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Integrating ACT and EMDR with Tammy Walker & Kristy Potter

Presenter
Tammy Walker & Kristy Potter

Book now: https://contextualconsulting.co.uk/live-training/integrating-act-and-emdr 

Join us for an innovative and process-based exploration of integrating acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) with eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR). In this workshop you’ll learn how to integrate the two models in a theoretical coherent way, using  them fluidly and flexibly, tailoring interventions to meet your clients where they are. Whether you’re an ACT practitioner curious about EMDR or an EMDR therapist looking to deepen psychological flexibility in your practice, this workshop will equip you with practical strategies to work more effectively with avoidance, unprocessed experiences, and core memories that hold clients back.

Background to the workshop

Therapists often find themselves navigating the complexities of trauma, avoidance, and meaning-making, wondering how to seamlessly integrate different therapeutic approaches to better support their clients, particularly with trauma-related content, distressing memories, or deeply entrenched emotional barriers which can make them feel stuck. ACT provides a rich framework for changing how clients relate to their inner experiences, but there are times when unresolved content remains. EMDR, with its focus on processing and restructuring memory traces, offers a complementary way to help clients move through these barriers. Bringing the two approaches together requires a thoughtful understanding of how ACT’s process-based flexibility and values-orientation can align with EMDR’s structured and transformative interventions. This workshop will help you work  confidently and ethically  across these two models, improving outcomes for clients

 What you will gain from this workshop

By participating in this workshop, you will:

  • Learn when and how to integrate EMDR into an ACT framework, especially when clients are stuck in avoidance or trauma-related barriers.
  • Understand the theoretical alignment between ACT and EMDR, using ACT to normalise intrusions and build psychological flexibility while employing EMDR techniques to loosen the grip of unresolved memories.
  • Explore clinical scenarios where integration is particularly helpful, such as avoidance of trauma narratives, post-processing distress, or shame-based identity fusion.
  • Gain practical strategies for adapting ACT processes to EMDR phases, from preparation to closure, using specific tools like values clarification, defusion, and willingness exercises.
  • Discover how ACT can be used to address blocks or avoidance during EMDR, with metaphors, functional analysis, and creative interventions to keep clients engaged.
  • Learn key tips for integrating ACT and EMDR to ensure that therapeutic gains are anchored in values and embedded into a meaningful sense of self.

About this workshop

This 2-hour workshop is designed to be engaging, interactive, and directly applicable to your practice. It will include:

  • Mini lectures to set the theoretical foundation for integrating ACT and EMDR.
  • Client vignettes to illustrate common clinical challenges and how to navigate them using both approaches.
  • Practical demonstrations, including a brief overview of how ACT processes can align with EMDR phases.
  • Experiential exercises to explore ACT tools for working with avoidance and blocks in EMDR.

Throughout the workshop, you’ll have opportunities to reflect, ask questions, and consider how this integration can benefit your specific client population.

Who will benefit from this workshop?

This workshop is ideal for:

  • Therapists and psychologists with foundational training in either ACT or EMDR who wish to broaden their skills by integrating both approaches.
  • EMDR-trained clinicians looking to incorporate ACT principles to enhance psychological flexibility, both before and after reprocessing.
  • ACT practitioners who want to explore how EMDR can help clients process core trauma-related content and overcome barriers.
  • Mental health professionals working with clients facing trauma-related avoidance, unresolved memories, or shame-based identity issues.


No prior experience in both models is required, but participants should have at least a working knowledge of one approach to gain the most from this workshop.

Online/Virtual
Yes
Region
Europe
Country
United Kingdom
Language
English
Recur Type
Custom/Single Event