Lush green palm fronds

EMDR Therapy

Evidence-based trauma treatment using bilateral stimulation to reprocess traumatic memories and reduce their emotional charge.

Flowers in front of the Selva Wellness Collective

Access Your Inner Adaptive Healing

EMDR Rewires the Mind for Transformation

Eye-Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR) Therapy is a powerful, evidence-based approach designed to help you heal from trauma and distressing life experiences. Unlike traditional talk therapy, EMDR uses bilateral stimulation to help the brain process and reframe traumatic memories. Over time, painful emotions and negative beliefs lose their intensity, allowing individuals to gain relief, build resilience, and move forward with clarity and confidence.


How EMDR Works

Here’s the cool part! During the REM (Rapid Eye Movement) stage of sleep, our brains naturally process and file away memories. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation**,** typically through guided eye movements, tapping, or auditory tones, to mimic the brain activity that occurs during REM, but while you're awake and focused on a specific memory.

This stimulation activates both sides of the brain, helping to connect the emotional part—the limbic system, with the thinking part—the prefrontal cortex. This connection lets the brain "digest" the stuck memory, separating it from the intense emotional charge. Over time, the memory stops feeling like a present threat. It no longer hijacks your emotions, your body, or your sense of self, and you finally get to move forward.

When we experience something traumatic, our brain sometimes struggles to process it like it would a normal memory. Instead of being stored as a past event, the memory can remain “stuck” with the same vivid emotions, physical sensations, and negative beliefs that were present at the time. That’s why years later, current situations that resemble the trauma—even in subtle ways—can suddenly trigger intense emotional and physical responses, as if the event is happening all over again.

EMDR therapy helps the brain finish processing what it couldn’t at the time of the trauma.

Here’s the cool part! During the REM (Rapid Eye Movement) stage of sleep, our brains naturally process and file away memories. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation**,** typically through guided eye movements, tapping, or auditory tones, to mimic the brain activity that occurs during REM, but while you're awake and focused on a specific memory.

This stimulation activates both sides of the brain, helping to connect the emotional part—the limbic system, with the thinking part—the prefrontal cortex. This connection lets the brain "digest" the stuck memory, separating it from the intense emotional charge. Over time, the memory stops feeling like a present threat. It no longer hijacks your emotions, your body, or your sense of self, and you finally get to move forward.

Selva Wellness appointment room

Sessions

Duration

Choose between 50-minute or 80-minute 1-on-1 sessions with an EMDR-trained clinician.

Pricing

Ana Rodriguez, LPC

  • $300 per 50-min

  • 80-min available upon request

  • Sliding scale rates available based on need

Emery Rodriguez, LPC-Associate

  • $165 per 50-min

  • $185 per 80-min

Benefits

Shorter EMDR sessions can make therapy more accessible by reducing financial strain, while still providing consistent, focused progress toward healing in a manageable timeframe.

Intensives

Duration

Choose between 2-hour or 3-hour intensives with an EMDR-trained clinician.

Pricing

Ana Rodriguez, LPC

  • 2-hour intensive available upon request

  • 3-hour intensive available upon request

Emery Rodriguez, LPC-Associate

  • $300 per 2-hour intensive

  • $450 per 3-hour intensive

Diana Maxwell, LPC-Associate

  • $300 per 2-hour intensive

  • $450 per 3-hour intensive

Benefits

EMDR intensives offer a powerful opportunity to make faster, deeper progress by condensing months of therapy into focused, extended sessions—saving time, reducing long-term costs, and allowing for more sustained healing in a shorter period.

Lush green palm forrest

What EMDR Can Help

PTSD

This includes single-incident traumas (such as car accidents, assaults, or natural disasters) and complex trauma (repeated or chronic experiences such as childhood abuse, neglect, or domestic violence). EMDR helps individuals reprocess these experiences, reducing symptoms like flashbacks, nightmares, hypervigilance, and emotional reactivity.

Childhood Trauma

Adverse childhood experiences—such as neglect, emotional abuse, bullying, or inconsistent caregiving—can impact how we relate to ourselves and others as adults. EMDR can help individuals reprocess these early relational wounds, improving self-esteem, emotional regulation, and relationship patterns.

Anxiety & Panic Attacks

EMDR can target the root causes of anxiety, whether related to specific fears or generalized worry. By identifying and processing past events that may have contributed to current anxiety responses, EMDR can significantly reduce panic symptoms and help clients feel more in control.

Phobias

Many irrational fears—such as fear of flying, driving, public speaking, or medical procedures—can be linked to earlier experiences. EMDR helps reframe the brain’s response to these triggers, reducing avoidance behaviors and restoring confidence..

OCD

EMDR can be a valuable complement to traditional OCD treatment by helping to identify and reprocess past experiences, traumas, or negative beliefs that may be fueling obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors. By reducing the emotional charge connected to these underlying triggers, EMDR can decrease anxiety and lessen the need for compulsions. It also supports greater emotional regulation and tolerance for uncertainty—key challenges in OCD.

Depression

While EMDR is not a cure-all for depression, it can be highly effective when depressive symptoms are linked to unresolved trauma, grief, or chronic negative beliefs about the self. By targeting the experiences that contributed to the onset of depression, clients often experience greater emotional balance and self-worth.

Addiction

While EMDR is not a standalone treatment for addiction, it can be a powerful adjunct. By helping clients process the emotional pain, trauma, or triggers that may underlie substance use or compulsive behaviors, EMDR can support long-term recovery and emotional regulation.

Grief

EMDR helps individuals work through the pain of losing a loved one, especially if the grief feels “stuck” or complicated by guilt, trauma, or unresolved conflict. It supports healthier emotional processing and can create space for healing and remembrance.

Low Self-Esteem

Many people carry deeply rooted beliefs like “I’m not good enough,” “I don’t matter,” or “I’m unlovable.” These beliefs often stem from earlier life experiences and can shape how we view ourselves and the world. EMDR works to transform these beliefs at their source, replacing them with more adaptive, empowering ones.

Chronic Pain

In some cases, unresolved emotional trauma contributes to physical symptoms such as chronic pain, fatigue, or tension. EMDR has been used to reduce the intensity of physical symptoms by addressing their emotional and psychological components.

Ready to start your healing journey? Schedule a free consultation.

Frequently Asked Questions

It varies. Some people feel significant relief in a few sessions, while others with more complex or longstanding trauma may need longer-term treatment. Your therapist will help create a treatment plan based on your unique needs and goals.










Looking for multiple services?

Check out our Wellness Packages!

Explore our Wellness Packages
Green forrest with trees and palm trees

Our Services