IEMT · FOR COACHES

Add IEMT
to your practice.

For coaches and practitioners who want a working whole to apply, not a separate technique.


iemttrainingen.nl

Mitchel Heitinga

APPROVED IEMT TRAINER & COACH

FOR AN INTRODUCTORY CALL

Mitchel Heitinga

APPROVED IEMT TRAINER & COACH

CONTACT

iemttrainingen.nl

[email protected]

PRACTICAL

  • Open enrolment · in-company on request
  • Dutch · English
  • Small groups for practice space

Introductory call

30 minutes — to see if it fits.

iemttrainingen.nl/contact →

WHY YOU'RE READING THIS

A method for that layer.

You coach. You've seen plenty. Clients come with patterns that are cognitively clear, but emotionally keep coming back — and you notice talking no longer lands on them.

IEMT works on that layer.


WHAT YOU'LL FIND HERE

  • What IEMT is
  • Who this training is for, and who it isn't
  • How I teach — and how to begin

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Download the leaflet for coaches (PDF, 2 pages — fold-ready)

  1. The method in one image

    What IEMT is

    Flow: the eye follows a movement, brings a sensory fragment into view, touches the self-image layer and leads to an identity shift. eye movementsensoryself-image identity shift brief intervention · typically 40–60 minutes

    In short: guided eye movements bring attention to the sensory layer beneath an emotion; on that layer, space opens for a shift in self-image or in how the situation feels. A brief intervention, typically 40–60 minutes.

    Read on: what IEMT is

  2. The working principle

    How it works — calibrating, not removing

    Calibration gauge: the needle rests on proportionate, between removing and leaving untouched; below, the five principles. removeuntouched proportionate identitysensorycalibrationpatternemotions

    In short: the charge isn't removed but recalibrated to proportion — somewhere between 'erasing' and 'leaving untouched'. The eye movements are the anchor, not the engine; five principles carry the work.

    Read on: how IEMT works

  3. Where it fits

    What it fits — and where the limit lies

    Fit zone with three indications — stuck emotions, self-image patterns, stable context; boundary to the clinical domain with three exclusions: acute crisis, active trauma, psychosis spectrum. fits stuck emotionsself-image patternsstable context not acute crisisactive traumapsychosis spectrum complement, not replace

    In short: strong with stuck emotional responses and self-image patterns in a stable client. Not for acute crisis, active trauma or the psychosis spectrum — there, a registered healthcare professional remains in the lead.

    Read on: what IEMT works for

  4. For which clients

    With that limit clear: which client patterns do you meet in practice?

    CLIENT TYPOLOGY · 17 PATTERNS

    Which client is in front of you?

    17 recognisable coaching questions IEMT can be used for. By way of illustration — more is possible, and we’re not fond of labels.

    1. TRAUMA

      Living-dead

      • 'My life ended that day'
      • Timeline deletion after the event
      • No future projection
      • Crash depression ~6 wks after recovery

      trauma involving loss or life threat

    2. TRAUMA

      PTSD with dissociation

      • 'That's not me, that's the angry man'
      • Tag-refusal of medical labels
      • Privacy frame around the event
      • Identity shift possible within seconds

      often with childhood pre-loading

    3. IDENTITY

      Identity loss

      • 'I don't know myself any more'
      • Role or context loss
      • No living-dead frame
      • Question: new expression, or the old one back?

      after retirement, caregiving, divorce

    4. SOMATIC

      Chronic pain

      • Variable days, stable substrate
      • Sensitisation to other complaints
      • Sense of injustice
      • Erickson: remembered / anticipated / now

      depression-pain feedback loop active

    5. SOMATIC

      Tinnitus

      • 'I've always had it'
      • Attention makes it louder
      • Imprint often traceable
      • Perception shifts, sound remains

      perception changes; the sound remains

    6. RELATIONSHIP

      Narcissism survivor

      • Waits for 'the reckoning'
      • Enabler talk about a third person
      • Grief for the relationship-that-never-was
      • Walking-on-eggshells lifestyle

      parent, partner or work system

    7. SOMATIC

      Mysterious maladies

      • Medically unexplained, years in the circuit
      • Often several complaints in parallel
      • Honesty: often not psyche-only
      • A workable layer sometimes — don't claim it

      scope limit: alongside medical care

    8. ANXIETY

      Specific phobia

      • Clearly defined object
      • Avoidance behaviour around it
      • Imprint almost always traceable
      • Island pathology

      classic IEMT working domain

    9. ANXIETY

      Social and performance anxiety

      • Avoiding visibility
      • Often a high-performing audience
      • Not the same as introversion
      • Often alongside imposter / perfectionism

      fear-based, not preference-based

    10. ANXIETY

      Panic-attack pattern

      • Episodic, not continuous
      • A fear-of-fear loop forms
      • Initial medical check required
      • World shrinks through avoidance

      first attack is the workable imprint

    11. TRAUMA

      Stuck grief

      • Grief > 6-12 mths without movement
      • Unfinished communication
      • Not the same as living-dead
      • Trigger events stay acute for years

      relationship with the deceased not transformed

    12. TRAUMA

      Shame as linchpin

      • Privacy frame around the presentation
      • 'I am wrong', not 'I did wrong'
      • Often beneath other complaints
      • Self-diminishing body language

      identity level, not behaviour level

    13. IDENTITY

      Imposter pattern

      • Incongruent achievement perception
      • 'They'll expose me'
      • Conditional-love imprint
      • Avoids status increase

      often high-performing clients

    14. IDENTITY

      Perfectionism

      • Critical inner voice
      • Procrastination paradox
      • Burnout susceptibility
      • Voice often a parent or teacher

      the voice has a protective function

    15. SOMATIC

      Pleaser pattern

      • 'I can't say no'
      • Body symptoms in parallel
      • Needs-are-a-burden imprint
      • Often parentified too young

      often parentified young

    16. ADDICTION

      Addiction pattern

      • Behaviour regulates an underlying emotion
      • Willpower approach never works
      • Clinical scope limit required
      • Shame cluster underneath

      the behaviour is the solution, not the problem

    17. RELATIONSHIP

      Attachment pattern

      • Avoidant OR anxious
      • Primarily in intimate relationships
      • Early-attachment imprint carries it
      • Pattern repeats across partners

      don't pigeonhole; a workable pattern

    18. Which questions do you work with?

      The four principles IEMT works on apply more broadly than this list:

      1. Works on the sensory track — not on the story
      2. Addresses identity — not behaviour alone
      3. Calibrates the charge back to proportion — it does not remove
      4. Follows the pattern that keeps the issue in place (Patterns of Chronicity)

      Curious whether your issue fits? In an introductory conversation we look at it together.

      Ask your question

    Read more about the 17 client patterns

  5. The sensitive boundary

    IEMT and trauma

    Beneath the story lies the sensory imprint layer: calibrate, not remove, but restore; with acute trauma the clinical boundary applies; scope is mild to moderate imprints in a stable context. story · surface sensory imprint calibrate, not remove, but restore acute · clinical mild–moderate imprints · stable context

    In short: IEMT touches the sensory imprint layer — there is overlap with trauma work — but it does not replace trauma treatment. Complement, not replace: alongside existing treatment, not instead of it.

    Read on: IEMT and trauma

  6. In the landscape

    IEMT alongside EMDR and other methods

    IEMT at the top, then CBT, EMDR, Hypnotherapy, NLP and Mindfulness and ACT, each with the layer it works on; factually side by side, no ranking. own layer IEMT CBT EMDR Hypnotherapy NLP Mindfulness & ACT sensory-emotional imprint thoughts & behaviour trauma reconsolidation trance & unconscious language & behaviour patterns attention & acceptance factually side by side · no ranking

    In short: other methods each work on their own layer (cognition, behaviour, meaning). IEMT addresses the sensory-emotional imprint — complementary, with its own direction of work.

    Read on: IEMT in the landscape

  7. The building blocks of the method

    What does the work consist of? Six recognisable components make up the method.

    IEMT TRAINING · CONTENT

    What you learn to apply.

    Six components of Integral Eye Movement Technique. Not separate techniques — a working whole you take into your own practice.

    1. Patterns of
      Chronicity

      DIAGNOSTIC LAYER

      Recognising what holds a pattern in place — before you reach for technique.

    2. K-pattern

      PROTOCOL · EMOTIONAL

      Working with emotional charges that don't belong to the present situation.

    3. Lazy-8

      PROTOCOL · IDENTITY

      Working with patterns rooted at the identity level.

    4. Three Pillars

      LENS · CLUSTERING

      Reading how emotional states cluster and flow into each other under pressure.

    5. PSACs

      COMPASS · BODY

      Reading what the body shows during the work.

    6. Lynchpin

      LINCHPIN · CORE

      The core pattern that holds the whole together — the pin the rest turns around.

    Read more about the training

  8. How a session unfolds

    What happens in a session

    Five session moments — opening, eye work, observing, aftercare and the days after — as a half arc embracing a circle of four cooperating concepts (Patterns of Chronicity, PSACs, Three Pillars and Lynchpin): the process encloses the four concepts. opening eye work observing aftercare days after Patterns of Chronicity PSACs Three Pillars Lynchpin one whole together · the process encloses all four

    In short: five moments — from opening to the days afterward — carried by four cooperating lenses (Patterns of Chronicity, PSACs, the three pillars and the Lynchpin).

    Read on: the IEMT session

  9. How I hold the space

    And how I guide that work in practice and in the training:

    Approach · Four values in hierarchy

    IEMT approach — visual summary

    1. Safety

      Participants can make mistakes, hesitate, fail

    2. Craftsmanship

      Methodological purity, clear structure

    3. Service

      Attention to what the participant needs

    4. Productive tension

      Pressing on within the safe space.

    “People learn best where it feels safe.

    I make sure of that.”

    Four-phase build-up

    1. Opening safely
    2. Holding the space
    3. Implicit transmission
    4. Closing and inviting

    Read on: my approach

  10. What the evidence says

    Research — the SUD drop in the lab

    Three bars of SUD reduction: IEMT minus 43, EMDR minus 44, control minus 19 points; IEMT and EMDR statistically comparable. N=33, non-clinical, effect after one week. SUD reduction ≈ equal −43−44−19 IEMTEMDRcontrol N=33 · non-clinical · effect after 1 week

    In short: in a first peer-reviewed lab comparison (Maastricht 2026, N=33, non-clinical) tension fell comparably for IEMT and EMDR (−43 vs −44) and the effect held after a week. Exploratory — no claim about PTSD.

    Read on: IEMT and research

  11. The whole picture

    All the pieces together, as one map to return to:

    The method hub

    IEMT from six angles

    1. What IEMT is
    2. How IEMT works
    3. What IEMT works for — and what not
    4. IEMT and trauma
    5. IEMT in the methodical landscape
    6. What happens in an IEMT session

    To the methodology hub

  12. Who you're guided by

    The method isn't separate from who brings it — what I bring to the table:

    What I bring to the table

    Three worlds that feed each other

    At the centre sits the way I work.

    Mitchel Heitinga
  13. The path to certification

    Recognised via The Association for IEMT Practitioners

    Het pad naar certificering: training, twee case studies, video-opname, termijn en lidmaatschap, met als uitkomst Associate member en directory-vermelding. training2× casusvideo3 mndlid Bij goedkeuringAssociate member+ directory-vermelding

    In short: after the live training you submit two case studies + a video recording; on approval, certification follows along with Associate membership and a directory listing. A method certification — not a statutory healthcare registration.

    Read more about certification

  14. The path to learning it

    Want to learn to apply this yourself? Here is what the training offer looks like:

    INVESTMENT SPECTRUM · LIGHT TO DEEP

    Seven variants, two paths

    One glance — find what fits how deep you want to go.

    1. PRACTITIONER · FIRST TIME

      IN DEVELOPMENT

      Online
      (self-study)

      € 297

      own pace · no certification

      Read more

      Entry (understand)

      Live online

      € 597

      multiple sessions

      certifiable · online

      Read more

      Accessible (apply)

      Live online
      + in-person

      € 997

      15h online + 2 in-person days

      certifiable · blended

      Read more

      Recommended (master)

      In-person
      (Hoorn)

      € 1,297

      multi-day · 6–18 participants

      certifiable · in-person

      Read more

      Intensive (master+)

      FLAGSHIP

      With guidance

      € 2,497

      max 6 participants · 6h supervision

      in-person (1-on-1 supervision)

      Read more

      Premium (deep mastery)

    2. DEEPER WORK · ALREADY A PRACTITIONER

      Advanced

      € 1,297

      3 days · 6–8 participants

      requires Practitioner certification

      Read more

    See the full training offer

  15. When you can start

    The next editions

    1. Thursday, 4 June 2026

      IEMT Practitioner — Live Online

      Live online · Online (secure connection)

      • Thursday 4 June
      • Friday 5 June
      • Wednesday 10 June · evening
      • Thursday 18 June
      • Friday 19 June
      Enrolment closed
    2. Friday, 4 September 2026

      IEMT Practitioner — In-person

      In-person · Hoorn (NL)

      • Friday 4 September
      • Saturday 5 September
      • Wednesday 9 September · evening
      • Wednesday 16 September · evening
      • Friday 18 September
      • Saturday 19 September
      • Wednesday 23 September · evening
      Spots available
    3. Thursday, 12 November 2026

      IEMT Practitioner — Live Online

      Live online · Online (secure connection)

      • Thursday 12 November
      • Friday 13 November
      • Wednesday 18 November · evening
      • Monday 23 November
      • Tuesday 24 November

      Plus 2 in-person practice days, still to be scheduled (twice a year)

      Spots available
    4. On request

      IEMT Advanced

      In-person · Hoorn (NL)

      On request
    5. On request

      Master Classes

      In-person · Hoorn (NL)

      On request

    Full details, times and sign-up are on the schedule.

Which training fits you?

You have seen the whole story. Take the short test — five minutes, eight questions — for an honest mirror of which trajectory fits where you stand now.

Take the short test

Or see the full method explanation.