Ok I will admit my bias as President of RTI here. While most therapies help clients talk about the problem..
Resource Therapy helps therapists speak directly with the part of the person that is carrying it. The one holding stuck emotions, outdated coping behaviours or old shame.
That is the clinical elegance of Resource Therapy. And I think one of the reasons it is gaining attention among psychologists, counsellors, psychotherapists, and trauma-informed practitioners globally.
Developed in Australia by Professor Gordon Emmerson, PhD. I love this ! Resource Therapy grew from the lineage of Ego State Therapy. Gordon has developed RT into it’s own distinctive model. Indeed RT is often referred to as Advanced Ego State Therapy for this very reason.
Through Gordon’s many books, including Ego State Therapy, Healthy Parts Happy Self, Resource Therapy Primer, Resource Therapy, Learn Resource Therapy, and Therapist Gold we see this.
Gordon Emmerson offers therapists a practical, structured, and deeply respectful way to understand personality as a system of inner Resource States – our inner crew.
These states are not “broken parts.” They are inner resources.
Some are confident, calm, loving, creative, or competent. Others carry old pain, fear, rejection, confusion, avoidance, anger, disappointment, or conflict.
In Resource Therapy, symptoms are not treated as random pathology. They are understood as signals that a particular state is active, distressed, protective, or stuck in an old emotional learning.
That is where the model becomes powerful.
Resource Therapy gives therapists a clear clinical road map. Rather than asking, “What is wrong with this person?” RT asks:
Which part is at the helm?
What is this Resource State carrying?
What does this state need in order to heal, update, or relax?
This creates a more compassionate and precise therapy process.
A client may present with anxiety, but the real work may be with a Vaded State carrying fear. Client’s may describe depression, but the therapist may discover a state holding disappointment or rejection. A client who avoids closeness may not be “resistant” at all. They may have a Retro Avoiding State trying to protect them from old attachment wounds. Couples may appear locked in conflict, when underneath the fight are hurt states longing for safety, connection, and repair.
This is what makes Resource Therapy so useful in trauma work, relationship therapy, addictions, shame, anxiety, depression, and stuck therapeutic patterns. It does not leave therapists guessing. It offers a structured framework of diagnosis and treatment actions, so the clinician can identify the active state and choose the next therapeutic step with confidence.
Resource Therapy is also beautifully Australian in spirit. Which is why we use Aussie animals, and me being a kiwi a few from NZ too.
It is practical, direct, warm, and down-to-earth.
It does not overcomplicate healing. Instead it simplifies.
It gives therapists language clients can understand and targetted interventions that can create meaningful change in session.
At the Australia Resource Therapy Institute, we often describe the model through the ship and crew metaphor. The person is not one flat, fixed self. They are more like a ship with many crew members. Sometimes the wise, steady Captain is at the helm. At other times, a frightened, rejected, angry, confused, or protective crew member takes over the wheel.
Recognising the Captain of the moment who is driving is a key skill.
Resource Therapy helps the therapist meet that crew member with respect, not judgment. And then, gently and precisely, help the right part heal.
That is what makes Resource Therapy special.
It is not just another parts model – similar, yes, to IFS, EGO State Therapy, and Voice Dialogue. But unique in its structure, where you know what key actions to take and when. Applying your own therapeutic artistry.
It is an Australian-born, clinically structured, attachment-informed therapy that gives therapists a clear way to work with the part that needs help now.
Less guessing. More precision. Deeper healing.
Love learning? Join us in June.
References
Emmerson, G. (2007). Ego state therapy. Crown House Publishing.
Emmerson, G. (2012). Healthy parts, happy self: 3 steps to like yourself. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
Emmerson, G. (2014). Resource therapy primer. Old Golden Point Press.
Emmerson, G. (2014). Resource therapy. Old Golden Point Press.
Emmerson, G. (2014). Resource therapy trainer’s manual: For Resource Therapy Foundation Training and Resource Therapy Clinical Qualification Training. Old Golden Point Press.
Emmerson, G. (2015). Learn resource therapy: Clinical qualification student training manual. Old Golden Point Press.


