Lisa Robinson, PhD

713-922-5339

713-922-5339

  • Welcome
  • About Me
    • Background & Experience
    • Testimonials
    • My Style & Approach
    • Headstrong Project
  • EMDR Therapy
    • Learn more about EMDR
    • EMDR Intensives
    • Adjunct EMDR
  • Get Started
    • Contact Information
    • Offerings & Fees
    • Insurance
    • FAQs
    • Forms
  • EMDR Consultation
  • Client Portal
  • More
    • Welcome
    • About Me
      • Background & Experience
      • Testimonials
      • My Style & Approach
      • Headstrong Project
    • EMDR Therapy
      • Learn more about EMDR
      • EMDR Intensives
      • Adjunct EMDR
    • Get Started
      • Contact Information
      • Offerings & Fees
      • Insurance
      • FAQs
      • Forms
    • EMDR Consultation
    • Client Portal
  • Welcome
  • About Me
    • Background & Experience
    • Testimonials
    • My Style & Approach
    • Headstrong Project
  • EMDR Therapy
    • Learn more about EMDR
    • EMDR Intensives
    • Adjunct EMDR
  • Get Started
    • Contact Information
    • Offerings & Fees
    • Insurance
    • FAQs
    • Forms
  • EMDR Consultation
  • Client Portal

Adjunct EMDR Collaboration

Welcome to Your Invitation to Something Different...

Collaboration: EMDR as Adjunct Therapy

Lets us work as a team to help you grow

We’ve all had those moments in therapy where we feel stuck or loop on issues related to negative life experiences. It can be discouraging for both the client and the therapist. Often times, when the primary therapist and client collaborate with an EMDR therapist, this partnership can help move treatment forward. 


I partner with primary therapists and their clients to target their clients’ specific memories, body sensations, or limiting beliefs with EMDR. By narrowly targeting specific traumatic memories or intrusive material, brief adjunct EMDR can accelerate progress in traditional therapy, help the client and the primary therapist to resolve stuck points, and enrich their ongoing work.


Adjunct therapy does not replace or interrupt ongoing therapy; it is supplemental to the primary therapeutic relationship. With adjunct EMDR therapy, clients continue to receive treatment with their primary therapist. Usually adjunct therapy is short term (4-12 extended sessions) and desensitizes single incident trauma or simple phobias that interfere with the client’s therapeutic gains. Treatment is scheduled in an intensive format (extended sessions, half-day intensive, multi-day intensives).  The success of treatment is based on clearly defined goals for the EMDR therapist, defined in collaboration with the primary therapist and client.



Team members stacking hands in the middle

The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now. -Chinese Proverb

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Online EMDR Therapy & Consultation in Texas & North Carolina

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