EMDR Therapy for trauma &Anxiety
You don't need to talk about the past in detail to let it go. What you actually need is for your body and nervous system to unfreeze — and to start making new connections.
Trauma often feels like a shadow that follows you everywhere, or a weight you've been quietly carrying for so long you've almost forgotten it's there. And here's something that might surprise you: everyone carries some version of this. Big or small, visible or invisible, the experiences that leave a mark on us are simply part of being human. They are the mental and emotional scars we didn't choose — ones we picked up long before we had any say in the matter.
As we grow older, some of those scars do soften on their own. They become familiar, almost comfortable. A few of them even become good stories — the kind you tell someone you've just met. Maybe you flew off a skateboard once and scraped your face, and in the moment your whole world collapsed: I'm going to be ugly forever. No one is going to love me. But now? You can laugh about it. The memory is still there, but it's lost its sting. It's become a part of your story, not a threat to it.
Here's the thing, though — psychological trauma doesn't always work that way.
Unlike a scraped knee, emotional wounds are often invisible, and invisible wounds are harder to tend to. When fear, pain, or shame never gets a chance to heal, something else happens: it freezes. Your emotions, your bodily sensations, your deepest beliefs about yourself — they get locked in place, exactly as they were on the day something happened. And even though years may have passed, a part of you is still living in that moment.
You might feel it as exhaustion you can't explain, or a sensitivity that catches you off guard. You might notice that certain looks, tones of voice, or situations send you somewhere you didn't expect to go — somewhere old and heavy and familiar. The triggers may seem small from the outside, but inside, they pull you right back. Back to I am powerless. I am shameful. I cannot help myself. Back to the same cave, again.
This is what some therapists call "the past in the present."
EMDR was designed specifically for this. It helps you stay rooted in the present while gently reprocessing what happened in the past — so that the past can finally, truly, become the past.
What Is EMDR
It was originally developed for PTSD but is now used for a wide range of trauma, anxiety, and distressing experiences
How it works mechanistically — in client-friendly language: the brain stores traumatic memories differently from ordinary memories. They get "frozen" with the emotions, sensations, and beliefs attached to them. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (eye movements, tapping, or audio tones) to help the brain reprocess these memories so they lose their emotional charge. You don't forget what happened — but it stops feeling like it's still happening.
What a session actually feels like: it's structured, but Jun goes at the client's pace. You don't have to narrate every detail. Many clients describe it as "finally being able to put something down."
What EMDR Can Help With
Childhood experiences that shaped how you see yourself or others
A single traumatic event (accident, loss, assault, medical crisis)
Complex or relational trauma — patterns of harm over time
Anxiety that feels wired into your body, not just your thoughts
Emotional reactions that feel disproportionate or hard to control
Just physically being able to stay calm and get back to experience was powerful. It makes me feel confident that I can live with these trauma.
—Former Customer