EMDR Therapy
In-Person in San Jose & Virtual Therapy Across California
We are all shaped by our experiences.
Some moments pass through us easily. Others can stay lingering in the body, in our thoughts, in the way we respond to the world around us, in ways that aren’t serving us. Over time, these experiences can create patterns that feel difficult to shift, even when we understand them.
I offer EMDR therapy as a way to effectively process those experiences so they no longer hold the same weight in your present.
Whether you’re working with me in my office in San Jose or connecting virtually somewhere else within California, EMDR offers a path toward meaningful, lasting change.
What Is EMDR Therapy?
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an evidence-based therapy designed to help the brain process and integrate difficult or overwhelming experiences.
Originally developed for trauma and PTSD, EMDR is now widely used for a range of concerns, including anxiety, grief, and distressing life events. Unlike traditional talk therapy, EMDR focuses less on analyzing your experience and more on helping your brain reprocess it. Through guided bilateral stimulation, such as back-and-forth eye movements or tapping, EMDR activates the brain’s natural ability to heal.
When working with an EMDR therapist, clients often find that experiences that once felt overwhelming begin to feel more distant, less charged, and easier to hold.
Clients often come to EMDR therapy to process experiences such as:
Childhood trauma or attachment wounds
Emotional abuse or neglect
Experiences of abuse or assault
Accidents or medical experiences
Grief and loss
Major life transitions
Anxiety and panic
You don’t need to label an experience as “trauma” for it to be worth processing. If something continues to affect how you feel, think, or respond, it deserves attention.
What Can EMDR Help With?
When the Past Feels Present
Trauma doesn’t always stay in the past. You may notice it showing up as:
Intrusive memories or flashbacks
Heightened anxiety or hypervigilance
Emotional reactivity or shutdown
Negative beliefs about yourself
A persistent sense of unease or tension
These responses are not a sign that something is wrong with you. They are signs that your nervous system is still trying to process something that hasn’t fully resolved.
With the support of a therapist, EMDR offers a way to process these experiences in a space that feels safe, supportive, and paced to your needs.
What EMDR Can Help With
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Some experiences are isolated events, and others are patterns that unfold over time. These patterns often begin in childhood.
EMDR can be impactful for traumatic events as well as complex trauma or PTSD rooted in:
Early attachment wounds
Emotional neglect or abandonment
Chronic stress or instability
Repeated experiences of criticism or unpredictability
Abusive and unsafe home environments
In complex trauma, the impact is often felt not just in memories, but in identity. This can impact how you see yourself, how you relate to others, and how safe the world feels. Through EMDR, we work at a pace that honors your readiness, helping you process these deeper layers while building the internal resources needed for stability and resilience.
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Anxiety often has roots that go deeper than the present moment. If you’re struggling with anxiety, you may experience:
Racing or circular thoughts that are hard to shift out of
A constant sense of tension or worry
Physical symptoms like a tight chest or shallow breathing
Difficulty relaxing or feeling at ease
While many approaches focus on managing anxiety, EMDR helps address it at its roots.
Through EMDR therapy, we identify and process the past experiences and beliefs that contribute to anxious patterns. This can help your nervous system shift out of chronic states of stress and into a more regulated baseline.
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Grief is a natural response to loss, but sometimes it becomes complicated, overwhelming, or difficult to process.
When you’re dealing with grief, loss can take many forms:
The death of a loved one
The end of a relationship
Changes in identity or life circumstances
Unresolved or ambiguous loss
EMDR can support the grieving process of all of the above by helping you process the emotional intensity of loss while preserving the meaning and connection that matter most.
If you’re seeking support during a time of grief or loss, EMDR offers a way to move through grief without rushing or minimizing your experience.
What to Expect in EMDR Sessions
EMDR therapy is a structured, phased process designed to support both emotional safety and change.
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In the beginning, we focus on building a strong foundation. This includes:
Understanding your current challenges
Identifying past experiences to process connected to those current challenges
Developing internal resources to support you through reprocessing
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Once you feel ready, we begin reprocessing.
During these sessions, you’ll be guided through short sets of bilateral stimulation, such as eye movements or tapping, while focusing on specific memories or beliefs.
Between sets, we pause briefly to notice what is shifting internally. Your therapist supports this process, helping it move forward in a way that feels manageable and adaptive.
Over time, experiences begin to feel different. What once felt intense or overwhelming may feel more distant, more neutral, or more integrated into your broader life story.
A Different Way to Heal
Many clients come to EMDR after trying traditional talk therapy and feeling like something is still unresolved.
EMDR offers a different approach, and it’s one that works directly with how the brain stores and processes experiences. When starting EMDR therapy, you may begin to notice:
Reduced emotional intensity around past experiences
Negative beliefs or self concept beginning to shift
Increased sense of calm and regulation
More flexibility in how you respond to stress
In-Person Therapy in San Jose & Virtual Across California
I offer in-person sessions at my office in San Jose, as well as virtual EMDR therapy for clients residing in California.
Whether you prefer the grounding presence of in-person work or the flexibility of virtual sessions, my approach remains the same: thoughtful, paced, and attuned to your needs.
Is EMDR Right for You?
EMDR may be a good fit if you:
Feel stuck in patterns that don’t shift with insight alone
Experience ongoing anxiety, stress, or emotional overwhelm
Notice that past experiences still feel present
Want a therapy approach that goes beyond talking
You don’t need to have everything figured out before starting. Therapy is a place to explore, understand, and begin again.
Begin Your Healing Journey
If you’re considering EMDR therapy, you’re already taking an important step.
Working with an EMDR therapist can help you move through experiences and beliefs that feel stuck. I invite you to make the next step today.
Book a free consultation below and learn more about how EMDR can support your healing.
You don’t have to carry it alone.
Schedule Your Free Consultation Call
A consultation call is a 15 minute phone call for us to talk about working together towards your desired change, ask any questions you may have, and determine if working together feels like the right fit.