EMDR, Trauma Therapy Jaclyn Hall EMDR, Trauma Therapy Jaclyn Hall

Why Imagination Matters in Trauma Therapy

An exploration of imagination, imagery rescripting and relational healing in trauma therapy, and how the nervous system can respond to imagined experiences in meaningful ways.

Have you ever wondered why your therapist invites you to imagine safety, comfort or protection, even though you cannot change the past?

Many people pause when imagination is introduced in therapy.

It can sound like pretending. And if you have lived through trauma, the last thing you want is to feel like your experience is being dismissed, minimised or rewritten.

But imagination in trauma therapy is not about denying what happened.

It is about helping the nervous system experience elements that may have been missing at the time: safety, comfort, protection, connection or choice.

In trauma, the body can remain caught in unfinished survival responses, frozen in time, still waiting for the safety that never came.

Through approaches such as Resource Therapy, Relational Integrative EMDR and Imagery Rescripting, therapy gently revisits these experiences, not to change the facts, but to support the nervous system in experiencing something different emotionally.

An experience where support arrives.
Where the adult self can comfort the younger self.
Where the body can begin to feel what “safe enough” might be.

Research exploring skilled pianists found that when participants imagined playing the piano, many of the same brain areas involved in physically playing became active (Meister et al., 2004). Findings such as these help us better understand why imagination can feel emotionally and physiologically meaningful within therapy. Imagined experiences can influence emotions, perceptions and nervous system responses in powerful ways.

Within approaches such as imagery rescripting, Relational Integrative EMDR and Resource Therapy, imagination is not about pretending the past was different. Instead, it offers the nervous system an opportunity to experience elements that may have been missing at the time.

Research suggests imagery rescripting may help reduce trauma intrusions, soften shame and guilt, and support traumatic memories being experienced and integrated in less distressing ways.

Imagination can become a bridge between past and present, helping different parts of the self, feel seen, cared for and connected within the healing process.

Healing is not about pretending the past was different.

It is about allowing the body and nervous system the opportunity to finally experience what safety, comfort and care can feel like.

Written by Jaclyn Hall

Jaclyn Hall is a PACFA Accredited Clinical Counsellor & Supervisor, EMDRAA Accredited EMDR Practitioner and Advanced Clinical Resource Therapist based in Blaxland in the Blue Mountains. Jaclyn provides trauma therapy, EMDR, Resource Therapy, clinical supervision and trauma-informed training both in-person and online across Australia.

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The Gatekeepers to Healing: Understanding Protector Parts in Trauma Therapy

A trauma-informed exploration of protector parts, survival responses and relational safety through the lens of Resource Therapy and parts-informed trauma therapy.

In the sacred journey of healing trauma, there are parts of us that step forward not to harm, but to protect.

These protector parts have carried the weight of survival — often in silence, often alone. They’ve made impossible choices, built walls, guarded wounds, and worked tirelessly to keep the most vulnerable parts of us safe.

They are not barriers to healing —
they are the guardians of it.

Within trauma-informed approaches such as Resource Therapy and Relational Integrative EMDR, these protective responses are understood not as resistance, but as adaptive survival responses shaped through trauma, attachment wounds and the need for safety.

To earn their trust is not to bypass them, but to pause… to listen.
To understand why they do what they do.

To hear their fears, their needs, their stories.

Trust cannot be demanded from protector parts.

It must be earned through consistency, respect, relational safety and attuned therapeutic presence.

When they begin to trust — truly trust — something incredible happens:

They soften.
They step back.
They let healing in.

Healing is not possible, nor is it ethical, to attempt to overpower or push through protector parts.

Instead, healing often begins through curiosity, compassion and collaboration with the inner system.

In Resource Therapy and Relational Integrative EMDR, we do not force change —
we work collaboratively with the inner system,
bringing every voice to the table with dignity.

So we thank the protectors.
For their service.
For their strength.
For their fierce love.

And we remind them:

You are no longer alone.

And together we heal.

Written by Jaclyn Hall.

Jaclyn Hall is a PACFA Accredited Clinical Counsellor and Supervisor, EMDRAA Accredited EMDR Practitioner and Advanced Clinical Resource Therapist based in Blaxland in the Blue Mountains. Jaclyn provides trauma therapy, EMDR, Resource Therapy, clinical supervision and trauma-informed training both in-person and online across Australia.

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Professional Resources

Below are a selection of professional organisations and educational resources related to trauma therapy, EMDR, counselling, dissociation and mental health support.

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