Clinical Psychologist, Psychologist
Schema Therapy + EMDR
Healing patterns at their roots, not just managing symptoms:
Many people come to therapy feeling frustrated because they’ve understood their problems — yet still find themselves reacting in the same ways emotionally. If this resonates, Schema Therapy combined with EMDR may offer a different path forward.
The Reframe:
Diagnoses help describe what you’re experiencing. Schema Therapy helps explain why these patterns formed — and why they keep repeating.
Your patterns are not flaws or failures. They are adaptations your nervous system developed when important emotional needs were not consistently met (Young, Klosko, & Weishaar, 2003).
From a Schema Therapy perspective, many long-standing difficulties are not about having “one disorder,” but about enduring patterns shaped by early experience.
How Patterns Form:
Schema Therapy understands emotional difficulties as developing over time through a predictable pathway:
Unmet Core Needs → Schemas → Modes
Unmet Core Emotional Needs
Such as:
- Safety and protection
- Emotional connection and being understood
- Acceptance and belonging
Schemas (Deep Emotional Beliefs):
Schemas are deeply held emotional beliefs about yourself, others, and the world. They are not conscious thoughts — they are felt truths that shape how you interpret situations and relationships.
Examples include:
“I’m unlovable.”
“I don’t matter.”
“People will leave or reject me.”
Because schemas are stored in emotional memory, they don’t feel like opinions — they feel like facts.
Modes (Emotional States or “Parts”):
Modes are different emotional states or “parts” of you that get activated when a schema is triggered. They tend to follow a predictable sequence:
Vulnerable Child — feels hurt, scared, ashamed, lonely, or rejected
Protector Modes — attempt to prevent further pain by overcompensating, withdrawing, attacking, pleasing, or staying in control
Inner Critic — steps in with harsh, shaming, or punitive messages
Everyday example: A schema of “I’m unlovable” is triggered when a friend doesn’t reply to a message. The Vulnerable Child feels rejected and panicked. A Protector mode overcompensates by sending an angry or demanding text to regain control. The friend pulls back or avoids the interaction. The Inner Critic then attacks: “See? You always ruin things. You’re too much.”
What this teaches the nervous system: The original schema feels confirmed — “I really am unlovable” — even though the reaction was driven by protection, not truth.
This is how patterns become self-reinforcing, and why insight alone often isn’t enough to break them.
Why This Keeps the Pattern Going:
Because the Vulnerable Child’s need for reassurance, safety, or connection is never directly met, the original schema (for example, “I’m unlovable” or “I’ll be rejected”) remains unhealed.
The Protector steps in by overcompensating or lashing out in an attempt to regain control. This often pushes others away — not because the schema is true, but because the behaviour is driven by fear rather than connection.
When the other person withdraws, the Inner Critic attacks with shame and self-blame — and the nervous system takes this as “proof” that the schema was right all along.
Because the system never experiences calm connection in the present, it never learns that the past is over — and the same pattern repeats.
Why “Think Positive” or Logic Alone Often Doesn’t Work:
Schemas are stored in emotional memory, not just thoughts. When they’re activated, the nervous system responds as if the past is happening again.
This is why:
Insight doesn’t always lead to change
Reassurance doesn’t settle the reaction
You may know something logically, yet still feel overwhelmed
As trauma research shows, the body responds before the thinking brain can intervene (van der Kolk, 2014).
How Schema Therapy + EMDR Helps:
Schema Therapy
Maps your patterns with compassion rather than judgement
Identifies schemas, modes, and coping strategies
Strengthens the Healthy Adult part of you — the part that can notice, reflect, and respond rather than react
EMDR
Targets the memories and emotional learning that shaped these patterns
Helps the nervous system update old beliefs and threat responses
Reduces the emotional charge that keeps patterns repeating
Together, this approach works at both the psychological and nervous system level (Shapiro, 2018).
What Therapy Typically Looks Like:
Stability & Safety first: building awareness and stabilisation without pressure
Understanding the roots: mapping schemas and modes together
EMDR reprocessing: updating old emotional learning at a tolerable pace
Strengthening the Healthy Adult: developing new emotional and behavioural choices
You remain in control throughout the process. Therapy is paced, collaborative, and responsive to you.
The Bottom Line:
You are not broken. You adapted to what you were given.
Schema Therapy and EMDR help your nervous system learn that the present is safer than the past — so you can respond to life with more choice, calm, and self-compassion.
You must be a HealthShare member to report this post. to your account or now (it's free).