ARTI Is Now An IICT Approved Training Provider For Resource Therapy Training – Advanced Parts Work in Aussie

Nautical ARTI graphic announcing that the Australia Resource Therapy Institute is now an IICT Approved Training Provider for Resource Therapy training, with navy and gold branding and a sailing image.

A New Chapter For Resource Therapy Training In Australia And Beyond

Some announcements are simply administrative.

This one feels different.

It feels like a moment on deck, when the wind shifts, the sails catch, and you realise the journey has entered a new chapter.

The Australia Resource Therapy Institute is delighted to announce that ARTI is now an official IICT Approved Training Provider.

For our students, graduates, and growing Resource Therapy community, this is more than a professional tick of approval. It is a meaningful step forward in recognition, credibility, and support for therapists choosing to train in one of the most practical, compassionate, and clinically powerful parts therapy models available today.

Led by Philipa Thornton and Chris Paulin, ARTI brings together decades of clinical experience, international Resource Therapy leadership, and a warm, practical teaching style that helps therapists feel confident working directly with parts, trauma, anxiety, depression, inner conflict, and complex client presentations.

At ARTI, we have always believed that Resource Therapy deserves to be taught with depth, rigour, warmth, and clinical precision.

Not as a passing trend.

Not as a loose collection of “parts work” ideas.

But as a sophisticated, structured, attachment-informed, trauma-informed clinical model that helps therapists know exactly which part of the client needs help, and what to do next.

IICT approval supports that vision.

And yes, we are celebrating.

Why This Approval Matters

When therapists invest in professional development, they are not just buying a course.

They are investing in confidence.

They are investing in clinical clarity.

They are investing in the hope that the next time a client becomes stuck, shut down, ashamed, conflicted, panicked, avoidant, or overwhelmed, they will have a better map.

That is where Resource Therapy shines.

Resource Therapy helps therapists move beyond vague understandings of “parts” into a clear method for identifying and working directly with the Resource State that is active in the moment.

Instead of asking, “Why is this client resisting?” we begin to ask a far more useful question:

Which part is here now, and what does this part need?

That one shift can change the entire therapy session.

It turns frustration into curiosity.

It turns stuckness into direction.

It turns symptoms into signals.

It turns the therapy room into a place where the right part can finally be met.

IICT approval now gives ARTI trainees and graduates an added layer of professional recognition and support around this important work.

Ready to explore Resource Therapy training?
Visit resourcetherapy.com.au to view upcoming programs.

What Is IICT?

The International Institute for Complementary Therapists, known as IICT, is a professional membership body supporting practitioners and training providers across a wide range of therapeutic, complementary, and integrative modalities.

IICT approval gives recognised training providers a professional pathway through which eligible graduates may apply for IICT membership and, depending on their location, qualifications, scope of practice, and modality, access insurance options through IICT’s recommended partners.

This matters because many therapists today work integratively.

They may be psychologists, counsellors, psychotherapists, social workers, hypnotherapists, EMDR clinicians, somatic therapists, coaches, or mental health professionals expanding their scope through high-quality additional training.

For those practitioners, professional recognition matters.

Insurance pathways matter.

Credibility matters.

And feeling part of a respected professional community matters too.

IICT states that its membership is recognised in many countries worldwide, although recognition and insurance eligibility can vary depending on local laws, professional titles, regional requirements, and insurance partner approval.

As always, each therapist remains responsible for checking what applies to their own profession, registration, location, and scope of practice.

But for ARTI, becoming an IICT Approved Training Provider is a beautiful and important step forward.

What This Means For ARTI Graduates

For graduates of ARTI training, IICT approval may provide access to additional professional support, including:

Professional membership pathways
Recognition of approved training
Insurance options through IICT’s recommended partners
Greater confidence when communicating your training background
Connection with a wider international professional community

For some practitioners, this may be especially helpful if Resource Therapy sits alongside other modalities within a broader private practice.

For others, it may help strengthen their professional identity as they bring parts-based therapy more visibly into their work.

And for many, it simply offers reassurance.

A sense of, “Yes, this training is recognised. Yes, this pathway is supported. Yes, I am part of something growing.”

That is no small thing.

Therapists do courageous work.

You sit with trauma, grief, shame, anxiety, depression, attachment pain, avoidance, betrayal, inner conflict, and the tender places clients often cannot name.

You deserve training that supports you well.

And you deserve professional recognition around the skills you have worked so hard to develop.

Why Resource Therapy Is Growing

There is a reason so many therapists are becoming interested in parts therapy.

Clients are complex.

Human beings are not one simple, consistent self.

A person may genuinely want connection, and then suddenly pull away.

They may long for success, and then sabotage the next step.

They may love their partner, and also attack, withdraw, freeze, or collapse.

They may understand something intellectually, yet still feel hijacked by fear, shame, anger, or confusion.

Resource Therapy gives therapists a way to understand these shifts without pathologising the client.

In Resource Therapy, we understand that different Resource States may carry different memories, learnings, emotions, roles, and protective strategies.

The “Captain of the Moment” can change.

And when the Captain changes, the client’s inner world can feel completely different.

This is not weakness.

It is not manipulation.

It is not resistance.

It is the inner system trying to survive, protect, avoid pain, or complete unfinished emotional business.

Resource Therapy gives us a respectful and precise way to work with that system.

What Makes Resource Therapy Different?

Many therapists are familiar with the general idea of “parts work.”

But Resource Therapy offers something beautifully practical: a clear map and a direct method.

Rather than spending long periods talking about parts from a distance, Resource Therapy teaches therapists how to work directly with the Resource State that needs help.

It includes clear clinical diagnosis of Resource State conditions, including Vaded States, Retro States, Conflicted States, and Dissonant States.

It offers the 15 Treatment Actions, giving therapists a practical pathway for choosing the right intervention for the right part at the right time.

And importantly, it is not just conceptual.

It is experiential.

It is alive.

It is often deeply moving.

Clients frequently feel profound relief when the part that has been carrying distress is finally heard, understood, and helped.

For the therapist, Resource Therapy can bring something equally powerful: clarity.

That precious moment when you know where you are in the work.

You know which part is present.

You know what kind of distress is being held.

And you know the next therapeutic step.

That is the kind of confidence therapists remember.

Why ARTI Sought IICT Approval

At ARTI, we are not only training therapists in Resource Therapy.

We are helping build the professional future of Resource Therapy in Australia and internationally.

That means holding the work carefully.

It means maintaining quality.

It means teaching the model with respect for its founder, Professor Gordon Emmerson, PhD, while continuing to make it accessible, practical, and clinically relevant for today’s therapists.

It means supporting students not only during training, but as they take the work into real therapy rooms with real clients.

IICT approval aligns with that larger mission.

It strengthens our professional framework.

It adds recognition for our graduates.

It helps Resource Therapy stand more visibly within the wider therapeutic landscape.

And it reminds us that this work is growing because therapists are hungry for methods that are both compassionate and effective.

Guided By Experienced Clinicians And Trainers

Behind ARTI is a deeply human story.

The Australia Resource Therapy Institute is led by Philipa Thornton and Chris Paulin, two experienced psychologists, trainers, and clinicians who have spent decades helping people understand, heal, and transform the inner patterns that shape their lives.

Philipa Thornton is a psychologist, President of Resource Therapy International, Co-Director of the Australia Resource Therapy Institute, and a Master Trainer and Consultant in Resource Therapy. She is also trained in EMDR, Deep Brain Reorienting, and Imago Relationship Therapy, bringing a rich, integrative, trauma-informed, and attachment-informed lens to her teaching.

Chris Paulin is a consultant psychologist with more than 40 years of clinical experience, and brings deep wisdom, steadiness, humour, and clinical insight to the training room.

Together, Philipa and Chris create a learning environment that is practical, safe, engaging, and deeply respectful of both therapist and client.

Their teaching is not simply theoretical.

It comes from years of sitting with real clients, real couples, real trauma, real complexity, and real human pain.

That is part of what makes ARTI training so distinctive.

Students do not just learn the Resource Therapy model. They learn how to think clinically, respond compassionately, and work directly with the Resource State that needs help.

Philipa and Chris bring the work alive through case examples, live teaching, demonstrations, practical exercises, and the now well-loved ARTI ship metaphor.

In this model, the client’s inner world is like a ship, with different Resource States coming to the helm as the “Captain of the Moment.” Some parts are confident and capable. Some are frightened, ashamed, avoidant, angry, conflicted, or overwhelmed. Resource Therapy helps therapists understand which part has taken the helm, and what that part needs in order to heal.

This is where ARTI training becomes more than professional development.

It becomes a way of seeing clients with more compassion.

A way of understanding complexity without overwhelm.

A way of helping therapists feel clearer, steadier, and more effective in the room.

With IICT approval now adding another layer of professional recognition, Philipa and Chris are delighted to continue sharing Resource Therapy with therapists in Australia and around the world.

Resource Therapy Training With ARTI

ARTI offers a clear training pathway for therapists who want to learn Resource Therapy with depth and confidence.

The Foundation Certificate In Resource Therapy is a two-day introductory program. It introduces the core concepts of Resource Therapy, including Resource States, the Conscious State, pathology, diagnosis, and the foundational principles of working directly with parts.

The Clinical Resource Therapy Certification Program is the full ten-day clinical training pathway. It includes the Foundation Program and then expands into deeper clinical application, including the 15 Treatment Actions, Vaded States, Retro States, Conflicted States, Dissonant States, trauma, anxiety, depression, stuckness, avoidance, and complex clinical presentations.

The Advanced Clinical Training is designed for experienced Resource Therapists who are ready to deepen their clinical mastery, refine their precision, and expand their confidence with more complex work. Our next Advanced Clinical Training begins in November.

These programs are designed for therapists who want more than theory.

They are for practitioners who want to sit with a client and think:

“I know how to help this part.”

A Moment Worth Celebrating

This approval is a proud moment for ARTI.

But the real celebration is not the badge.

The real celebration is the ripple effect.

It is every therapist who feels more confident walking into session.

It is every client whose frightened part is finally met with compassion.

It is every protective part that no longer has to work so hard.

It is every moment when shame softens, confusion clears, grief speaks, anger finds its rightful place, and the client’s inner crew begins to work together again.

That is the work.

That is the mission.

That is why this recognition matters.

Resource Therapy is growing because therapists can feel its usefulness in the room.

They can see the shift.

They can feel the relief.

They can witness the moment a client says:

“That makes sense now.”

And once you have seen that, you do not forget it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ARTI an IICT-approved training provider?

Yes. The Australia Resource Therapy Institute is now an official IICT Approved Training Provider for Resource Therapy training.

What Does IICT Approval Mean For Resource Therapy Graduates?

IICT approval may support professional recognition, membership pathways, and insurance options for eligible graduates. Requirements can vary depending on each practitioner’s location, qualifications, scope of practice, and professional registration.

Does IICT Approval Replace Professional Registration?

No. IICT approval does not replace any legally required professional registration, licence, or protected professional title. Therapists should always check the requirements that apply to their profession and region.

Who Can Study Resource Therapy With ARTI?

Resource Therapy training is suitable for qualified psychologists, counsellors, psychotherapists, social workers, hypnotherapists, and eligible mental health professionals who want to deepen their work with parts, trauma, anxiety, depression, inner conflict, and complex client presentations.

When Is The Next Resource Therapy Training?

The Clinical Resource Therapy Certification Program begins this June, and Advanced Clinical Training begins in November.

Come On Board

If you have been feeling called to deepen your work with parts, trauma, anxiety, depression, inner conflict, relationship wounds, avoidance, or stuck protective patterns, this is a wonderful time to explore Resource Therapy training.

ARTI is now an IICT Approved Training Provider.

Our crew is growing.

The work is strengthening.

And Resource Therapy is taking its place as a powerful, practical, and deeply compassionate model for therapeutic change.

Clinical Resource Therapy Certification Program – commencing this June
Advanced Clinical Training – commencing this November

Explore upcoming training with the Australia Resource Therapy Institute:

resourcetherapy.com.au

Australia Resource Therapy Institute
Training therapists in the art and science of Resource Therapy.

Phew it was worth it drafts back and forth Yay! Philipa

How Memory Reconsolidation Works in Resource Therapy

advanced parts therapy informed memory reconsolidation

Have you ever wondered why some sessions lead to deep, lasting shifts while others just produce better coping, you are already thinking about memory reconsolidation. This is the brain’s natural process for updating emotional learning – and it sits at the heart of effective, evidence-informed trauma therapy.

For therapists using parts-based, trauma-informed approaches such as Resource Therapy, understanding memory reconsolidation can help us work more precisely and confidently with the “emotional brain”.

What is memory reconsolidation in therapy?

Memory reconsolidation is the process by which an existing emotional memory becomes open to change. When a significant emotional memory is reactivated, there is a brief neurobiological window in which that learning becomes “plastic” again. If – and only if – a mismatching, corrective experience is introduced during this window, the old learning can be revised rather than simply layered over with new coping strategies (Ecker, Ticic, & Hulley, 2012; Lane, Ryan, Nadel, & Greenberg, 2015).

Clients often describe the result in simple language: “It’s strange – the old reaction just isn’t there in the same way.” For trauma, attachment wounds, and long-standing shame, this is profoundly hopeful.

How Resource Therapy uses memory reconsolidation

Resource Therapy (RT) is a parts-based, trauma-informed model that maps beautifully onto memory reconsolidation. Instead of treating the client as a single, unified self, RT works with Resource States – the inner “parts” or “crew members” who each hold specific emotional learnings from earlier experiences.

In practice, a reconsolidation-informed RT advanced parts session often involves four stages:

  1. Bringing the State “on deck”
    The first step is helping the relevant Resource State come fully into conscious awareness, with its feelings, beliefs, images, and body sensations. The old story – “I’m not wanted”, “It’s not safe to need anyone”, “The only way to be loved is to be perfect” – needs to be alive in the room.
  2. Bridging to the Initial Sensitising Event (ISE)
    Next, we follow that State back to the Initial Sensitising Event where its core learning formed. Using RT’s structured treatment actions, we locate the scene where the State drew its painful conclusion about self, others, or the world.
  3. Creating a mismatch experience
    At the ISE, we then create a new emotional experience that directly contradicts the old learning. The hurt State may finally feel protected instead of abandoned, validated instead of shamed, or comforted instead of terrified. This is more than talking about safety – the child-state actually feels accompanied, defended, and believed.
  4. Consolidating new learning with other Parts
    Finally, we help other, better-able parts step forward so that, in similar situations in present-day life, a different part can take the wheel. The client begins to notice: “I respond differently now.” This is emotional rewiring rather than short-term coping.

What are the Key principles of memory reconsolidation?

Although the neurobiology is complex, the clinical principles are straightforward:

  1. Reactivate the emotional memory – the original learning must be vividly present.
  2. Elicit a mismatch experience – the client needs a felt experience that clearly contradicts the old belief.
  3. Allow new learning to consolidate – we slow down, stay with the shift, and let the nervous system absorb this new reality.
  4. Integrate into everyday life – we notice and reinforce new patterns as they show up in relationships, work, and self-care.

Used thoughtfully and ethically, these principles mean we are not only teaching clients to cope. We are helping the brain update its deepest emotional scripts.

What this means for your practice

For many clinicians, “evidence-informed” means more than quoting a study or adding a brain diagram to our slides. It is about aligning what we do in the room with what we know about how change actually happens carefully, collaboratively, and within our scope of practice.

As you consider your professional development for the year ahead, you might like to ask: where in my work am I offering true emotional rewiring, and where am I mainly helping clients manage?

If you are curious about parts-based, memory-re consolidation-aligned ways of working, Resource Therapy offers a clear, humane framework for doing just that. Training with Master clinicians Chris and Philipa (President of Resource Therapy International) at the Australia Resource Therapy Institute in 2026 is one pathway to deepen this work.

References

Ecker, B., Ticic, R., & Hulley, L. (2012). Unlocking the emotional brain: Eliminating symptoms at their roots using memory reconsolidation. New York, NY: Routledge.

Emmerson, G. (2014). Resource Therapy: The complete guide. Melbourne, Australia: Resource Therapy International.

Lane, R. D., Ryan, L., Nadel, L., & Greenberg, L. (2015). Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 69, 47–59.

Celebrating 11 Years – Last Day for Early Bird: Advanced Parts Work Bali + Online

Advanced Parts work Resource Therapy Book Gordon Emmerson

Today is the final day for the early bird rate for our 2026 Hybrid Clinical Resource Therapy Program – an advanced parts work training for psychologists and therapists who want deeper, faster, trauma-informed results with complex clients.

As we celebrate 11 years of the Australia Resource Therapy Institute, Chris and I are opening this cohort to a small group of clinicians who are ready to go beyond “tools and tips” and learn a complete, parts-based clinical framework grounded in Professor Gordon Emmerson, PhD’s Resource Therapy.

This ADVANCED PARTS WORK is suitable for:
• Psychologists and clinical registrars
• Mental health social workers and counsellors
• Therapists working with complex trauma, dissociation, attachment wounds, chronic anxiety, depression, and addictions

Why this training stands out (our positioning):
• A clear, evidence-informed model – not a grab-bag of techniques
• Direct, on-deck work with parts (Resource States) using 15 defined Treatment Actions
• Integrates attachment, memory reconsolidation, and nervous system work in a way that is practical, ethical, and client-centred

Hybrid 2026 program structure:
• ONLINE FOUNDATIONS (live, interactive on Zoom)
– Block 1: 22–24 February 2026
– Block 2: 22–24 March 2026

BALI CLINICAL INTENSIVE – ADVANCED PARTS WORK IN PRACTICE
– 10–12 June and 15–17 June 2026
– Focus on live demos, supervised practice, complex case formulation, and bringing RT into your existing modality (EMDR, EFT, Imago, CBT, DBT, schema, AC,T and more)

What will you walk away with?
• A complete, step-by-step parts-based roadmap for assessment and treatment
• Confidence to work with “too much” emotion, stuck trauma responses and dissociative presentations
• Scripts, language, and session structures you can use immediately in private practice or public settings
• A Clinical Resource Therapist certification (on successful completion and assessment)

EARLY BIRD CLOSES 1 DECEMBER.

After today, the full fee applies, and places are limited so we can keep the training experiential, safe, and well supervised.

If you are curious, drawn to parts work, or already doing EMDR, schema, IFS-style work, this program will give you a powerful, structured way to deepen what you do – without burning out.

Reply to this message, email me at philipa@resourcetherapy.com.au, or visit resourcetherapy.com.au to secure your early bird place.

Warmly,
Philipa Thornton
President – Resource Therapy International
Co-Director – Australia Resource Therapy Institute

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