


This book was required reading for an EMDR course I‘m about to take. I‘m still skeptical but looking forward to include this as a part of my practice. The book has a good overview about trauma and EMDR and lays out good arguments and support. The examples were helpful but I felt there were way too many.
JenReadsAlot I've had this on my shelf for years and still haven't read it. 6y
alvingregorio @JenReadsAlot it‘s worth the read. You‘ll get the point halfway through, then it just repeats. 6y
13 likes2 comments