EMDR therapy helps your brain process what talk therapy alone sometimes can’t — offered online by a licensed psychologist who takes your insurance.

“Sometimes the mind gets stuck. EMDR helps it get unstuck — without requiring you to relive everything in painful detail.”
I’m a licensed psychologist offering EMDR therapy online for adults and teens in Alaska, Colorado, Nevada, and Texas. I work with people carrying trauma they haven’t been able to fully shake — even when they’ve tried other approaches.
EMDR is one of the most researched and effective treatments available for trauma and PTSD. I’ve seen it create real, lasting change for people who had started to wonder if healing was possible for them.
Schedule Your Free ConsultationEMDR — Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing — is a structured, evidence-based therapy that helps your brain process distressing memories so they no longer feel overwhelming or intrusive.
Unlike traditional talk therapy, EMDR doesn’t require you to describe your trauma in detail. Instead, it uses bilateral stimulation (like guided eye movements) to engage the brain’s natural healing process, allowing stuck memories to be processed and filed away properly.
Think of it this way: when something traumatic happens, the memory can get “frozen” in the nervous system in a raw, unprocessed form. That’s why a smell, a sound, or a passing thought can trigger the same fear or pain as the original event — years later.
EMDR helps the brain do what it couldn’t do on its own — fully process the experience, reduce its emotional charge, and integrate it as a memory of the past rather than a threat in the present.
While EMDR is best known for trauma, research supports its effectiveness across a wide range of conditions. If you’ve felt stuck despite trying other therapies, EMDR may be worth exploring.
Single-incident and complex, developmental, and relational trauma
Chronic worry, panic attacks, and fear-based avoidance
Especially when rooted in painful past experiences or beliefs
Neglect, abuse, unstable environments, and early losses
Complicated or traumatic grief that remains unresolved
Negative core beliefs like “I’m not enough” or “I’m not safe”
Fear of failure, perfectionism, and self-doubt under pressure
Specific fears and avoidance behaviors that limit daily life
EMDR doesn’t just help you cope — it aims to change how your nervous system responds to the memories and triggers that have been running the show.
EMDR follows a structured eight-phase protocol, but we move at a pace that feels right for you. Here’s how our work typically unfolds from start to finish.
We start with a thorough intake to understand your history, current challenges, and goals for therapy. This session also gives you a chance to ask questions and get a sense of how EMDR works before we begin.
Before we move into active memory processing, we build the tools and safety you’ll need. This includes emotional regulation skills, grounding techniques, and establishing a strong therapeutic relationship — so you feel prepared and supported.
Using bilateral stimulation — typically guided eye movements — we work through targeted memories and beliefs. You stay in control of the pace, and many clients are surprised by how much lighter they feel after even a single session of active processing.
We review your progress, consolidate the gains you’ve made, and determine whether additional sessions would be helpful. Some clients feel complete at this point; others choose to continue working on additional targets.
EMDR sessions are billed the same as standard therapy — which means your insurance coverage applies. I accept the following plans across Alaska, Colorado, Nevada, and Texas.
Not sure if you’re covered? Ask during your free consultation call — I’m happy to help you figure it out.
EMDR isn’t something that works well as a one-size-fits-all service. It requires a clinician who knows your full history, can read when to push forward and when to slow down, and can adapt the approach to what you specifically need. As a PsyD-level psychologist, I bring the clinical depth to do that well — and to hold the space safely when the work gets hard.
Large therapy platforms can connect you quickly, but EMDR requires continuity with a single provider who genuinely knows you. Switching therapists mid-process can disrupt the work significantly.
Yes — research supports the effectiveness of EMDR delivered via telehealth. We use bilateral stimulation adapted for online sessions, and many clients find the comfort of their own home actually helps them feel safer during processing.
Fill out the form below and Corinne or a member of her team will reach out to schedule a convenient time for your complimentary 15-minute call.