The enigma of EMDR:  Pushing the panic button

Description

When she first heard about EMDR, and the CWMS about its high success rate with agoraphobics, I thought, 'Yeah, right-I just roll my eyeballs around and suddenly I'm cured!" That this trendy, new technique could end almost 20 years of paralyzing fear and dread seemed doubtful, to put it mildly. I'd already experienced enough standard, name-brand therapies and assorted snake-oil cures to become a one-woman encyclopedia of clinical failures. So my cynicism about this latest entry in the cure-all sweepstakes was almost, almost as great as my desperation to try anything once. Desperation won out by a hair. Nothing, I thought, not even putting myself through the paces of another half-baked new fad, could be as bad as what I was going through now, and what I had been through, off and on, for the last 18years of my life.

Format

Magazine

Language

English

Author(s)

Emma O'Brien

Original Work Citation

O'Brien, E. (1993, November/December). The enigma of EMDR: Pushing the panic button. Family Therapy Networker, 17(6), 33-39

Tags

Citation

“The enigma of EMDR:  Pushing the panic button,” Francine Shapiro Library, accessed May 11, 2024, https://francineshapirolibrary.omeka.net/items/show/16847.

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