If you are a therapist working with trauma, dissociation, anxiety, or relationship distress, you have probably come across parts work. You may already use Ego State Therapy, Internal Family Systems (IFS), or integrating EMDR with parts-informed protocols. But you may still feel something is missing, something more precise, clinically structured, and neurologically aligned.
That is where Resource Therapy (RT) steps in.
First let’s give a brief history of RT’s generation.
From Ego States to Resource States: A Key Shift
Ego State Therapy, popularised by John and Helen Watkins, offered therapists a revolutionary way to understand the psyche as a family of internal states. This model allowed clients to speak to the part of themselves holding trauma, fear, or anger. It was groundbreaking at the time, but lacked a cohesive system for working with these parts beyond dialogue and hypnosis.
RT is widely recognised as the next generation of Ego State Therapy. Often referred to as Advanced Ego State Therapy. It retains the best of the original model and expands it into a clinically robust, client-centred system. Whether used as a stand-alone therapy or integrated with EMDR, DBR, ACT, or IFS, Resource Therapy offers a clear roadmap for working with internal parts and achieving client-led goals with precision and purpose.
Instead of ego states, Emmerson reframed these as Resource States — adaptive, intelligent, and formed from repeated experiences. Each Resource State serves a unique purpose, and in Resource Therapy, we do not see them as fragments to be managed. We see them as assets to be healed, respected, and restored to their optimal function. They are the gold of us on the inside, a treasure trove within.
“Every part of the personality has a positive intention, even when it seems stuck, reactive, or painful. In Resource Therapy, we honour that intention and provide a clear path to healing.”
— Philipa Thornton, President, Resource Therapy InternationalHow Resource Therapy Modernises Parts Work
Traditionally, Ego State Therapy relied heavily on hypnosis to access inner parts. While effective for some, this approach created barriers for clinicians and clients who preferred non-hypnotic methods or needed greater emotional safety and control in the session.
Resource Therapy modernises this approach.
It provides structured techniques that do not require hypnosis. We acknowledge clinical hypnosis as a valuable method. Therapists learn how to work with the client’s present-moment awareness, using permission-based methods to invite the exact part holding unwanted emotion or broken behaviours. This makes RT accessible, empowering, and trauma-informed, even with highly dissociative clients.
How Resource Therapy Views Introjects
One key difference between Resource Therapy and earlier parts models lies in how it theoretically sees introjects as merely internalised voices, often from the past.
In traditional therapies, these voices, like a critical parent or shaming teacher, might be observed or even directly engaged with for some time. Some models even attempt to change or heal the introject itself.
But Resource Therapy offers a powerful reframe.
In RT theory, introjects are not seen as distinct parts. They are understood to be internalised voices or memories, not true Resource States. These voices hold no power. What matters is not the introject, but the part of the client carrying the emotional wound in response to that voice.
Resource Therapy empowers the client’s wounded Resource State, helping it realise that the harm came from someone lacking the capacity to love, not because the part was unworthy.
RT uses specific techniques, like the empowerment protocol for the hurt or fearful part to process and gain freedom. In this process, RT taps into the emerging research and phenomena of memory reconsolidation (MR). MR draws on the concept of memory malleability for trauma resolution. This often leads to emotional clarity, resolution, a new perspective, and relief from the shame or pain that a part has carried for years.
RT uses client-led, therapist-facilitated techniques perfect for trauma-informed clinicians working with dissociative, anxious, or avoidant clients.
“In Resource Therapy, we know introjects have no power. We invite the part that carries the wound to have their voice, gain empowerment and have choices in what they want to have happen within the memory sequence, This is incredibly freeing.”
— Philipa Thornton, Psychologist.
This is a major evolution from older approaches, which either avoided introjects altogether or focused on changing them directly, often leaving the client’s wounded part further isolated, unheard, feeling rejected and abandoned.
Where Ego State Therapy accesses a state, Resource Therapy goes further by offering a structured clinical roadmap. With its 15 clearly defined treatment actions, RT gives therapists a flexible but focused framework to work with personality parts, always aligned to the client’s goals and readiness.
Structure, Precision, and Healing at the Root
What makes Resource Therapy stand out?
- Direct access to parts -RT teaches therapists how to bring the exact Resource State into the conscious, aware position so it can express, release, and heal right there in the session
- OPI’s – when parts are not parts, this is a specific form of introject in RT terminology and theory. Somewhat similar to the concept of the IFS ‘unattached burden’ as an external non-human influence that is affecting the client. RT has a beautiful script for this.
- Targeted treatment actions – With 15 specific therapeutic actions, RT allows therapists to tailor interventions to the type of part presenting, whether it is a Vaded (traumatised), conflicted, confused, disappointed, dissonant, or Retro (protective overreaction behaviours) state
- Memory reconsolidation principles – RT works with the brain’s natural ability to update emotional learning
- Client-led and strength-based -Sessions are guided by what the client brings, making it adaptable, respectful, and trauma-informed
- The ship metaphor -In Resource Therapy, your personality is a ship with many skilled crew members (Resource States). When trauma hits, some crew members go below deck. Our job is to bring the best part for the occasion, in line with your values – your Captain, to the wheel again for smooth sailing
The Perfect Interweave: RT and EMDR
For EMDR therapists, Resource Therapy is a natural and seamless interweave.
You already know that clients sometimes hit blocks — protector parts that resist processing, or beliefs like “I don’t deserve love” that derail momentum. These are not just thoughts. They are Resource States holding protective strategies, fear, or past learning.
Resource Therapy gives you a precise way to identify, access, and treat these parts before, during, or after EMDR reprocessing.
You can:
- Resource clients internally by bringing their calm, confident part into the driver’s seat
- Work with blocking beliefs by negotiating with the Resource State that holds them
- Step aside from stuckness when protectors take over with respect for their good purpose
- Integrate RT actions to build safety and increase readiness for EMDR Phases
- Bring clarity to dissociative responses and access structural dissociation with greater confidence
“Resource Therapy is the missing link for many trauma therapists. It helps us navigate the client’s inner system with clinical clarity, gently shift blocking beliefs, and align parts with their good purpose with healing compassion.”
— Philipa Thornton, President, Resource Therapy International
RT is both a complete stand-alone therapy and a powerful complement to existing modalities. It integrates effortlessly with EMDR, DBR, IFS, schema and somatic therapies—while offering its own comprehensive framework for treating trauma, attachment wounding and internal conflict at the root.
Therapists trained in RT are often struck by how practical, targeted, and transformational it is. One trauma therapist shared they were blown away by the clarity and immediate shift it brought to clients stuck in self-sabotage and shame.
Read her experience here:
A Trauma Therapist’s First Experience With Resource Therapy →
The Training Path: From Foundation to Clinical Mastery
The Clinical Resource Therapy Program offers a complete qualification in this modality, led by psychologists and master trainers Philipa Thornton and Chris Paulin (MA, Psychology).
The training is:
- Fully certified and internationally recognised qualification from Resource Therapy International
- Delivered online and in-person
- Ideal for EMDR, DBR, IFS, ACT, and schema therapists, counsellors, and professional counsellors
- Strengths-based, neuro-informed, and client-led
With guest appearances from Professor Gordon Emmerson, PhD, you are learning directly from the founder of Resource Therapy.
Ready to Integrate the Missing Link?
Whether you are already parts-informed or just beginning to explore, Resource Therapy gives you a clinically sound, neurologically aligned, and deeply compassionate way to work with the internal system.
Join the next Clinical RT Program and experience the power of parts therapy that works with precision, purpose, and profound respect for the whole person.
Visit the next training dates – registrations now open to learn more and secure your place.
We can’t wait to meet you and all your parts.
Philipa and Chris.