Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
Key Takeaways
- This article guides you in choosing between IFS, EMDR, and EMDR Intensive based on your nervous system state.
- For a ‘Revved up’ state, decide if you want understanding or relief; IFS and EMDR serve different needs.
- A ‘Shut down’ state may benefit from IFS or EMDR, depending on emotional accessibility.
- If you experience ‘Both,’ IFS helps stabilize before introducing EMDR; assess your readiness for deeper work.
- If you feel ‘Pretty stable,’ the pace of healing determines the choice; go for IFS for depth, or EMDR for quicker results.
A gentle guide for choosing the right next step.
Start Here:
How would you describe your nervous system most days?
A. “Revved up.”
(Jumpy, anxious, easily triggered, always on alert)
B. “Shut down.”
(Tired, numb, disconnected, overwhelmed)
C. “Both, depending on the day.”
(Swinging between anxiety + collapse)
D. “Pretty stable — I’m ready for deeper work.”
If You Answered A: “Revved up”
Next Question:
Do you want to understand why you feel this way, or are you ready to change how it feels in your body?
1. “I want to understand myself more deeply.”
→ You’re likely a great fit for IFS. IFS helps calm protective parts and soften the emotional load underneath the hypervigilance.
2. “I want relief from the physical intensity.”
→ You may be ready for EMDR. EMDR helps reprocess the trauma memories fueling the activation.
3. “I want fast relief.”
→ You may be a fit for an EMDR Intensive — if your system can tolerate deeper work.
If You Answered B: “Shut down”
Next Question:
When you try to access emotions, does it feel possible?
1. “Not really — I feel frozen.”
→ Start with IFS. IFS gently reconnects you to your emotional world without overwhelming you.
2. “I can feel things — I just don’t know how to move through them.”
→ Consider EMDR. Especially if the shutdown comes from old trauma that has never been processed.
3. “I’m capable, just exhausted.”
→ IFS or EMDR can both work, depending on your goals. We’d help you choose based on your stability.
If You Answered C: “Both, depending on the day”
Next Question:
Do you feel ready for concentrated trauma work?
1. “Not yet.”
→ IFS first. IFS helps stabilize the inner system so you can eventually do deeper processing.
2. “Some days yes, some days no.”
→ Start with IFS → add EMDR later. This layered approach works beautifully.
3. “Yes — I’m ready.”
→ EMDR or an EMDR Intensive (but we would assess your regulation skills first).
If You Answered D: “Pretty stable — I’m ready for deeper work”
Next Question:
What’s the pace you want for healing?
1. “Slow and steady. I want depth.”
→ IFS. Especially if you want relational healing, self-understanding, and long-term transformation.
2. “Let’s move — I want trauma off my plate.”
→ EMDR. Ideal for direct processing.
3. “Let’s do this in days, not months.”
→ EMDR Intensive. Best for people who are ready, resourced, and motivated.
Bonus Question: What feels scarier — going slow, or going deep?
Pick your answer:
“Going slow feels unbearable — I need change.”
→ You might be ready for EMDR or an EMDR Intensive.
“Going deep too fast feels overwhelming.”
→ You’re likely a better fit for IFS, at least to start.
“Both sound okay — I just want the right fit.”
→ We’ll help you decide based on your nervous system, past trauma, and goals.
Your Personalized Glance
✔️ IFS is right for you if you want:
- gentleness
- emotional clarity
- compassion for your inner parts
- deep relational healing
- a slow, steady approach
✔️ EMDR is right for you if you want:
- structured trauma reprocessing
- faster change
- less emotional “story” and more nervous-system shifts
- relief from specific memories or triggers
✔️ An EMDR Intensive is right for you if you want:
- accelerated healing
- focused, uninterrupted trauma work
- transformation in days, not months
- a retreat-like experience
Final Thought
Your system already knows the pace and approach it needs. Our job is to listen to your story, your body, your capacity — and help you choose the healing path that feels supportive, not overwhelming.
A Note on This Content
This post is meant to offer education and support, not a diagnosis or treatment plan. Mental health care looks different for everyone, and decisions about therapy or medication are best made in partnership with a licensed provider.
About the Author
This article was created by Ginger Houghton, LMSW and reviewed by the clinical team at Bright Spot Counseling and EMDR Treatment Center, a Michigan-based practice specializing in trauma-informed therapy and psychiatric medication support. All of our providers are licensed to provide therapy or medication services in Michigan.



