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Working With Affective Blocks in Therapy
In a previous post, I described why insight-based and relational work can reach a limit when emotional memory is activated. This piece focuses on how that limit shows up in practice, particularly for therapists working with couples and families. Affective Blocks in the Therapy Room Most therapists recognise the moment. The session has been thoughtful. The pattern is clear. The cycle has been named. Then something tightens. A parent suddenly reacts to a child’s tone. A partner
Dec 26, 20252 min read


When Insight Doesn’t Lead to Change: Why Emotional Memory Work Matters
Many therapists come to RET after years of solid clinical practice. They understand systems. They can map interactional cycles. They recognise attachment patterns and relational positions. They know how to slow conversations, invite reflection, and create a safe space. And yet, certain moments keep repeating. A parent understands why they react so strongly to their child, but the reaction still happens.A couple can describe their cycle in detail, but under pressure, they coll
Dec 26, 20255 min read


From Storytelling to Targeting: Identifying the Precise Memory for Therapeutic Processing
In Radical Exposure Tapping, storytelling is only the starting point. We listen for the exact moments when a client’s narrative shifts from intellectual recounting to emotional activation — the ‘hot’ points where unprocessed memory still lives. By targeting these precise moments, rather than entire stories, RET achieves deeper, faster, and more sustainable trauma resolution.
Aug 15, 20258 min read


The Trauma List: Establishing Direction Through Precise Naming Rather Than Disclosure
In Radical Exposure Tapping, the trauma list is more than a record—it’s a structured, client-led roadmap for safe and effective trauma processing. By naming events precisely, without premature disclosure, therapists and clients establish focus, containment, and a shared direction that prevents overwhelm while enabling deep, sustainable change.
Aug 11, 20258 min read


When Radical Exposure Tapping Fits: Clinical indications and therapist readiness
In a companion post [How Radical Exposure Tapping Differs from Other Therapeutic Approaches], I outlined how RET differs from EMDR, EFT, and other trauma-focused approaches. This piece focuses on clinical fit: when RET is useful, when it is not appropriate, and the therapist's stance it requires. Radical Exposure Tapping (RET) was not developed as a universal trauma intervention. It emerged in response to a specific clinical problem: what to do when therapy is well-formulated
May 15, 20254 min read


How Radical Exposure Tapping Differs from Other Therapeutic Approaches
RET keeps therapists engaged, clients attuned, and change sustainable. Learn how this approach differs from other trauma treatments and why it’s redefining effective, burnout-free practice.
Mar 11, 20254 min read


Breaking Through When Traditional Therapy Hits a Wall: Introducing Radical Exposure Tapping
Discover Radical Exposure Tapping (RET), an innovative trauma therapy method combining EMDR and tapping techniques to heal emotional wounds. Developed by Laurie MacKinnon, RET helps clients break through therapy plateaus by addressing trauma’s emotional and somatic core. Learn how RET promotes rapid healing, lasting belief shifts, and deeper trauma recovery beyond traditional talk therapy. Ideal for therapists and trauma survivors seeking effective solutions.
Feb 1, 20255 min read
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