EMDR for Complex Trauma
Healing Layers, Not Just Moments
In-Person in Miami Beach & Virtual Throughout Florida
"It's not one thing that happened. It's everything that happened — for years."
Adapted Approach
EMDR for Trauma That's Woven Into Who You Are
Standard EMDR was originally developed for single-incident trauma — a car accident, an assault, a specific event. But for people with complex trauma, the picture is different. The trauma wasn't a single moment. It was an environment, a relationship, a way of growing up that left its mark on everything.
EMDR for complex trauma requires adaptation. You can't simply target one memory when the trauma spans years of emotional neglect, chronic instability, or relational betrayal. The work needs to account for multiple layers: the specific memories, the core beliefs that formed around them ("I'm not worthy," "I'm not safe," "I have to do this alone"), and the nervous system patterns that developed as survival strategies.
At Soulstice Miami, we follow a phased approach to EMDR for complex trauma. Phase one focuses entirely on stabilization — building internal resources, developing distress tolerance, and creating a foundation of safety in the therapeutic relationship. Only when that foundation is solid do we begin targeted reprocessing.
During reprocessing, we work systematically through the memory networks that hold your trauma. This might mean starting with a recent trigger and following the thread back to its earliest origins. Or it might mean targeting the core beliefs that developed from years of invalidation. The approach is always tailored to you and moves at the pace your system can handle.
The Phased Approach
Why Complex Trauma Needs a Different Pace
Phase 1: Stabilization — building safety, grounding, and internal resources
Phase 2: Processing — EMDR reprocessing of key memories and belief systems
Phase 3: Integration — consolidating gains and building new patterns
Constant check-ins to ensure the pace feels manageable
Somatic work alongside EMDR to address what the body holds
Attachment repair within the therapeutic relationship itself
Complex trauma took time to develop. Healing it requires patience, skill, and a willingness to go at the pace your system needs.
What Shifts
What Healing From Complex Trauma Can Look Like
As layers of trauma are processed through EMDR, people with complex PTSD often describe a gradual but profound shift. The inner critic gets quieter. Emotional flashbacks become less frequent and less intense. Relationships start to feel less threatening. There's a growing sense of "I'm okay" that doesn't depend on external validation.
This isn't about erasing your past. It's about freeing yourself from its grip so you can show up in your life with more choice, more presence, and more of who you actually are.
You've been carrying this for a long time. You don't have to carry it alone anymore. Reach out for a free consultation — in-person in Miami Beach or virtual throughout Florida.