đď¸ New Podcast Episode: Bridging EMDR, IFS, and Motivational Interviewing
- Empowered Through Compassion
- May 31
- 3 min read
Empowered Through Compassion Podcast
In this episode, we explore a powerful and often overlooked therapeutic trio: EMDR, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and Motivational Interviewing (MI). If youâve ever wondered how to help clients move from ambivalence to meaningful changeâor how to make EMDR feel more relational and intuitiveâthis is the conversation for you.
The Common Ground: Self-Leadership & Intrinsic Wisdom
What ties IFS, EMDR, and MI together? At their core, all three approaches believe this:
Clients hold the wisdom and capacity for healing inside themselves.
Whether itâs the Self in IFS, the Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) system in EMDR, or the intrinsic motivation in MI, each model honors the client as the expert on their own life. Our role is to compassionately guide, not direct.
What is Motivational Interviewing (MI)?
Larisa describes MI beautifully:
âItâs a conversation style that helps elicit peopleâs behavior change and resolve any ambivalence they have around making changes. Itâs not about leading or followingâitâs about guiding.â
MI helps clients uncover their values and use those as fuel for transformation. It's relational, respectful, and deeply humanizing.
MIâs Spirit: PACE as a Compass
To show up for clients in the MI spirit, we bring:
Partnership
Acceptance
Compassion
Empowerment
This allows for true connectionâcreating a space where clients feel safe enough to explore, question, and grow.
MI in Action: A Bridge to EMDR
As Larisa shares, many clinicians struggle with applying EMDR, especially in early stages. MI offers a crucial entry pointâhelping clients prepare, build trust, and find clarity in their goals.
âOur clients come in with ambivalenceâabout therapy, about EMDR. MI helps us meet them where they are.â
MI enhances EMDRâs Stage One (Preparation)Â phase by bringing in empathy, reflection, and alignment with client values.
A Case Example: Matthew Perry & the Power of Discrepancy
Imagine a young Matthew Perry wrestling with abandonment wounds and addiction. MI helps us uncover the discrepancy between where he is and where he wants to be. Itâs not just about stopping a behaviorâitâs about healing the parts that carry unmet needs and pain.
Reflections, Change Talk & âDARN CATsâ
MI offers tools to strengthen internal alignment:
DARN (Desire, Ability, Reason, Need)Â â the seeds of change
CATs (Commitment, Activation, Taking Steps)Â â the momentum for action
These can powerfully support Phase Four of EMDR, especially when clients are ready to take new stepsâbut feel unsure how.
Integration & Future Templating
MI isnât just for the beginningâit shines in re-evaluation and future planning too:
âSometimes clients say theyâre ready for changeâbut donât know how. This is where we go back to Evoking and Planning. MI gives us tools to break it down, make it concrete, and support clients in taking those next steps.â
Whether you're addressing co-occurring issues or preparing for future challenges, MI helps keep the work grounded, hopeful, and empowering.
Final Thoughts: Parts Want to Grow
IFS reminds us that all partsâeven protectorsâultimately want healing. MI offers a lens to honor that growth:
âThereâs a fear in IFS that we donât want to change parts. But MI helps us see it differently: Parts want to grow. Our goal is to encourage the intrinsic desire of parts to grow.â
đ Learn more about Larisa and her work:Â empowertct.com
đ§ Tune in and subscribe to the Empowered Through Compassion podcastâwhere healing is a collaborative, compassionate journey.
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