Internal Family Systems
Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a powerful yet deceptively simple therapeutic modality. IFS helps you build healthy internal relationships with the various ‘parts’ of yourself. These parts can hold beliefs, feelings, perspectives, and unresolved experiences from earlier in your life.
By working with the parts of yourself that got ‘stuck’ in the past, you can bring them safely into the present. Here, their burdens can be transformed into qualities to benefit your life now. Roles of parts are renegotiated to adapt to this change, so your inner critic can become your coach and cheerleader.
As you do the work, you stop fighting with or hating yourself for having certain feelings or doing certain behaviours. You learn how to negotiate inner balance, harmony and cultivate self compassion.
Many people experience profound breakthroughs with this modality, even seasoned ‘professionals’ who have tried ‘everything’. Clients experience an inner connection and safety that inspires change and a new perspective. Patterns that you felt powerless over, or confused by, reveal their origins.
The transformative power of this model could be described as Radical Reparenting, because in a sense you become the parent you never had, providing your inner children and teens with what was missing. It puts you in the driver’s seat to bring balance in your inner world and a sense of self leadership that remains, even outside of sessions.
IFS does not pathologise - reduce a client to a diagnosis - instead, it views people as whole with an innate capacity to take ownership of their life and self heal. It is very effective to treat overwhelm, anxiety, depression, pain, grief, addictions, shame, anger, attachment injuries, OCD, ADHD and traumas.
IFS works best when you commit to working with yourself over a minimum period of 3 months. This gives your system plenty of time to explore and learn to trust you.
First online session 90 min - follow up sessions are 60 min. In person sessions are available in my Breakthrough & Transformation Programs.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a powerful yet deceptively simple therapeutic modality. IFS helps you build healthy internal relationships with the various ‘parts’ of yourself. These parts can hold beliefs, feelings, perspectives, and unresolved experiences from earlier in your life.
By working with the parts of yourself that got ‘stuck’ in the past, you can bring them safely into the present. Here, their burdens can be transformed into qualities to benefit your life now. Roles of parts are renegotiated to adapt to this change, so your inner critic can become your coach and cheerleader.
As you do the work, you stop fighting with or hating yourself for having certain feelings or doing certain behaviours. You learn how to negotiate inner balance, harmony and cultivate self compassion.
Many people experience profound breakthroughs with this modality, even seasoned ‘professionals’ who have tried ‘everything’. Clients experience an inner connection and safety that inspires change and a new perspective. Patterns that you felt powerless over, or confused by, reveal their origins.
The transformative power of this model could be described as Radical Reparenting, because in a sense you become the parent you never had, providing your inner children and teens with what was missing. It puts you in the driver’s seat to bring balance in your inner world and a sense of self leadership that remains, even outside of sessions.
IFS does not pathologise - reduce a client to a diagnosis - instead, it views people as whole with an innate capacity to take ownership of their life and self heal. It is very effective to treat overwhelm, anxiety, depression, pain, grief, addictions, shame, anger, attachment injuries, OCD, ADHD and traumas.
IFS works best when you commit to working with yourself over a minimum period of 3 months. This gives your system plenty of time to explore and learn to trust you.
First online session 90 min - follow up sessions are 60 min. In person sessions are available in my Breakthrough & Transformation Programs.
Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a powerful yet deceptively simple therapeutic modality. IFS helps you build healthy internal relationships with the various ‘parts’ of yourself. These parts can hold beliefs, feelings, perspectives, and unresolved experiences from earlier in your life.
By working with the parts of yourself that got ‘stuck’ in the past, you can bring them safely into the present. Here, their burdens can be transformed into qualities to benefit your life now. Roles of parts are renegotiated to adapt to this change, so your inner critic can become your coach and cheerleader.
As you do the work, you stop fighting with or hating yourself for having certain feelings or doing certain behaviours. You learn how to negotiate inner balance, harmony and cultivate self compassion.
Many people experience profound breakthroughs with this modality, even seasoned ‘professionals’ who have tried ‘everything’. Clients experience an inner connection and safety that inspires change and a new perspective. Patterns that you felt powerless over, or confused by, reveal their origins.
The transformative power of this model could be described as Radical Reparenting, because in a sense you become the parent you never had, providing your inner children and teens with what was missing. It puts you in the driver’s seat to bring balance in your inner world and a sense of self leadership that remains, even outside of sessions.
IFS does not pathologise - reduce a client to a diagnosis - instead, it views people as whole with an innate capacity to take ownership of their life and self heal. It is very effective to treat overwhelm, anxiety, depression, pain, grief, addictions, shame, anger, attachment injuries, OCD, ADHD and traumas.
IFS works best when you commit to working with yourself over a minimum period of 3 months. This gives your system plenty of time to explore and learn to trust you.
First online session 90 min - follow up sessions are 60 min. In person sessions are available in my Breakthrough & Transformation Programs.
IFS and sub personalities
Richard Schwartz the founder of IFS discovered that the mind contains multiple sub-personalities he calls ‘parts. This is reflected in common language when we say ‘part of me wants this, but another wants that..’ We are born with these parts, and they pop out at different times in our lives to help with valuable qualities and resources. But at some point trauma and attachment injuries force them out of their naturally helpful roles into behaviour that can be destructive and outdated.
What happens to these ‘parts’ during trauma?
A lot of the time these parts don’t know that you’ve grown up. They’re ‘frozen’ in the time of the trauma and keep doing whatever extreme things they did to protect you when you were young. So even as an adult, these parts of you may carry ‘burdens’, which are extreme beliefs and emotions caused by trauma, or inherited by through your family history, culture or ethnic group. The extreme beliefs and emotions attach to these parts almost like a virus and drive the way they operate.
About ‘exiles, managers and firefighters’
At the time of trauma parts are forced to take on the roles of ‘exiles’, ‘managers’ and ‘firefighters’. When you’re rejected, traumatised or hurt by a caregiver for instance, these parts pick up the burdens of worthlessness, powerlessness, emotional pain or terror, and become not so much fun to be around.
When we try to lock these parts away inside they become ‘exiles’. And when you have a few exiles, the world feels much more dangerous and easily triggered into extreme emotions. So other parts are forced into these protective roles to try and keep the exiles from being triggered and to keep them contained.
We call these parts ‘managers’ because they’re trying to manage every facet of your life so that no similar injury or trauma ever happens. They’ll keep you a certain distance from people so they can’t get close enough to hurt you or they stop you from going out when you don’t look perfect so you don’t get rejected. Or they push you into high performing to receive special honours and approval to counter feelings of worthlessness.
Perfectionist, people pleaser or stuck in your head?
Usually, these managers are also inner children, who may take on the responsibilities of a parent because the parent failed to do their duties. Often they become inner critics because they’re trying to get you to behave and they don’t know what to do other than to yell at you.
Or there may be caretaking ‘managers’ that don’t let you take care of yourself and instead try to take care of everyone else. Or the intellectual ‘managers’ that keep you in your head and don’t let you feel the rest of your body.
And what role do ‘firefighters’ play?
Firefighters jump into action when your ‘exiles get triggered because there’s so much emotion that they just don’t think you can handle it. They only care about stopping you from feeling the hurt of the exile’s feelings regardless of the cost. Either by hiding you from the pain or distracting you until you feel okay again. A lot of addictions are related to ‘firefighter’ activities because they don’t care about the damage to your body or your relationships.
How can IFS help someone to self-heal?
The good news about is that once a part believes it is safe to do so, they can unload these extreme beliefs and emotions, at which point it’s like a curse has been lifted and they transform into their naturally valuable states.
And so a lot of the work is designed to achieve that kind of transformation. The biggest discovery of IFS is that if you get these parts to open space inside there’s a kind of essence of people that will be released – something in IFS we refer to as the ‘Self’.
The ‘Self’ is in everybody. It can’t be damaged, it knows how to heal us both internally and in our external relationships and it contains wonderful qualities all of which begin with the letter ‘C’ – courage, creativity, commitment, caring, compassion, calm, curiosity and clarity.
Self-leadership
That’s what we call the ‘8 C’s of self-leadership’. So IFS is a way to access that place of ‘Self’ and it can be accessed far more quickly than maybe the other traditions thought possible simply by getting parts to open up the space.
Can you give an example of how you would work with these ‘parts’?
If you’re working with someone who is feeling anxious, for instance, it’s about helping them to speak from the anxious part and then opening up space for the part that dislikes the anxious part. We generally go to protectors (managers and firefighters) first, to honour them for doing their service in protecting the individual. Not to tell them to change or to stop doing what they’re doing. And then to learn about what they protect and negotiate permission to go to the exiles they protect. When we get to the exile we go through steps to unburden the exile and then come back to the protector who now can see that the exile doesn’t need its protection.
Tapping into Self
We then ask the protector what it wants to do instead now and often it’s quite amazing – it’s the opposite of what they’ve been doing. We help them into that new role. By separating and acknowledging the two parts suddenly the individual taps into this ‘Self’. They become calm and also curious about those parts, they feel compassion for them and confident to handle them. They also feel connected to these parts in ways they didn’t before. They find new creative ways of relating to these parts and the courage to go to places inside that they were afraid to go to before. There may also be greater clarity – where initially these parts may have looked kind of monstrous, they’re now seen as a child inside.