Looking for an EMDR therapist in Ottawa who offers warm, nervous-system-informed care?
At Vistas Psychotherapy & Wellness, you can explore trauma-aware EMDR therapy with clinicians who pay close attention to pacing, readiness, and your overall support system. We offer in-person EMDR therapy in Ottawa, with virtual care across Ontario.
If things feel heavy or hard to carry on your own, you are not alone — and you do not have to keep pushing past what your system can manage. If it feels helpful, you are welcome to book a free 15–20 minute consult to ask questions, get a sense of fit, and see whether this kind of support feels workable for where you are right now.
EMDR may be one piece of an integrative plan that can also include body-aware grounding, mindfulness, and attachment-focused work. Together, you and your therapist can decide what feels supportive and manageable.
At Vistas, EMDR is offered within a broader, nervous-system-informed psychotherapy approach. Care is paced, collaborative, and adapted to your capacity in each session. If you're new to EMDR, our guide on what EMDR is and how it works is a good place to start before reading on.
Focuses on safety, stabilization, and readiness before any reprocessing.
Integrates body-aware, sensory-based, and yoga-informed grounding practices.
May be combined with CBT, DBT-informed skills, attachment-focused therapy, or parts work.
Attends to your cultural context, identities, and lived experience.
We use a body-aware, nervous-system-informed lens to understand how the body and nervous system may respond to stress, but we do not offer formal somatic modalities (such as Somatic Experiencing), bodywork, or touch-based interventions.
Many people notice that trauma and stress show up not only in thoughts and emotions, but also in the body: tension, numbness, digestive changes, sleep disruption, or always feeling "on." A nervous-system-informed EMDR approach takes this into account.
At Vistas, EMDR is woven together with grounding, attention to your window of tolerance, and day-to-day coping skills — so your system stays within a range that feels manageable, instead of pushing into overwhelm.
You might consider meeting with an EMDR therapist in Ottawa if you:
If anxiety is also present, you might explore anxiety counselling in Ottawa alongside EMDR-informed care.
A free 15–20 minute consult to share a little about what brings you in, ask questions, and get a sense of fit — no obligation to continue.
Getting to know your history and supports, mapping how anxiety or trauma show up in the body, and learning grounding strategies.
Building internal and external resources and ensuring there's enough stability before any reprocessing begins.
Focusing on a specific memory or sensation with bilateral stimulation, with grounding between sets to keep things tolerable.
Noticing changes in old triggers, integrating new beliefs about safety, and deciding together when to pause or wrap up.
Many people look for EMDR for PTSD in Ottawa when they're experiencing flashbacks, avoidance, emotional numbness, or ongoing stress that traces back to earlier experiences.
At Vistas, EMDR is woven into a broader plan that can include polyvagal-informed pacing, body-aware grounding, attachment-focused work, and CBT or DBT-informed skills for day-to-day coping. If anxiety is also a focus, you and your therapist might integrate EMDR with anxiety counselling in Ottawa.
If cost is a concern, you can ask about low-cost counselling in Ottawa options during your consult.
EMDR may be helpful if you feel stuck with past experiences that keep affecting the present. In your consult, you and your therapist can explore whether EMDR, another approach, or a combination feels most supportive.
There is no set number. Some people focus on a specific incident; others work with long-term trauma over a longer period. Time is also spent on stabilization and integration, not only reprocessing.
Yes. EMDR can support the nervous system in responding differently to triggers, especially when these patterns have roots in earlier experiences or are strongly felt in the body.
Yes, through secure, PHIPA-compliant platforms, adapted with attention to safety and grounding.
No. You do not need a formal PTSD or anxiety diagnosis to begin EMDR therapy.
Your therapist will check in often. EMDR can be slowed down, paused, or shifted back to stabilization at any time.
EMDR and trauma-focused work can bring up strong emotions, body sensations, and memories. It's important to have enough stability, support, and safety before beginning reprocessing.
If you are in immediate crisis or at risk of harm, please contact 9-8-8 (Suicide Crisis Helpline), 9-1-1, or your local crisis service instead of waiting for an appointment.
If you'd like to understand more about how trauma and stress show up in the body — or what actually helps when anxiety won't quiet down — our blog shares reflections on the slower, human work of therapy: written for people considering EMDR, already on their healing path, or simply curious about nervous-system-informed care.
Read the BlogYou're welcome to book a free 15–20 minute consult to explore pacing, readiness, and whether EMDR or another approach feels like the next supportive step.
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