Internal Family Systems Therapy and Parts Work

Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a remarkable form of behavioral therapy that identifies and addresses the various sub-personalities, or “parts” within us. When we experience trauma, our personality breaks into various parts that represent our feelings of hurt, sadness, anger and shame. IFS has been used to successfully treat anxiety, depression, various forms of abuse, PTSD, eating disorders and a variety of other issues.


What is IFS?

Working With Parts


Parts can develop within us to protect us from the pain of our traumatic experiences and the associated challenging emotions. Often these parts are in direct conflict with one another and our core Self, which is the happy, confident and whole person that is at the center of us.

IFS addresses all of these wounded parts, providing them with a voice and an opportunity to express their unique perspective on our past trauma and what their role is in protecting us. With the support of a skilled mental health professional, we can create a dialogue with these parts, allowing them to be acknowledged and release their pain, moving the stuck energy that is locked within them to provide more ease and freedom in our lives.


“A part is not just a temporary emotional state or habitual thought pattern. Instead, it is a discrete and autonomous mental system that has an idiosyncratic range of emotion, style of expression, set of abilities, desires, and view of the world. In other words, it is as if we each contain a society of people, each of whom is at a different age and has different interests, talents, and temperaments.” – Richard C. Schwartz, Ph.D.

I have wanted to write to you for some time now. I want to give you excruciating details of our (my internal family) progress. The work we did has helped me so much. I say a prayer to you daily. I love you, so deeply. There are no words—thank you. I wish I could write

Homa G
I have felt huge shifts since my retreat. First I finally feel in charge of myself and my choices instead of feeling like a small onlooker just responding to things that I encounter. I have a good relationship with my mom, which I had written off before my retreat. I’m able to communicate with my

Megan Boxberger
My 5 day Intensive EMDR retreat gave me a new and improved sense of self-awareness and self love by allowing me to look deep within myself. This office is a very safe and entirely accepting space. Bambi helped me walk through painful memories in order to process my trauma by gently nudging me to step

Sky Yamagiwa

So much has changed in my life! I feel free from so much trauma. I have more time In the day as I’m not bogged down with negative, self destructive thoughts. I am so

The best part of my 5-day retreat with Dr. Bambi Rattner is that she was able to reach my trauma in such a gentle way. Bambi is compassionate, healing, gracious, sensitive, honest and funny. My retreat went by so quickly, even while spending 7+ hours with Bambi every day. I loved how kindly she brings

Judy G
When your ego is breaking apart you can feel stuck with trauma and a lot of blocked emotions you collect through your life. You need to let all those emotions go to become your new self. Bambi with her kindness, love and knowledge was the person that helped me to become my new version of

Pablo G.
At the very beginning of my intensive retreat with Bambi she told me that the process would open up my life to all the universe had to offer. That was a very nice thought but I had no idea that it would completely change my life. After struggling with chronic Lyme disease for 13 years

Josephine Burnett, PhD
Dr Bambi Rattner worked with me doing intensive EMDR after my mother had passed. I was experiencing a reactivation of my PTSD from the sudden death of my father when I was a kid, that got reactivated from my mother’s recent death. It would have been a much longer road of healing without Dr Bambi’s

Dr Kate Klemer, DC, RCST
Dr Kate Klemer, DC, RCST
It seems impossible to describe the extent of the positive impact that Bambi’s intensive therapy brought to me. The first night after about 5-6 hours of her intensive trauma therapy, I experienced a new sense of serenity that I had not felt for close to 15 years. Physically and mentally, it felt similar to when

C.T.
As someone who has struggled with suicidal depression since childhood, I have done important work with many therapists, counselors, and healers. But Bambi Rattner is the first to help me recognize, name, and face my deepest wounds, and to compassionately embrace the parts into which I broke myself to survive. Bambi has not only shown

Joy Ladin
I have participated in intensive therapy with Dr. Bambi Rattner on three different occasions. I had not done a therapy intensive before and was hesitant, but Bambi made me feel comfortable right from the start. She is warm, accepting, non-judgmental, and deeply kind. As a trauma survivor, it is hard for me to feel safe with people and

Jessica B.
My life had become like ashes in my mouth. I felt nothing but fear, and maybe shame, but not even much of those because I was so shut down by a lifetime of “sucking it up” and “pulling myself up by my bootstraps” until, one day, those bootstraps ripped off in my hands. I was

Don Cuerdon
I sought out Bambi’s help for my son when he was 5 years old and suffering from behavioral outbursts and PTSD from early childhood trauma. I was impressed with Bambi’s abilities. She was always very calming and engaging. She was able to guide him through past traumatic memories in a way that allowed him to

G. O.
Bambi was an integral part to overcoming issues I was still dealing with from my past. She is very kind, open, listens, and provides positive direction to her clients. I felt extremely comfortable working with her and had no trouble opening up and talking. She really helped improve my depression and anxiety in a short

Heather Clifford Moros
I knew I was in good hands… Bambi demonstrated just the right balance of abiding kindness and exceptional knowledge in her craft as a trauma therapist. She brought me through a week-long intensive EMDR retreat in a way that felt safe and productive. She genuinely cared and responded with attunement and warmth to the varied

Traccie Hilton, LMHC

Designed to Help Family Members Achieve Harmony in Their Lives

Internal Family Systems Therapy helps us shift our trust back to the core Self so that we can live a life that is happy and harmonious.

We must allow the parts that are managing our past traumas to be acknowledged so that they can dissipate their energy and settle back into their appropriate role of supporting the Self in our decision-making process.

Why an Intensive Therapy Retreat?

Our Different Types of Parts

The Theory of Internal Family Systems Therapy

IFS was developed in the 1990s by family therapist Richard Schwartz, Ph.D. The premise of Internal Family Systems Therapy is the concept of an undamaged core Self that is at the center of who we are. Surrounding that core center for self-leadership are three different sub-types of personalities that each play a particular role in managing our past trauma, as described by the Internal Family Systems Model:


EXILES

Young parts that have experienced trauma and often become isolated from the rest of the system in an effort to protect the individual from feeling the pain, terror, fear, and so on, of these parts.

If exiled, can become increasingly extreme and desperate in an effort to be cared for and tell their story.

Can leave the individual feeling fragile and vulnerable.


MANAGERS

Parts that run the day-to-day life of the individual.

Attempt to keep the individual in control of every situation and relationship in an effort to protect parts from feeling any hurt or rejection.

Can do this in any number of ways or through a combination of parts -- striving, controlling, evaluating, caretaking, terrorizing, and so on.


FIREFIGHTERS

Group of parts that react when exiles are activated in an effort to control and extinguish their feelings.

Can do this in any number of ways, including drug or alcohol use, self-mutilation (cutting), binge-eating, sex addiction, etc.

Have the same goals as managers (to keep exiles away) but different strategies.


In a general sense, our exiles, or hurt parts, are cared for by our managers in an effort to keep us from experiencing additional pain from our past traumas. When an exile is triggered, a firefighter will step in to mitigate the pain as quickly as possible, often in unhealthy ways. Firefighters can manifest as some of our biggest character defects, such as alcohol or drug addiction, as a way of distracting us from facing and re-experiencing our past traumas.

The most important thing to remember is that our parts can be healed and transformed when they are given a voice and acknowledged in a supportive environment. Their pent up energy can be discharged, providing us with more ease and freedom. The ultimate goal is to liberate the parts from their extreme roles so that they can more effectively trust the core Self and work together as a team to support our happy and healthy lives.

What To Expect

Internal Family Systems Therapy in Practice

• Assessment of parts: The first step to utilizing Internal Family Systems Therapy is to develop a comprehensive understanding of all of the parts that exist within you, especially in relation to the most disruptive problem that you are currently experiencing in your life. As we learn about our parts and how they function in our lives, we also learn how we connect and respond to similar parts in others.

• Discussing awareness of parts: We need to know how you understand and interact with your parts, including the thoughts, feelings and experiences that you have when certain parts are actively manifesting in your life.

• Familiarizing with the language of IFS: At first it can be a little confusing to talk about various parts of ourselves as if they are separate individuals. With some practice, the language of IFS becomes more natural and provides a liberating way to acknowledge how our parts are attempting to manage our lives and protect us from past trauma.

• Discussing fears of the managers and their value: Managers are constantly working to keep us safe and protected from our past trauma so that we can live functional lives. They are driven by fear of re-exposure to the pain of past trauma. It is important that we discuss how we can work through problems without the fears of the managers actually occurring. It can be helpful to discuss the value of managers in our lives and to acknowledge how they help us.

• Discussing firefighters and their coping methods: Firefighters are there to step in the instant that our exiled parts are triggered, especially when the methods of the managers are not enough to keep us safe and protected. Often the firefighters can manifest as unhealthy coping methods, including addictions and withdrawal tactics, that do not support our ability to function in a healthy way. It is important to discuss the tactics our firefighters utilize to mitigate pain as it emerges.

What To Expect

Goals and Challenges

The ultimate goal of Internal Family Systems Therapy is to unify your internal family of sub-personalities so that they work together to support your core Self and end the conflicts that cause additional pain and suffering in your life. When you are unburdened, there is a sense of ease, freedom, unification and a clarity of understanding of how to move forward and make responsible decisions in your life.

Focus on the Positive

• Focusing on strengths: It is important to remind you that however wounded your parts have become from past trauma and challenging emotional experiences that your core Self remains and will always remain undamaged. The parts that have taken on dysfunctional roles to protect us from our past trauma can be liberated and restored to positive roles in our life, where they can support our strengths and ability to exist as healthy, autonomous individuals.

• The language of IFS as a tool for growth: When we learn how to discuss our inner struggles in terms of the various sub-personalities that are involved, it empowers us to view ourselves with a new perspective that can provide tremendous insight into the ways in which we cope with challenges and deal with the problems in our life. It also supports our ability to see how we connect with other people's parts and how this affects our interpersonal relationships, giving us a powerful tool to take responsibility for our behavior.

• A respect for your experience of your problems: IFS does not rely on an all-knowing therapist who "fixes" you. So much of the growth that occurs with IFS has to do with your innate ability to understand your own challenges and to provide the ideas and connection to your parts that ultimately results in the resolution of their burdens. Your therapist is simply a guide, and by providing language and a framework for you to do the work, they empower you to address your own problems in a new and effective way. Not only does this work more effectively than your therapist telling you what your problems are, but it helps you to develop trust in your innate ability to take care of yourself and take responsibility for your own life.

• The internal family system has innate wisdom: Similar to the previous point, IFS work occurs on a foundation of respect for the wisdom that your internal family system possesses regarding your past trauma and what is best for you. Often the system is working rather well, but needs some adjustment and optimization to encourage more balance and harmony in your life. The IFS model relies on your ability to provide the most effective direction for your own healing. Your therapist is a single part of the larger support system that you are developing.

Addressing Challenges

• Your protective parts: Often it is not so easy to work directly into the core trauma that affects you, as there are various parts that are functioning with the sole purpose of keeping old trauma from being re-experienced.

• Working with exiles before the system is ready: We cannot directly address the exiled and hurt parts until we address the managers and firefighters and receive permission to do so. Attempting to work directly with an exile before the family system is ready may result in the managers taking a more active role in protecting you from the resurgence of painful memories and could even trigger a firefighter to emerge and provide even more intense protection from the experience of past trauma. We must work with the system as a whole and be sensitive to the hurt parts and the opportunities that they provide for us to work with them in order to make real progress.

• Therapist thinking they are talking to the Self with they are really talking to a part: Your sub-personalities have developed over a lifetime to protect you from your most painful past experiences. Often they function subconsciously and we are unaware of how active they can become, especially through moments that intentionally bring up past trauma like a treatment session. A mistake that therapists can make is thinking that they are addressing your core Self when in reality it is a manager that is stepping in to take over, further protecting your exiles from an opportunity to re-experience past wounds. It is important for your therapist to develop a deep understanding of all your parts so that this can be avoided and parts can be worked with more effectively as they manifest themselves.

• Differentiating the Self from parts: Often when beginning IFS work, we have little understanding of the separation of our parts. Our experience has been more or less a continuous stream of feelings and sensations coming from a single place. As understanding develops, our ability to differentiate parts from one another improves, allowing us to begin working towards an understanding of our core Self as it exists underneath our parts. Getting connected to your core Self can support your ability to see clearly when a part is attempting to take control and can also provide you with the inspiration to keep moving through the therapeutic process as you get in better touch with your core Self on a regular basis. 

• Dealing with extreme parts: When trauma is particularly intense, the parts that emerge to protect us from re-experiencing it can also be quite extreme. The intensity of certain parts presents a challenge when attempting to develop a deeper understanding of them, as the volume is simply turned too high for identification and rapport. This can be addressed with techniques such as EMDR to help you work through some of the more painful aspects of your trauma, allowing the intensity of the parts to diminish, providing better access to them.

What To Expect

Learn About Our Therapeutic Modalities

Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing

EMDR releases the fight, flight, freeze instinct surrounding traumatic events and helps eliminate negative emotions.

Accelerated Resolution Therapy

Research shows that ART achieves rapid results and that gains are maintained for at least 4 months.

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