My Story: Going through EMDR treatment for PTSD
When I had PTSD, my biggest fear was ‘If I can’t really even explain how I feel, how can somebody ‘fix’ me?’ I couldn’t understand how they could get rid of my PTSD without somebody going into my skull and rewiring my brain… that was until I came across EMDR (eye movement desensitisation reprocessing).
I was recommended to have EMDR therapy by the medical team at the NHS, but a chance conversation between my mum and a friend over the virtues of EMDR, was really the boost I needed. Knowing that somebody else had been in my position, and was out the other side thanks to EMDR, gave me the hope that one day I’d be the ‘old me’ again! Oh what a feeling that was!
You may have read our page on EMDR therapy and how it works, but I’ve written this article to describe what EMDR is like, what the process is and how it can help you be ‘you’ again!
Due to waiting times on the NHS, I decided to use a private psychotherapist. I used the EMDR Association Website to find the nearest accredited practitioner to me. I’ll be honest, I did see one practitioner, but I felt that we just didn’t ‘fit’ together – it was the first time I’d been able to recall my trauma, but I didn’t cry… I’m not sure I felt comfortable? Finding the right therapist can be difficult, but it’s so important to make sure you feel safe, secure and can trust this person (as much as your PTSD will allow you to of course!)
The second therapist I saw was just lovely – it was a simple room at the Scottish Centre for Counselling and Psychotherapy, but it felt safe, clean and I was able to talk, and let my emotions out.
The first appointment was a ‘getting to know you’ type session. During this session, the therapist asked me to have a think about a place I felt comfortable, and secure. For me and my overactive hypervigilant mind, nowhere was safe to me, so I developed an imaginary tropical beach with all my friends forming a human chain around me to keep me safe, my cat jumping around and my husband making me laugh. I could use this ‘space’ anytime I needed to during a session, or even at home in the midst of a panic attack. I would concentrate on the beach, on each persons face, or what they would say to me, and get involved in that moment which would calm me down when I needed to.
If at any point during the forthcoming sessions, things got too much or I had a non-controlled flashback, I went back to that safe place in my mind. I know that some people use this ‘space’ during EMDR a fair bit, and it all depends on the individual, but luckily I only ever needed to visit my safe place a few times.
At the start of each of the sessions, the therapist asked me to think of the trauma, and scale it from 1-10 (1 being fine, 10 being OMG get me out of here) based on how you feel, and how strong your emotions are etc. For me, it was off the scale, it felt like I was going to be sick even just thinking about it (and she very kindly brought over a bucket just incase). She asked how I felt being back there (vulnerable, scared, terrified) and how I wanted to feel when I looked back on it (strong, capable, and powerful).
You then begin the reprocessing…. I chose to use a light beam – a electrical stick, which pulsed a light from side to side. You keep your head still, and follow the light from side to side with your eyes – left to right, left to right. As you’re doing this, you begin to think of the trauma, how you feel and how you want to feel, and you let your mind wander. It goes without saying, but that can be very difficult, but the therapist will ensure that things don’t get too much for you. My mind went to all sorts of places, thinking of things that I wasn’t sure how they related to the trauma, and every so often, she’d stop the light, asked what I’d been thinking, and then repeated the process over and over again.
At the end of each session, my therapist asked me to rate how I felt again – and for me, this was the most exciting part – each session, it was less!
I could see the transformation taking place – and feel it too.
By the third/fourth treatment, I was around a 4, and sometimes in between sessions, it’d creep back up, but then it would reduce more and more, until the final session where I could comfortably state that to me, the trauma, the thing that had haunted me for the years, was now only a memory – something that happened, and while it was an awful thing to go through, I didn’t have the ‘charge’ of emotions behind it anymore.
Everyone is different, and although in the end I only needed 6 treatments to rid me of PTSD and all my symptoms, some people will need more – particularly those with C-PTSD (PTSD from multiple traumas) as there is more to work on.
To see the change I was going through during therapy made it feel like a miracle – and I quite often thought about the day when it would be over. I thought ‘I’ll run out of the room, call my mum and I bet I’ll cry I’ll be so happy! I’ll say “I’m me! I’m cured”‘
Instead, on that last session, I walked out of the room – I wasn’t ecstatic, I wasn’t jumping for joy at getting rid of PTSD, I was just… well… me! I had returned to ‘normal’, and whilst that was an exciting thing, I was just incredibly content – smiling and beaming from the inside, and just full of contentment. I felt safe, I felt happy… I felt like me.
Written by PTSD UK Founder, Jacqui
You may be interested to read how EMDR works, and you can do so here.
IMAGE: Green Eyes by Danielle Elder
Hello! Did you find this information useful?
Please consider supporting PTSD UK with a donation to enable us to provide more information & resources to help us to support everyone affected by PTSD, no matter the trauma that caused it
PTSD UK Blog
You’ll find up-to-date news, research and information here along with some great tips to ease your PTSD in our blog.

Yazmin Oukhellou PTSD UK Ambassador
TOWIE’s Yazmin Oukhellou unveiled as PTSD UK’s first celebrity ambassador We’re delighted to be able to announce our exciting news, that we have an inspiring celebrity ambassador. Television personality Yazmin Oukhellou is best known for being part of the cast

Can we predict who will develop PTSD after a trauma?
Can our brain structures help predict who will develop PTSD after a trauma? There’s a key question when it comes to PTSD and C-PTSD research and understanding: why do some people get PTSD or C-PTSD from trauma, when another person

Fireworks Open Letter – a national charity collaboration
Fireworks Open Letter – a national charity collaboration PTSD UK is proud to be part of a coalition of national charities, lead by Dogs Trust, who have issued an open letter to the Secretary of State for Business, Energy and

Yoga Therapy for PTSD: A Multidimensional Approach
Yoga Therapy for PTSD: A Multidimensional Approach – Guest Blog The complex nature of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) makes it a challenging condition to treat. In the UK alone, PTSD is estimated to affect 1 in 3 people who

Dip a Day December Challenge
events | dip a day december PTSD UK’s Dip a Day December Challenge Sign up now PTSD UK’s Dip a day December The challenge It’s no secret that cold water swimming, cold water therapy, focusing on a challenge and simply

Remember remember… those with PTSD
Remember remember… those with PTSD When you have Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD or C-PTSD), any loud or sudden noise can be a trigger, leading to flashbacks, uncontrollable shaking, panic attacks, heart palpations and many other physical and emotional symptoms.
Treatments for PTSD
It is possible for PTSD to be successfully treated many years after the traumatic event occurred, which means it is never too late to seek help. For some, the first step may be watchful waiting, then exploring therapeutic options such as individual or group therapy – but the main treatment options in the UK are psychological treatments such as Eye Movement Desensitisation Reprogramming (EMDR) and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT).
Traumatic events can be very difficult to come to terms with, but confronting and understanding your feelings and seeking professional help is often the only way of effectively treating PTSD. You can find out more in the links below, or here.