Asheville NC Psychologist
Meet Dr. Lisa Robinson – Trauma, Anxiety, and EMDR Specialist.
Your past doesn’t have to limit your future.
Together, let’s discover new possibilities.
Life hurts right now, and you know something has to change
You’re stumbling through your days hoping things will get better, but they haven’t. You don’t know how to fix whatever this is, and you need help.
That’s ok. We all need help sometimes. It’s part of being human.
I’ve been doing this a long time, and I love it. I get to help people rebound from their most difficult life experiences and overcome the struggles and symptoms that are limiting their lives. That’s a beautiful thing.
Maybe you’ve read the self-help books, listened to the podcasts, and even gone to therapy, but there is still no better tomorrow for you yet.
Sometimes we need expert, focused help that goes beyond validation, support, coping skills, and insight. Hell, you may have even tried EMDR before with an ‘EMDR trained’ provider that hasn’t pursued the advanced trainings and certifications necessary to do EMDR really well, simply dabbles with EMDR here-and-there, or hasn’t used EMDR to tackle the more complex stuff people struggle with.
Well, that’s not me.
I received my initial training in EMDR in 2014, and since then I have consistently pursued advanced EMDR trainings, allowing me to advanced from student to teacher. I’m an EMDRIA-Approved Certified EMDR provider and EMDR Consultant, which has allowed me the pleasure of teaching other therapists how to use EMDR creatively and effectively.
I have successfully worked with clients with milder levels of anxiety and trauma all the way up to clients with almost unbelievable levels of anxiety and trauma. I’ve heard some of the worst life and humanity has to offer, and I’ve walked solidly by my clients as they worked through the things in need of attention.
I’ve worked at one of the largest VAs in the country for over 10 years which has helped me learn to stay mission-focused in order to get the work done within the time constraints inherent in a large system with limited resources. I bring this level of mission-focus into my private practice work so that my clients get relief sooner rather than later.
And when the dust settles, my clients say to me:
“That’s over. It doesn’t bother me anymore.”
“I know now that wasn’t my fault.”
“I’m ok now.”
“I can handle it now.”
“I was able to do ____ which I haven’t been able to do in years.”
“I haven’t panicked in weeks.”
“I stayed calm and didn’t overreact.”
“I deserve better.”
“I’m sleeping better.”
“I didn’t’ think this would work, but it did.”
You deserve to land there too.
What’s it like to work with me
Choosing the right therapist—one you feel at ease with and “click” with—is important. I’m not the right fit for everyone. To help you decide if I might be a good fit for you, here’s what working with me looks like.
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• Is collaborative. We will work as a team to target the pain points in your life based on what matters most to you. Whether it is old stuff or newer stuff, we’ll figure it out together.
• Is more than just talking. I emphasize evidence-based therapies in my clinical work, which means therapies supported by the best research evidence available. I’m trained in multiple modalities and incorporate these methods in a way that best supports you as an individual as you move towards your goals for therapy.
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• Is straight-shooting and not so ooey-gooey. I’m not great at tip-toeing around stuff, and my facial expressions generally reflect what I’m thinking. This doesn't mean I will push my views on you or try to make decisions for you. In fact, I'm a strong believer in the idea that what works for one person won't necessarily work for another person and that a person generally knows what is best for him- or herself. It's my job to help you explore and make decisions that are right for you within your discovery and change process.
• Is change-oriented. I help clients identify therapy goals around want they want to see different, better, or changed and then we develop a plan of action to get them there. So I work best with folks who have some sense of what the problem is and what they want changed. It also helps if you are the type that wants relief sooner rather than later.
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• Is EMDR Therapy. I was originally trained in cognitive-behavioral therapy, and I utilize pieces of this approach when clinically indicated, but I’m an EMDR therapist at heart for a very good reason. EMDR is a powerful and flexible therapy that helps people change what hurts, and it goes beyond traditional talk therapy. This matters because no matter how hard we try, we often can’t think ourselves into feeling better, and there is often a mismatch between what we know to be true and what we feel to be true. EMDR has a way of syncing up what the head knows and what the heart feels. For more information about EMDR, click here.
My clinical approach is also informed by cognitive-behavioral therapy, polyvagal theory (a way to understand how our nervous system responds to stress) and what we know about the neurobiology of trauma, mindfulness, attachment, and ego states.
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• Change is absolutely possible. I wouldn’t be doing this work otherwise.
• Prior difficult experiences are more often than not the source of current symptoms and struggles and thus likely need to be examined. I don’t believe in slapping a band aid over a deep cut. Sometimes you have to dig-in and debride the wound for it to heal.
• Getting “unstuck” often involves examining and/or changing how we think and behave in response to past or current events in our lives.
• Feelings are a natural and normal part of the human experience that provide us with important information. Our natural inclination though is to avoid pain, but here’s the kicker, feelings only stay if we push them away. Sometimes we have to let big emotions run their natural course so they don’t get stuck in the body.
• Sometimes we need to learn new practical skills to help us become more effective in coping with stress, responding to life’s inevitable hurdles, and obtaining desired outcomes.
• Every one of us has behaviors that worked for them in the past that may no longer serve them in the present. Imagine wearing your heavy Alaskan coat in Houston in June. It may have saved you in the past, but it’s hurting you in the present. These strategies may need to be identified and updated.
If you think we might be a fit and want to learn more, follow the link below to request a free 15-minute consultation.
SPECIALIZING IN…
We can heal from psychological trauma (aka any upsetting life event) just like we can heal from physical trauma to the body. When you cut your arm, your body works to repair the wound. The brain has a similar mechanism but at times it gets blocked by something. EMDR Therapy works to unblock this system so natural healing can resume and we can recover from what hurt us—big or small.
NC Licensed Psychologist #6155, 2022 - present
TX Licensed Psychologist #32216, 2003 - present
Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Dept of Behavioral Science, U.T. MD Anderson Cancer Center, 2002-2005
Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, 2002
Master of Arts in Psychology, Wake Forest University, 1996Bachelor of Science in Psychology, Texas A&M University, 1994
Education & Licensure
EMDRIA-Approved EMDR Consultant, 2024 - present
EMDRIA Approved Consultant-in-Training, 2022 - 2024
EMDRIA Approved Certified Therapist in EMDR, 2017
EMDRIA Approved Basic Training in EMDR, 2014
EMDR Training & Contributions
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● 2024: EMDR 2.0 - Enhancing EMDR Therapy by A. de Jongh & S. Matthijssen
● 2022-2023: The Consultation Program with EMDRIA-Approved Consultant Kambria Evans
● 2022: How to succeed as an EMDRIA Consultant-in-Training and Approved Consultant by A. Leeds & J. Madere
● 2022: Therapeutic Challenges in the Application of EMDR Therapy to Complex Trauma Cases by Dolores Mosquera
● 2022: Attachment-Focused EMDR: Healing Developmental Deficits and Adults Abused as Children by Laurel Parnell, PhD
● 2021: Getting Ventral with Polyvagal Theory in EMDR Therapy by Deb Dana, LCSW
● 2021: EMDR and Dissociation: Past, Present, and Future
● 2021: EMDR Treatment of Complex PTSD: Lessons Learned Over Three Decades
● 2021: EMD Symptom Reduction and Maintaining Stability by Donald deGraffenried, LCSW
● 2020: EMDR Recent Traumatic Episode Protocol (R-TEP) & EMDR Group Traumatic Event Protocol (G-TEP), by Regina Morrow Robinson, Ed.S, LMFT
● 2020 Utilization of EMDR Therapy with Grief and Mourning, webinar by Roger M. Solomon, PhD
● 2020 EMDR in the Treatment of Depression – the EMDR DeprEnd protocol, webinar by Dr. Arne Hofmann
● 2020: Acute Stress Syndrome Stabilization (ASSYST) - Remote, by Ignacio (Nacho) Jarero, Lucina Artigas, & Kelly Smyth-Dent
● 2020: Safe and Practical EMDR for Complex PTSD
● 2019: When There Are No Words: Repairing Early Trauma and Neglect from the Attachment Period with EMDR Therapy by Dr. Sandra Paulsen
● 2019: Flash Technique, by Dr. Philip Manfield and Dr. Lewis Engel
● 2018: Natural Processing: Integrating Somatic Psychotherapy with EMDR Therapy – Part I, intensive 4 day training by Craig Penner, LMFT
● 2018: EMDR toolbox: AIP methods for treating PTSD in dissociative personality disorder, 2 day training by Dr. Jim Knipe
● 2017: EMDR Therapy in the Treatment of Shame, Guilt, and Moral Injury, 2 day training by Dr. E.C. Hurley
● 2016: EMDR Therapy in the Treatment of Veterans/Military with Complex PTSD, Dissociation, and Moral Injury, 2 day training by Dr. E.C. Hurley
● 2016: The 10 Core Competencies of Trauma, PTSD, Grief, & Loss / Evidence-Based Trauma Treatments and Interventions, 2-day trauma competency conference by Dr. Eric Gentry
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● EMDR Consulting team provider: providing EMDR Basic Training coaching and Basic Training consultation (2023 - present)
● EMDRIA Military Special Interest Group, Co-Moderator in conjunction with Ted Olejnik (5/21 – present)
● Go With That magazine – Changing Lives – Conference Edition (Summer 2021 edition, Vol 26 / Issue 3). Military SIG online community response on Cognitive Interweaves for moral injury by Dr. Lisa Robinson printed with permission in Counselor's Corner section.
● Go With That magazine – EMDR and the Military: Combating Trauma (Spring 2020 edition, Vol 25 / Issue 1). Participated on a five-member EMDRIA Resource Committee that developed educational materials, 'therapist tools' [Top 5 Myths about Treating Service Members with EMDR Therapy; Top 10 Tips for EMDR Therapists Working with Veterans and Service Members; How to Create a Therapeutic Alliance with Veterans and Service Members], and a client handout [EMDR Therapy for Veterans and Service Members]. Contributions referenced at https://www.emdria.org/publications-resources/practice-resources/military-toolkit/.
● Video contributions describing aspects of EMDR Therapy for the National Center for PTSD treatment comparison decision aid (2014). For video clip segments see https://www.ptsd.va.gov/apps/Decisionaid/compare.aspx under the EMDR column.
Other Professional Certifications
CBT for Insomnia (CBT-I) trained provider – Center for Deployment Psychology, 2019
Cognitive Processing Therapy for PTSD Provider, Veterans Health Admin. certification, 2012
Prolonged Exposure for PTSD Provider, Veterans Health Admin. certification, 2015
International Association of Trauma Professionals, 2016
Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, 2009 - current
Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Houston, 2007-2008
American Psychological Association (APA)
EMDR International Association (EMDRIA)
Texas Psychological Association (TPA)
Western North Carolina Psychological Association (WNCPA)
International Association of Trauma Professionals, 2016
Professional & Academic Affiliations
Employed at the Michael E. DeBakey VA in Houston, TX since 2009
Headstrong Project Clinical Partner since 2018, providing individual therapy to Veterans receiving care through this nonprofit organization
Lone Survivor Foundation consultant, assisting at Veteran retreats between 2016 - 2018