IFS Therapy
All parts are welcome here
Internal Family Systems
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Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a compassionate, non-pathologizing, evidence-based approach that helps you relate to your inner world with curiosity rather than judgment. Many of us carry wounded or protective parts that shape how we think, feel, and respond. Through IFS, you’ll learn to understand and harmonize these parts, access your calm inner Self, and heal from the inside out—creating lasting clarity, balance, and connection.
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Anyone! IFS can help with many types of mental health issues, such as:
Trauma and PTSD
Depression and Anxiety
Relationship Issues
Low Self-Esteem
Eating Disorders
OCD and addictive behaviors
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This depends on your goals, your history and how far along you are in your healing journey.
Most clients I work with are in therapy for at least 6 months.
That said, you can always end the therapy when you feel like it’s time or if you want to take a break.
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IFS Insitutes’s Website:
Founder of IFS:
Highly Recommended Book:
No Bad Parts by Richard Schwartz
IFS Therapy
Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a gentle, evidence-based therapy that helps you understand the different “parts” of yourself, your thoughts, feelings, and reactions that often pull you in different directions. Instead of seeing these parts as problems, IFS views them as protective and meaningful, even when their strategies no longer serve you. The goal of IFS isn’t to get rid of parts, but to help them find balance so you can feel more grounded, connected, and at peace.
At the center of this work is Self, the calm, compassionate, confident place within you that can lead your system with clarity. IFS helps you reconnect with this inner Self so you can relate to your parts with understanding rather than judgment or fear.
Understanding your parts
IFS describes three main categories of parts, each playing a unique role in how you cope and respond to the world:
1. Protectors
Protectors work hard to keep you functioning day to day. They usually fall into two groups:
Managers
Managers try to prevent emotional pain. They keep you organized, responsible, and guarded. They might show up as perfectionism, overthinking, people-pleasing, emotional distance, or constant self-criticism. Their goal is to maintain control and keep the exiled emotions from being triggered.
Firefighters
Firefighters react when pain breaks through the surface. They step in quickly to shut down overwhelming feelings. These parts often use intense or impulsive strategies like overeating, drinking, anger outbursts, zoning out, or other escape behaviors. Their intent isn’t to harm you, but to stop the emotional flooding.
Both managers and firefighters are trying to protect you, even when their methods cause distress.
2. Exiles
These are the younger, more vulnerable parts of you that carry pain, shame, fear, or unmet needs from the past. They’re often the parts holding deep emotions or memories that feel overwhelming. Because of this, your system may try to push them away or “exile” them to protect you.
IFS helps these parts feel seen, safe, and cared for, often for the first time.
How IFS Helps
IFS teaches you to approach your inner world with curiosity instead of criticism. Together, we help wounded parts heal, give protectors new supportive roles, and strengthen Self-leadership; your natural clarity, calm, and confidence. As your internal system becomes more balanced, life often feels more manageable, connected, and grounded.
In sessions, we move at a pace that feels safe for you. IFS is not about reliving trauma or pushing vulnerable parts too quickly. Instead, it’s a collaborative process of listening inward, honoring your system’s wisdom, and allowing healing to unfold naturally.
Whether you’re struggling with anxiety, depression, trauma, eating disorders, or just feeling disconnected from yourself, IFS offers a powerful and compassionate path to deeper understanding and lasting change.