What Is Brainspotting and How Can It Support Healing?
Brainspotting is a brain-and-body-based therapy approach that helps the nervous system move out of chronic stress patterns and process experiences that may be stored outside of conscious awareness. Many people come to therapy understanding their patterns intellectually but still feeling stuck in them emotionally or physically. Brainspotting is designed to help access and process material that isn’t always reachable through insight alone.
How Brainspotting Works
Brainspotting involves identifying specific eye positions that correspond with areas of the brain connected to emotional experiences, performance blocks, and deeply held beliefs. These eye positions can act as access points into parts of the nervous system where unresolved experiences are stored. When those areas are gently and intentionally accessed, the brain and body can begin to process and release what has been held there.
The eyes and brain are closely connected. During early development, the eyes emerge from the brain and remain neurologically linked to many internal processes. Because of this connection, working with eye position can offer a direct way to access deeper brain regions that influence emotional responses, stress patterns, and internal beliefs.
Accessing Deeper Brain Processing
One of the aspects that makes Brainspotting unique is its focus on the subcortical brain — areas involved in emotional memory, survival responses, and regulation. These are regions that aren’t always easily accessed through traditional talk therapy alone. While insight and conversation are valuable, some patterns are stored in ways that require a more body-based approach to shift.
By working with the nervous system in this way, Brainspotting can help individuals process unresolved experiences, reduce reactivity, and create space for new insights and responses. Many people notice that as the nervous system becomes less activated, they feel more grounded and more able to respond to situations rather than react automatically.
Rather than forcing change, the process works with the nervous system’s natural capacity to process and integrate experiences over time.