Category Archives: frequency

EMDR is for EVERYONE!

If we have ever interacted, you have probably heard me talk about EMDR excitedly at least one time. EMDR, or Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing therapy, is an evidenced-based trauma focused therapy. It also happens to be my greatest passion, and most useful tool for any client!

So, what is EMDR, and why do I think it can benefit EVERYONE?

EMDR is a process that activates the brain’s natural healing process to address improperly stored memories. You know a memory is improperly stored if you think about it or are reminded of it, and have a physiological response (heart beats faster, sweating, shaking, stomach ache, or feeling sad, nervous, and/or angry).

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If you’ve ever heard of REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep, the process is similar. When we enter REM sleep, our eyes move back and forth rapidly. This activates a process in the brain that files our memories from the previous day away nicely. So, when I wake up the next day and think about what I had for breakfast the prior day, I can remember I ate an omelette without any sort of activation of stress response. However, when we experience trauma, these memories are often times not stored properly. If I had a car accident last week, I may walk to my car today and trigger the improperly stored memory, causing my heart to race, my stomach to turn, my breath to quicken, and a feeling of dread to wash over me.

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EMDR uses this same natural brain organization mechanism by activating a trauma memory, and having a trained therapist assist in recreating the REM movements while awake. The therapist tracks the movement of information with verbal cues from the client throughout the process, and can redirect as needed to make sure the memory is completely properly filed. The therapist is trained to keep the person in the present moment while also activating the past memory simultaneously. This delicate dance between memory and present moment allows the brain to activate its healing mechanism during waking hours and assists in filing memories that may have been improperly stored for an individuals entire life.

In a successful EMDR session, a person might have a memory that causes them a 10/10 on the distress scale, and a negative associated cognition such as “I am bad” or “I am not safe.” By the end of that session, that person will ultimately be able to remember the memory, but will have a subjective distress rating of 0/10 and will honestly be able to report and believe the positive cognition of “I am good,” and/or “I am safe.”

I have seen clients make immense amounts of progress in a very short duration of time. I had one month before moving out of state to work with a woman who agreed to 2x/week hour sessions, and in those 4 weeks we successfully reprocessed and worked through over 40 years of complex trauma. I cannot begin to explain how long that process could have gone on with traditional talk therapy or trauma-focused cognitive behavioral techniques.

The best part of EMDR is it can help ANYONE. You do not have to have “big T Trauma” to benefit; you only need to have a memory that activates distress. If that happens to be the time you were 6 and spilled your juice on your shirt in front of your crush and thinking of it now still causes you to blush and your heart to race, that’s just as much a target for EMDR as an accident.

We all have trauma. It’s a part of living, learning, and growing. We cannot undo what has happened in the past, but we absolutely have the power to ensure it does not have a hold over us in the present.

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If you’re interested in EMDR therapy, I would love to have a phone or in-person consultation with you. EMDR sessions must be done in person, however. Give me a call or email me, and I look forward to hearing from you!

Kristina Hoff, LCSW

704-965-1172

KHoffLCSW@gmail.com

Self Love

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For the past week, I have had company in town and therefore I have not been able to stick to my routine. Going to bed hours later than usual has led to me hitting snooze on my alarm, rather than get up an hour or so before work to do my yoga practice and journaling. I caught myself yesterday, for just a moment, beating myself up for not practicing and “falling off the wagon.” This brief moment of being overly harsh to myself led me to think more about self-love, self-acceptance, and forgiveness.

I thought for a moment of putting someone I love in my shoes. If my best friend had called me and said “I’m doing great on my yoga teacher training! I am one class away from my 200 hour certification, I’ve been working overtime seeing private therapy clients after my day job, and I have been hosting company this week and having a great time getting some social life TLC! I engaged in a daily yoga practice up until last Thursday, but then I got caught up in everything going on and haven’t practiced in a week! I feel like I’m failing because I can’t juggle all of the balls in the air right now. I should be able to go to bed at midnight and still get up at 6:30 for yoga… I don’t know why I’m being so lazy…” I would have stopped her in her tracks and said “Are you kidding me?! You’re doing AMAZING things and I am SO PROUD of you!!” So, why is it so hard to do this for ourselves?

I do assessments with clients all week, and after going through their childhood, teen years, what’s not going good, and lifelong trauma, they only really squirm when I ask “So, what are you good at? What are your strengths?” I’ve noticed that we as a collective can rattle off a serial list of things not going well, things we could do better at, things we wish we would do but we don’t…. but then struggle intensely to list 3 or 4 things we excel at.

Society has unfortunately conditioned us well to play small. Think of all of the negative words for someone talking about why they are awesome: conceited, big-headed, self-absorbed, vain, arrogant, cocky just to name a few. On the flip side, words like confident and self-assured come up as positive words to use for the same concept… but these words don’t carry the same sharpness and intense energy that their counterparts do. I also struggled to find more than these two words to describe self-affirmation positively, whereas I could keep going and going with the negatives.

Sometimes people are absolutely unable to come up with good things about themselves. The easiest way I have found to build self-love in myself and others in this case is to step into the shoes of someone who loves you. What would your mother/sister/best friend/favorite teacher/co-worker say about you? Even if you don’t believe it? “Well… my best friend always laughs at my jokes and says I’m funny.” Ok! Great start. Now, if we understand Abraham-Hicks’ concept of beliefs: a belief is a thought you keep thinking, all we have to do is keep thinking “I have a good sense of humor” until we believe it. Eventually, if told enough that we are good or bad, we come to believe it. That’s why it is so damaging to have constant negative self-talk; we really buy into and believe the negative things about ourselves that we think. To counteract these patterns, start small with one or two things that other people would say are your good qualities. Repeat these strengths over and over. Use “I” language; not “they think I’m creative” but “I am creative!” Write them on post-its and put them around your house. Put them in your planner. Set them as your desktop background. Whatever will help you to have constant exposure to your positive mantras is good practice.

While we are working on instilling the positive thoughts and feelings about ourselves, however, we also need to spread this concept to how we interact with the world. Each time we focus on positivity, self-love, and strengths, we reinforce that network in our brain so that it becomes easier and easier to engage in these thought patterns. In that same vein, we also need to weaken the negative connections that pull us into the mean, harsh, demeaning thought patterns, for ourselves and others. We reinforce the societal trap of playing small each time we engage in conversation that intends to keep others feeling small, and trying to put them in their place (aka, not loving themselves too much). How many times have you heard. thought, or said (and I’m guilty as well) “Wow, he’s really full of himself!” “Did you see what she was wearing? She doesn’t have the body for that” “She’s really not that pretty/good/skilled/etc.” Every time we allow ourselves to fall in this trap, we are strengthening the idea that this other person shouldn’t feel so good about themselves, and therefore neither should I.

Self love is a process, and it takes a lot of self-awareness. I sometimes am still catching myself engaging in these thought patterns; but I am to the point where I can recognize it and then choose to change my thoughts. “I can’t believe she’s wearing that” becomes “Actually, good for her. I’m glad she has the confidence to wear what she wants without worrying about what other people are thinking. I am going to work more on doing the same, and wearing things I love rather than things I think other people will love on me!” Also, loving actions can really help to focus on the positive. Give compliments! Tell others what they are doing well and what you like about them, and see how it becomes easier to begin to tell yourself the same!

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As you practice loving yourself and giving love and acceptance to others, you will start to emanate positivity and love. Imagine a world where people love and accept themselves, and encourage others to do the same. Imagine school aged children seeing this modeled by their parents; instead of bullying others for seemingly innumerable differences, they spread self-love and acceptance, and encouraged others to do the same. Loving yourself and changing your thought patterns sends out a vibrational pattern that has a ripple effect that extends far beyond just yourself. As you feel better about yourself, you are kinder to others, in turn helping them to feel better about themselves and be kinder to others, etc.

In summation, I missed a week of my practice, and I’m ok with that. I spent the week having a great time with company, working my butt off to get closer and closer to my goals doing a job I love and excel at. I help people in significant ways every single day. I empower people to be their best selves, and they in turn impact the lives of their family, friends, and others in positive ways. These ripples start with me; I have the power to make a difference in this world. I am living my truth and fulfilling my purpose. I am kind, I am loving, and I am generous. I am grateful I woke up this morning and practiced a yoga class I created for the people visiting. I am grateful that someone somewhere will read this post and gain some new insight into how they’ve been treating themselves and others. I am beautifully and wonderfully made, and am happy with the person I am growing into!

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I decided to post the above picture because I tend to automatically engage in negative thought patterns when I see a side-profile picture of myself. My habit is to see all of the things I don’t like, and to focus on flaws. Today, I choose to focus on how happy I look in this photo being at a dear friends’ beautiful wedding with people who I love deeply! Self love is a choice, and the more you make that choice, the easier it becomes.

Please feel free to start your self-love journey below by posting your strengths, what you like about yourself, and what others like about you! ❤

 

 

Raise Your Vibration

Nikola-Tesla-quoteMy intent in a large part of this blog is to make integrative holistic knowledge understandable and accessible to anyone. Many people hear of alternative health practices (energetic medicine, essential oils, crystals) and scoff due to the mainstream presentation of these methodologies being woo-woo and conducted by people resembling Professor Trelawney from Harry Potter:Pdahq1_(1)The truth is, these practices have been around a lot longer than modern medicine. They all revolve around the same thing: energy! Everything (and I mean everything) has a frequency. These electrical frequencies are scientifically measurable, empirical phenomena that have major implications. Different things will have different frequencies, and higher frequencies have been correlated to better health in living beings. Scientists have measured the frequencies of people and found definitive frequency ranges for different diseases.

The analogy of keeping food hot because at lower temperatures bacteria starts to grow and thrive is helpful in understanding talk of keeping a person’s frequency high. The same concept applies to frequency; if disease has definitive ranges and thresholds at which it can survive and thrive, by keeping the vibration of the body high you can maintain health and vitality.

So, how can we raise our vibrations? The good news is, everything you do has the potential to raise your vibration. Even the thoughts you think (whether you’re ruminating on something negative or reframing/refocusing on something positive) can have an effect on your vibration. Major shifts in vibration come from putting high vibrational objects into your vibrational field.

One way to raise your vibration is by eating fresh, high frequency foods. As a general rule, the closer a food resembles what is found in nature, the higher the frequency. Dried food and herbs still have frequencies, though lower than fresh. Unfortunately, the “easy” foods we usually reach for, canned and processed foods, have 0 Hz.

Other major ways to increase your frequency include the use of high-frequency crystals and/or essential oils.  When we use an essential oil or bring a crystal into our electromagnetic field, the frequencies of the crystal or oil will vibrate with related frequencies in our own energy field. This effectively creates a third, high frequency energetic field, and raises our vibrations.

Exercise (yoga!), meditation, positive social interaction, expressing gratitude, energy work (Healing TouchReiki, chakra work), and positive speech are also some of the ways to keep your vibration high. There’s an interesting article on the power of positivity and its effects on the external  world that outlines some of the physical evidence of the power of vibration. These studies conducted by Dr. Emoto can help some of us more left-brained people wrap our minds around the concept that we have immense power and influence over ourselves and everything around us. Below is a water crystal from Dr. Emoto’s work that had the assigned word of “love.”
Water-Crystal-Dr.-EmotoI hope that this post has helped to explain some of the concepts and tools used in holistic healing in a way that is easy to understand. If you have questions about anything please comment below! Also, I offer many of the services outlined above that can aid in raising your vibration- including yoga, meditation, Healing Touch, chakra work, Reiki, and essential oils. I would love to work with you on a personalized plan to empower you to be your best self ❤