many of these automatic patterns affect your relationships and your patterns of thought, emotion, and behavior. Working with a psychoanalyst helps you to deepen your awareness of how your mind works.
Analysis can be viewed as an intimate partnership, in the course of which the patient becomes aware of the underlying sources of his or her difficulties, not simply intellectually but emotionally as well – in part, by working them through with a skilled psychoanalyst.

From the beginning of therapy, patient and analyst work together to build a safe and trusting relationship that enables the patient to experience aspects of his or her inner life that have been hidden because they are painful, embarrassing, or guilt-provoking and which have led to destructive patterns of behavior.

Dr. O’Reilly helps you to better accept and tolerate unpleasant emotions and to have greater freedom in your life. By refining your understanding of the patterns that limit you or cause you pain, you will be able to elaborate on new and more productive ways of feeling, thinking and behaving.