Similar to Accelerated Resolution Therapy® (ART), EMDR treatment helps a person understand himself or herself better. It is an interior process helping a person gain insight into the reasons for a less than satisfactory life.
Contact us today, we'll place you with therapist specializing in individual therapy and treatments. We can help guide any individual to overcome or heal your mental health issues.
People never intend to be unfaithful when getting married. In the age of digital media and engaging technology, a new crisis of infidelity has emerged. Likewise, a person can unwittingly cross the line from platonic friendships into romantic relationships.
The causes of affairs can occur in happy relationships as well as in troubled ones. For example, a person often develops conflict avoidance, fear of intimacy or life cycle changes like parenthood and empty-nesting. As a result, a person can link their trauma to these infidelity vulnerabilities and relationship problems.
When working with infidelity therapists, an integrative approach is also better suited to couples. There are various modalities, such as experiential and cognitive therapy, that a therapist may use to treat infidelity. Irrespective of the theoretical choice that drives the healing process, care is rooted in a common ground approach that stresses protection and forgiveness.
At the initial stage of therapy, the primary goal is to safely recognize and resolve painful feelings and stressful symptoms. In essence, the therapist wants to control and stabilize the emotional response to the affair and get a good view of the circumstances surrounding the affair.
During the initial evaluation, a marriage and family therapist can help the pair explain the therapy objective by outsourcing choices. After an affair, partners who want to repair their partnership need to overcome any ambivalence about remaining in a relationship or moving for a constructive breakup. One spouse may wish to be reconciled while the other is either ambivalent or has chosen to leave. Either way, trauma may trigger painful feelings inside and outside the therapy room. The injured partner feels furious, while the involved partner also struggles with feelings of remorse and guilt.
Some family therapists work together with a couple as the primary strategy. However, in ambivalent or severely agitated spouses, several individual counseling sessions may be recommended by the therapist. Treatment can be complicated and challenging for couples. The way couples reconcile or uncouple after an affair depends on different factors, including each spouse's dedication to repairing relationships, cultural values and norms, and the effect on children if the partnership is broken.
After an affair disclosure, it is common for both partners to experience depression. The reactions of the injured individual can begin as acute stress that resembles PTSD symptoms. For example, the most severely traumatized person by infidelity has the most broken trust and was the most unsuspecting. As a result, if you have experienced betrayal trauma from an infidelity situation, don't wait. Seek professional help before your symptoms include physical and mental health issues for you.
The infidelity process tends to ease some of the demand for information. For example, It is preferable to delay complex motivational questions, and more detailed information about sexual intimacy can be more healing. As a result, the disclosure method progresses from a truth-seeking inquisition to a neutral information-seeking process – similar to a journalist and interviewee.
Also, symptoms of infidelity may worsen if left untreated over time. Dealing with them now may help to stop them from getting worse in the future. Getting help with your betrayal trauma can help improve you and your family's life. Finding out more about what treatments are working can make it easier to get help and lead to better outcomes.
Experts have created three categories (or clusters) of PTSD symptoms. Symptoms will generally persist for at least a month and for many survivors, these signs represent their first struggles with anxiety. The symptoms fall into the categories of re-experiencing the traumatic event, avoidance of reminders of the trauma and responses of hyperarousal.
Trauma depends on many factors, including a person's perception of and proximity to the event. In general, traumatic events expose the child to death, serious injury, or violence. Here are some examples of events that could lead to PTSD in children: car accidents, natural disasters, etc.

Some people with PTSD have symptoms throughout their lifetime due to prolonged exposure to trauma. Trauma can cause systemic, hormonal changes to the chemistry of the brain.
Complex PTSD is particularly common in people who have suffered childhood abuse, sexual abuse, or neglect. It may also contribute later to PTSD and substance abuse, eating disorders, inappropriate sexual activity, and other behavioral problems.

Our goal is to be a guide in helping you identify, confront and overcome traumatic issues. We understand that sharing your story with us can be difficult and we recognize the privilege we have in being included on your journey. We strive to be safe, affirming, and attuned to your struggles. Here is our promise to you:
Confidentiality is essential and your counselor will hold your story in trust until you are willing and ready to share it with others, if ever.
We will not push you to journey faster than you are capable of going. As guides we work for you, and your pace is our pace.
Our counselors concentrate on building expertise in specific areas of treatment. We are committed to receiving ongoing training in order to provide the necessary skills to help guide you on the path to wholeness.
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