How IFS Therapy Works in Washington State

Discover your inner world with curiosity, understanding, and compassion

I use Internal Family Systems (IFS) to support people in Washington in understanding anxiety, trauma, and relationship patterns with more steadiness. This work helps you get to know your protective strategies, tend to wounded parts, release old burdens, and build internal leadership without turning against yourself.

Pine trees standing before blue mountains and a river.

Understanding IFS Treatment in Washington State

IFS - Finding harmony within through gentle parts work

Deeper healing begins when you recognize that inner conflict isn’t a sign of brokenness – it’s a part of being human. There are parts of you that push too hard for perfection, others that shut down or lash out, and younger parts that carry old pain.

These parts of you aren’t problems to eliminate. They’re parts of an internal system that developed to help you survive, and they deserve respect and kindness rather than harsh self-judgment and shame.

Internal Family Systems offers a non-pathologizing approach to explore your inner world and encourage lasting, trauma-informed healing.

IFS brings clarity around each part of you that emerged during a specific time and circumstance in your life. Each part’s role is designed to protect you, either by managing or enduring traumatic, harmful incidents and relationships. There are no “bad” parts, only positive intentions.

Schedule a consultation to begin exploring your inner constellation with guidance.

Your Parts Have Always Protected You. Now You Can Thank Them.

IFS therapy guides you through the process of discovering the different parts of yourself. Parts formed early in childhood can carry feelings like deep shame and fear, or never being good enough, often connected to experiences where your needs were not fully met.

Working with these parts instead of fighting against them means offering yourself grace and compassion where you need it most.

Manager parts work hard to protect those younger, vulnerable parts. They often show up as a relentless inner critic, a harsh perfectionist, or a people-pleaser that stays hyper-aware of others, all trying to prevent more pain or rejection from resurfacing.

Firefighter parts work urgently when emotions feel too overwhelming or close to the surface. These parts react quickly, often through addictions, numbing, overworking, social withdrawal, or intense emotions, doing whatever they can to help you survive in moments that feel unbearable.

Mountain peak symbolizing trauma recovery goals with Seattle trauma specialist
Mountain landscape representing peace after trauma healing in Seattle, WA

“Slow is fast.” How Healing Happens with Internal Family Systems Therapy

Healing with IFS is a slower, more thorough approach that allows your nervous system to feel safe enough for deeper work, which often leads to faster, more sustainable changes. Progress is not linear, and periods of insight are often followed by quieter phases of integration.

What You Can Expect in the Early Stages (First Few Sessions) – Learning the Basics

To begin IFS, you will become familiar several key concepts:

How Healing Unfolds Over Time - The Deeper Work and Results

As you begin to notice and name your different parts when they show up in thoughts, emotions, and body sensations, you will gain clarity on the protective roles they have served throughout your life. Step by step, we can explore more at your own pace.

Flowing river representing emotional flow through Seattle trauma therapy

From inner conflict to internal harmony through IFS

How IFS Therapy Supports Balance From Within

Before IFS:

After IFS:

Common Concerns IFS Can Help Address

IFS therapy can support emotions that feel overwhelming, relentless self-criticism, or old patterns that seem impossible to break. By addressing the protective parts beneath symptoms, IFS supports deep emotional healing, self-compassion, and lasting internal balance.

IFS FOR SUBSTANCE USE AND ADDICTIONS IN WASHINGTON

Trapped Between Craving, Shame, and Relief

IFS offers a compassionate, non-pathologizing approach to recovery—one that understands addiction not as a moral failing or lack of willpower, but as a survival strategy developed in response to pain.

Addiction often emerges from inner “firefighter parts” trying to manage overwhelming emotions, shame, and unresolved trauma. Instead of fighting cravings or enforcing control, IFS invites you to understand and work with these parts in a respectful, non-judgmental way.

IFS reframes sobriety as more than stopping addiction—it is about restoring inner trust, self-compassion, and a sense of wholeness that supports sustainable, meaningful recovery.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Reframes addiction as protection, not failure
  • Reduces shame and self-blame
  • Heals the trauma beneath addiction
  • Builds a compassionate relationship with cravings
  • Strengthens the calm, grounded Self for lasting recovery

IFS FOR ANXIETY AND PANIC IN WASHINGTON

Anxiety and panic as protectors working overtime

In IFS, anxiety and panic are understood as protective parts trying to prevent something overwhelming from happening. These parts aren’t malfunctioning, they’re working hard to anticipate danger, manage uncertainty, and keep vulnerable parts from being flooded by fear, pain, or old memories.

Anxiety often comes from parts that stay vigilant, scanning for what might go wrong. Panic can arise when those protectors believe the system is at immediate risk and escalate their efforts to regain control. The goal is not to eliminate anxiety, but to slow down and understand what these parts are afraid would happen if they stopped doing their job.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Identifies anxious and panicked parts as protectors
  • Creates space from high-alert responses
  • Builds trust with anxious parts
  • Lowers panic by reducing internal urgency
  • Strengthens internal leadership so anxiety eases

IFS FOR COMPLEX TRAUMA AND PTSD IN WASHINGTON

My body keeps score of the past

In IFS, complex trauma and PTSD are understood as experiences held by parts that were shaped by repeated or overwhelming events, often without enough safety or support. These parts learned to carry fear, shame, and vigilance so the body could survive situations that felt inescapable or threatening.

Trauma responses are not signs of damage. They reflect protector parts that learned to manage danger and exiled parts that hold the pain of what was endured. Symptoms like hypervigilance, emotional numbing, or reactivity are seen as intelligent survival strategies that made sense at the time they formed.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Helps trauma-related parts feel safer without forcing memories or emotional flooding
  • Supports unblending from survival responses like hypervigilance, shutdown, or reactivity
  • Builds trust with protector parts so they can soften their extreme roles
  • Creates space for traumatized parts to release burdens at a tolerable pace
  • Strengthens internal leadership, supporting integration, stability, and a sense of wholeness

IFS FOR DEPRESSION AND DISSOCIATION IN WASHINGTON

Here, but not fully alive

In IFS, depression and dissociation are understood as protective parts that learned to shut things down when pain, loss, or overwhelm felt too intense to manage. Depression can reflect parts that slow the system to conserve energy, while dissociation can emerge when parts believe distancing or numbing is the safest option.

These parts often developed in environments where there was not enough support, safety, or choice. When escape was not possible, turning inward, disconnecting, or going numb became ways to survive. In IFS, these responses are seen as intelligent adaptations, shaped by necessity, even when they later limit vitality, presence, or connection.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Views depression and dissociation as protective strategies, not pathology
  • Builds safety so shutdown and numbing parts no longer have to work alone
  • Helps dissociative and depressed parts release burdens without retraumatization
  • Reduces internal pressure by meeting withdrawn parts with patience and respect
  • Strengthens Self-leadership to increase presence, connection, and emotional range

IFS FOR EMOTIONAL ABUSE AND SHAME IN WASHINGTON

Whatever I do it’s never enough

In IFS, chronic shame from emotional abuse is understood as something carried by parts that learned to internalize harmful messages in order to survive. When criticism, rejection, or emotional harm came from people who were supposed to love and protect us, parts often took on blame as a way to preserve connection or make sense of what was happening.

Shame is not who you are, it’s something that happened inside your system over time. Parts learned to believe they were flawed, too much, or not enough because that belief once felt safer than recognizing the truth of being hurt or unsupported. These parts often work quietly in the background, shaping self-worth, relationships, and the way you speak to yourself.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Helps you understand chronic shame as something you learned to carry, not who you are
  • Supports separating your sense of self from harmful messages shaped by emotional abuse
  • Gently softens harsh inner criticism that once served a protective purpose
  • Creates space for shame to release without forcing forgiveness or positivity
  • Strengthens your internal leadership, supporting dignity, self-trust, and self-worth

IFS FOR RELATIONSHIP TRAUMA AND ATTACHMENT WOUNDS

I keep reliving old dynamics with new people

In IFS, relationship trauma and attachment wounds are understood as experiences held within parts that learned how to stay safe in unsafe connection. When closeness involved inconsistency, criticism, neglect, or emotional harm, parts adapted by guarding vulnerability, anticipating rejection, or staying hyper-aware of others’ needs. These patterns were not mistakes. They were ways of surviving relationships that were not secure.

Attachment wounds often involve a mix of protectors and younger, exiled parts. Protectors may work to keep distance, people-please, control, or shut down emotionally, while exiles carry longing, fear of abandonment, or a deep sense of not being chosen. Relationship struggles in adulthood are often the result of these parts trying to prevent old pain from happening again.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Helps you recognize how attachment wounds shape connection
  • Reduces reactive relationship patterns rooted in past trauma
  • Supports younger parts holding fear of abandonment or rejection
  • Softens people-pleasing, withdrawal, or control
  • Strengthens internal leadership for healthier relationships

IFS FOR UNRESOLVED GRIEF AND LOSS IN WASHINGTON

Time moves on, but I cannot

In IFS, unresolved grief and loss are understood as experiences carried by parts that did not have the space, safety, or support to fully mourn. When loss happened alongside trauma, responsibility, or the need to keep going, parts often stepped in to contain grief so life could continue. Those parts helped you survive, even when the pain had nowhere to go.

Grief is often held by younger, vulnerable parts, while protector parts work to manage daily functioning, avoid collapse, or prevent emotional flooding. Some parts may push forward and stay busy, while others numb out or shut down. These responses are not signs of avoidance or weakness. They reflect an internal system trying to maintain balance in the face of profound loss.

How IFS Can Help:

  • Helps you understand unresolved grief as something parts carried to survive
  • Creates safety to approach grief without overwhelm
  • Honors parts that set grief aside to keep going
  • Supports gradual processing of loss
  • Helps integrate grief with care and steadiness
Woman with tangled thoughts representing trauma treatment needs in Seattle, Washington
Peaceful fern representing growth through trauma counseling in Seattle, Washington

IFS as Part of an Integrated Approach

Healing that begins by listening to the wisdom already within you.

IFS serves as a foundation for restoring wholeness by helping the internal system feel safe, understood, and guided by the Self. Other modalities can be integrated to support regulation and processing, while respecting the wisdom of parts and allowing healing to unfold at a sustainable, tolerable pace.

IFS and ACT work well together because they both support a respectful relationship with inner experience. IFS helps you understand the roles and wisdom of different parts, while ACT supports making space for thoughts and emotions without being overwhelmed by them. Together, they encourage acceptance, clarity, and values-based choice, allowing change to happen without forcing any part to be different.

IFS and Trauma-Focused CBT work together by supporting both emotional safety and practical skill building. IFS helps you understand protective parts and create internal safety, while trauma-focused CBT supports identifying trauma-based beliefs and building tools for regulation and stability.

IFS can complement KAP by offering a steady, compassionate framework for understanding what emerges during and after sessions. Ketamine can soften emotional defenses and increase neuroplasticity, while IFS helps you relate to protective and wounded parts with curiosity and care. This combination supports accessing Self-energy, making sense of experiences and integrating insights in ways that lead to deeper, more lasting change over time.

IFS complements EMDR by helping you feel more prepared, supported, and grounded throughout trauma processing. IFS builds internal safety and trust with protective parts, making it easier for traumatic memories to be accessed without overwhelm, while EMDR supports the reprocessing of those memories. Together, they allow trauma to be addressed in a way that feels steadier, more contained, and more integrated over time.

Hi. I’m Cuyler Simmons, LICSW, SUDP

How IFS Shaped My Work as a Clinician

When staying connected meant losing myself

For many years, I lived from a people-pleasing place without realizing it. From a young age, I learned to monitor others’ moods, soften my needs, and avoid conflict to preserve connection by keeping everyone else comfortable. Over time, that way of surviving left me exhausted and disconnected from myself.

IFS changed how I related to those patterns. I learned to see my people-pleaser as a protective part rather than a flaw. As I met my deeper wounds with care, that part no longer had to manage everything, shaping how I now support others in this work.

Cuyler Simmons, trauma therapist in Seattle, WA, specializing in complex PTSD therapy

See if IFS Therapy feels like a supportive fit for you.

Frequently Asked Questions About IFS

IFS is a trauma-informed, evidence-based approach to mental health treatment that understands the mind as a system of different parts. These parts develop in response to life experiences, especially trauma, stress, and attachment wounds. IFS focuses on restoring balance and internal leadership rather than fixing or eliminating parts.

Understanding the Three Types of Parts

IFS identifies three categories based on protective roles.

Managers

Managers are proactive protectors focused on preventing pain, rejection, or loss before it happens.

Common Manager Parts:

  • People-pleaser or appeasing
  • Inner critic or self-judging
  • Perfectionist or high-standards
  • Overworking or overachieving
  • Caretaker or rescuer
  • Controller or planner
  • Avoidant or conflict-minimizing
  • Hyper-responsible

Firefighter Parts

These parts step in when feelings feel too intense.

  • Numbing or dissociating
  • Substance-using or relapse-prone
  • Compulsive behaviors
  • Rage or explosive anger
  • Shutting down or collapsing
  • Escaping through distraction
  • Risk-taking or impulsive
  • Self-soothing through food, sex, or substances

Exiled Parts

These are often younger parts that carry pain from trauma, neglect, or attachment disruptions.

  • Shame and worthlessness
  • Fear and terror
  • Grief and loss
  • Loneliness and abandonment
  • Feeling unwanted and unloved
  • Helpless and powerless
  • Sad and hopeless
  • Longing for connection

No Bad Parts

There are no bad parts, even ones that cause distress, such as addiction-related behaviors or self-criticism. They all have positive intentions rooted in protection. Healing happens by understanding these intentions rather than fighting against them.

The Self

The Self is the calm, grounded, and compassionate core within every person, separate from all the parts. The Self naturally knows how to heal.

IFS therapy helps strengthen access to the Self so it can guide the internal system. When the Self is leading, parts no longer need to operate in extreme or exhausting ways.

The Self is expressed through the eight C’s:

  • Calm
  • Curiosity
  • Clarity
  • Compassion
  • Confidence
  • Courage
  • Creativity
  • Connectedness

When The Self Leads the Internal System

When the Self is present, the internal system begins to feel steadier and more organized.

  • A sense of calm and steadiness emerges
  • Parts feel validated and less reactive
  • Curiosity replaces judgment
  • Reactions slow, creating more choice
  • Vulnerable parts feel safer
  • Protectors relax their intensity
  • Decisions feel clearer and more grounded
  • The system moves with more cooperation and trust

The timeline varies from person to person. It depends on the complexity of your internal system, how many parts need attention, and how quickly protective parts feel safe enough to allow deeper work.

IFS is not brief therapy, but it also does not require years of weekly sessions for everyone.

  • Some people notice meaningful shifts within the first few months
  • Others need more time to work through layers of protection and trauma
  • Meaningful, lasting change often takes six months to a year or longer

Typical Phases of IFS Therapy

(These phases are not linear and may overlap)

Phase 1: Safety and Stabilization

  • Learning the IFS framework
  • Strengthening Self-leadership
  • Identifying and building trust with protective parts
  • Increasing capacity to stay present with emotions

Phase 2: Parts Work and Unburdening

  • Developing relationships with managers and firefighters
  • Gaining permission to access vulnerable parts
  • Witnessing and releasing trauma-related burdens
  • Letting go of limiting beliefs and emotional weight

Phase 3: Integration

  • Parts take on healthier roles
  • Protective parts relax their intensity
  • New internal patterns stabilize
  • The system reorganizes around Self-leadership

Factors That Influence the Timeline

  • Complex trauma often involves more layers and takes longer
  • Single-incident trauma may resolve more quickly
  • The number of parts needing attention affects pace
  • Time may be needed to build grounding and emotional tolerance
  • Highly vigilant protectors require more safety before deeper work

A Note on Timing

  • Deep, lasting change takes time and cannot be rushed
  • Some people work intensively and finish sooner
  • Others move more slowly or take breaks between phases
  • The goal is not speed, but healing that is integrated and sustainable
  • Trusting your system’s timing supports deeper, long-term transformation

Is Internal Family Systems therapy right for everyone?

IFS is effective for many people, but it is not the right fit for every situation. Some circumstances call for more immediate, structured, or stabilization-focused support before deeper parts work is appropriate.

When IFS is not recommended as a starting point

  • Acute suicidal crisis
  • Severe psychiatric symptoms needing immediate stabilization
  • Active psychosis
  • Severe substance or other addiction withdrawal
  • IFS may be appropriate after stability is established

When dissociation feels severe or unmanageable

  • Grounding and regulation skills may be needed first
  • Affect tolerance may need development
  • Parts may not yet trust that therapy is safe
  • Preparation helps prevent overwhelm

You prefer a structured or directive therapy style

  • IFS is exploratory rather than directive
  • It does not rely on homework or step-by-step plans
  • CBT or DBT may feel more supportive initially
  • Skills-based work can later complement IFS

When IFS feels too overwhelming

  • Some parts carry intense emotions
  • Firefighter parts may react strongly when Exiles are near
  • Emotions can feel too big to hold at first
  • Slowing down and stabilizing becomes the focus

Accessing the Self feels difficult

  • Protective parts may be highly blended
  • Thoughts and emotions may feel constant or overwhelming
  • Unblending can take time and practice
  • Work often starts with less vulnerable parts

IFS moves too slowly for my needs

  • Parts have been protecting you for many years, even decades
  • Trust must develop gradually, so parts will step back
  • Rushing increases resistance from parts
  • Forcing change backfires

Does this mean IFS won’t ever work?

  • Often it is about timing, not suitability
  • Many people return to IFS after building stability
  • Needs can change over time
  • Listening to what your system needs now is part of the work

IFS respects readiness. When another approach is needed first, that information helps guide care rather than limiting what is possible later.

How IFS is different from traditional talk therapy

  • Focuses on your internal system rather than analyzing problems from the outside
  • Works with parts in real time, not just stories about the past
  • Change happens through relationship and understanding, not insight alone

How IFS is different from symptom-focused therapy

  • Does not aim to eliminate symptoms directly
  • Views anxiety, depression, addiction, and patterns as protective responses
  • Relief comes from helping parts feel safer, not forcing symptoms to stop

How IFS is different from cognitive or skills-based therapies

  • Does not rely primarily on worksheets, homework, or techniques
  • Skills may be included, but parts work remains central
  • Focuses on why reactions exist, not just how to manage them

How IFS is different from advice-driven or problem-solving therapy

  • Does not center on giving advice or telling you what to do
  • Encourages clarity and direction to come from within
  • Supports internal leadership rather than external instruction

How IFS approaches behaviors you want to change

  • Behaviors are seen as meaningful survival strategies
  • Even extreme behaviors are approached with curiosity and respect
  • Change happens through understanding, not control or shame

Why IFS feels slower than some therapies

  • Moves at the pace of safety and trust within your system
  • Respects parts that have been protecting for a long time
  • Slower pacing supports deeper, more lasting change

Who tends to resonate most with IFS

  • People who feel inner conflict or confusion
  • Those stuck in repeating patterns
  • Individuals with trauma or attachment wounds
  • People seeking depth rather than quick fixes

IFS is different because it trusts the wisdom of your internal system. Healing is supported by creating safety and understanding, allowing change to emerge from within rather than being pushed from the outside.

Yes, IFS is considered a safe, gentle, and highly effective approach for trauma survivors.

In IFS, trauma is understood as something held by parts that adapted to protect you when safety, choice, or support were missing. Trauma is less about the event itself and more about how your internal system had to reorganize to survive what felt overwhelming, frightening, or out of your control.

Types of Trauma IFS Can Support:

Single-Incident (Shock) Trauma

When a sudden, overwhelming event occurs, parts often form quickly to manage fear, shock, or helplessness.

  • Protectors become hypervigilant, controlling, or avoidant
  • Exiled parts may hold terror, grief, or frozen fear
  • These parts formed to prevent re-experiencing the original danger
  • Healing focuses on helping protectors feel safe enough to allow witnessing and release

Complex or Ongoing Trauma

With repeated or long-term stress, the internal system often develops multiple layers of protection.

  • Manager parts work constantly to control the environment
  • Firefighters step in to numb, distract, or shut down overwhelm
  • Exiles carry pain from repeated exposure to threat or neglect
  • Healing unfolds gradually as trust is built with many parts over time

Less Recognized or “Silent” Trauma

When painful experiences were minimized or overlooked, parts often internalize the impact.

  • Exiles carry shame, worthlessness, or grief
  • Managers may work hard to prevent disappointment or rejection
  • Protectors often form around being unseen, ignored, or emotionally unsafe
  • Healing involves separating identity from what parts learned to believe

Relational Trauma

When harm occurs in relationships, parts adapt to protect connection or prevent loss.

  • People-pleasing, withdrawal, or control become dominant strategies
  • Exiles carry fear of abandonment or longing for connection
  • Present-day relationship patterns are shaped by these early adaptations
  • Healing centers on helping parts trust the Self to lead connection safely

Traumatic Stress From Indirect Exposure

Even when danger was not directly experienced, parts can absorb threat through exposure.

  • Protectors stay on alert after witnessing violence or disasters
  • Exiles carry fear without a clear origin
  • Prior trauma can increase sensitivity to these experiences
  • Healing involves helping parts update to present-day safety

Childhood Trauma and Parts Formation

Early trauma shapes how parts develop before there was language or choice.

  • Parts form around survival, attachment, and regulation
  • Exiles hold unmet needs and early fear
  • Protectors learn to manage without reliable support
  • Healing requires pacing, safety, and strong Self-leadership

An IFS View of Healing Trauma

Across all trauma types, IFS does not ask parts to relive what happened or be pushed aside. Healing happens by building relationships with protective parts, witnessing exiled pain from the Self, and allowing the system to reorganize around safety, trust, and internal leadership.

Each part’s response is honored as intelligent and protective, and change unfolds through compassion, permission, and patience rather than force.

Visit our complete FAQs page for more questions about IFS therapy in Seattle.

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