EGOSTATE THERAPY AND PARTS WORk | CONNECTICUT

Understand the parts of you that feel at odds with one another.

A compassionate way of understanding the different aspects of yourself that developed over time to help make sense of long-standing patterns and create the conditions for meaningful change.

Plants in therapy office to symbolize resilience.

SOUND LIKE YOU?

If this is familiar, you are not alone.


Part of me knows everything is okay…but another part of me can't stop worrying.


A part of me wants to speak up, but another part freezes.


I know I'm being hard on myself, but I can't seem to stop.

We aren't just one emotion, one belief, or one way of responding to the world.

One way of understanding ourselves is through the lens of different parts that developed over the course of our lives, each with its own perspective, role, and purpose.

Some parts help us organize our day, solve problems, care for others, or navigate work and relationships.

Other parts carry painful memories, old beliefs, fear, shame, or hurt from experiences that haven't fully resolved.

Some parts work incredibly hard to protect those more vulnerable places, often through perfectionism, overthinking, people-pleasing, staying busy, shutting down, or always preparing for what might go wrong.

None of these parts are "bad."

In fact, they usually developed for very good reasons.

The question isn't "How do we get rid of this part?"

It's "What has this part been trying to do for you?"

Hope worry stone and plant in psychotherapy office.

THE FOUNDATION

Grounded in egostate therapy

My approach to parts work is based on my training in Ego State Therapy.

Ego State Therapy is based on the understanding that our personalities are naturally made up of different parts or "ego states." Each part holds its own experiences, emotions, beliefs, and ways of responding.

My foundational training in ego state therapy began while working with individuals living with complex dissociation and dissociative disorders. That work gave me a deep appreciation for how the mind organizes itself to survive overwhelming experiences.

While not everyone experiences dissociated parts, many people naturally recognize themselves in parts language.

Almost everyone has experienced moments like:


Parts work simply gives us a compassionate way to understand those internal experiences instead of judging them.

"A part of me wants to..."

"Part of me knows better..."

"I'm torn."

Maybe. Maybe not. You don't have to think about yourself in parts for this approach to be helpful.

Parts aren't personalities. They're different aspects of your internal experience that have developed over time — often in response to life experiences and relationships.

For many people, looking at themselves through this lens feels surprisingly relieving. Instead of asking "What's wrong with me?" they begin asking "Why does this part of me respond this way?"


That shift often creates space for curiosity where there used to be criticism

Do I have parts?

a shift in perspective

Rather than asking, "What's wrong with me?"

We start to ask:

  • Which parts of you are carrying the most responsibility?

  • Which parts are exhausted?

  • Which parts learned they had to stay vigilant?

  • Which parts still believe the world isn't safe?

  • Which parts never really had the chance to be heard?

As we begin understanding how these parts interact, patterns that once felt confusing often start to make much more sense.

Instead of feeling like you're fighting yourself, you begin understanding why different parts of you have been pulling in different directions.

From that understanding, change becomes much more possible.

How I Integrate Parts Work & EMDR

I rarely think about EMDR and parts work as separate approaches.

To me, they're partners.

Parts work helps us understand the landscape of your internal world.

EMDR helps the nervous system update the experiences that keep those patterns active.

Often, we'll begin exploring your internal system early in therapy. Getting to know your internal system often helps us identify the beliefs, experiences, and memories that continue to keep you stuck.

From there, EMDR gives us a way to process those experiences so your system no longer has to work so hard to protect you.

Together, these approaches help us move beyond simply understanding your patterns intellectually and toward helping your nervous system experience something different.

OUR GOAL

The goal isn't to eliminate any part of the self.

Not the anxious parts, not the critical ones, not the angry ones. Those parts often developed because they were trying to help.

Instead, our work is helping those parts feel less alone, less burdened, and less stuck in roles they may have been carrying for years.

Over time, therapy becomes less about one part trying to overpower another. We begin strengthening the more grounded, present-day parts of yourself so they can support the parts still carrying fear, shame, or old experiences.

Rather than staying stuck in an internal tug-of-war, your system can begin working together in new ways.

From this:

Fighting yourself

Asking what’s wrong with me

One part overpowering the other

To this:

Understanding why

Curiosity instead of criticism

Your system working together

FAQs:

Common Questions about parts work.

Ready for the next step?

Ready to understand the parts of you that feel at odds?

The first step is a free 25-minute consultation. There’s no pressure, no commitment. We'll talk through what's bringing you in and whether this feels right.