Insight Family Therapy Group, Inc.

Insight Family Therapy Group, Inc. Psychotherapy practice for couples, individuals, groups & families. Additional offerings include trauma informed yoga & somatic groups.
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Specialities inclide: Somatic, Gestalt, Perinatal, Eating Disorders, Emotionally Focused Couples, EMDR & Yoga Therapy. Insight Family Therapy Group is a psychotherapy practice offering mental health services to: individuals, couples, and families. Areas of speciality are: eating disorders, trauma, anxiety, dissociative disorders and depression. This practice uses a variety of techniques and treatment modalities. These include: relational Gestalt therapy, EMDR therapy, and exposure based methods. Mary Ortenburger is EMDR certified and an approved EMDR consultant, a Certified Eating Disorder Specialist (CEDS) and supervisor (CEDS-S). She is also a certified Gestalt therapist and runs a consultation group for therapists seeking certification. Mary Ortenburger, LMFT, owner of Insight Family Therapy Group, is a Registered Yoga Teacher (RYT) and actively training as a Certified Trauma Informed Yoga Therapist.

Sometimes what people call an emotional flashback does not look like a memory at all.There may be no images, no clear re...
03/06/2026

Sometimes what people call an emotional flashback does not look like a memory at all.

There may be no images, no clear recollection of the past event. Instead, what emerges is a state shift in the nervous system — a sudden drop into shame, fear, collapse, or urgency that seems to arrive without warning.

In trauma work we often see that the body can re-enter a physiological state that originally developed in response to threat. The mind may remain in the present, but the autonomic nervous system begins responding as if the original conditions are happening again.

This is one reason these experiences can feel confusing or disorienting. The intensity of the reaction does not appear to match the present moment, so the mind tries to search for an explanation in the current situation.

But what the nervous system may be responding to is an older survival pattern that has not yet had the opportunity to complete or reorganize.

In somatic approaches to trauma, the work is not to force insight or interpretation, but to help the nervous system differentiate past from present. This often begins with simple orienting: noticing the room, feeling contact with the chair or floor, sensing breath and movement in the body.

As the system gradually recognizes that the threat is no longer present, the intensity of the state can begin to soften.

Nothing is “wrong” with the person in these moments.
The nervous system is doing what it learned to do in order to survive.

Healing often involves creating the conditions where the body can finally experience safety, regulation, and completion that were not available at the time of the original event.

03/05/2026

Sometimes “I’m just concerned about you” isn’t actually about concern.

For many adults who grew up with emotionally immature parents, this phrase was used in moments when they were beginning to separate, set boundaries, or make their own decisions. Instead of supporting autonomy, the statement can function as a subtle form of control.

In some families, a narcissistic parent may use “concern” to question your judgment or undermine your confidence. In others, an anxious parent may genuinely feel worried—but their anxiety gets projected onto you in a way that creates doubt about your choices.

Over time, this can make you second-guess yourself:
Am I making a mistake? Am I being irresponsible? Should I listen to them instead of trusting myself?

A helpful question to ask is when the concern shows up.
Is it when you’re truly in distress and asking for support?
Or does it appear when you start setting boundaries, making independent choices, or growing beyond the role your family is comfortable with?

Real concern supports your agency.
Control disguises itself as concern but erodes it.

If this dynamic resonates, the book Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents by Lindsay Gibson offers a really helpful framework for understanding these patterns.

Noticing the difference is often the first step toward reclaiming your own inner authority.

Note: This post is not encouraging people to cut off their parents or families. Every relationship and family system is complex and deeply personal. For some people, repair and dialogue are possible. For others, boundaries may look different.

The intention here is simply to help people notice relational patterns that can make them doubt their own judgment or autonomy. Awareness doesn’t automatically mean disconnection—it often opens the door to more honest conversations, clearer boundaries, and healthier relationships.

Family dynamics are rarely black and white, and each person has to decide what is right for their own situation.

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Not all trauma looks like fear. Some of the clients I work with aren’t explosive or visibly hypervigilant. They’re the o...
03/04/2026

Not all trauma looks like fear.

Some of the clients I work with aren’t explosive or visibly hypervigilant. They’re the opposite. They’re the easiest person in the room. The one who anticipates everyone’s needs. The one who says yes before they’ve even checked in with themselves.

For a long time these patterns have been labeled as personality traits or even pathology.

But from a nervous system perspective, they can also be survival strategies.

If a threat can’t be fought and can’t be escaped — especially when it happens inside relationships — the body adapts in other ways. Sometimes that adaptation is cooperation. Sometimes it’s becoming what the environment needs in order to stay safe.

In somatic work we don’t see these responses as flaws. We see them as intelligent adaptations the nervous system made in a context where options were limited.

Healing isn’t about blaming the strategy that helped someone survive.

It’s about helping the nervous system slowly discover that it may have more choices now.

03/03/2026

“What’s hysterical is historical.”

And before anyone jumps — I’m not using that word in the old misogynistic way. The history of that term matters. I’m not calling women irrational. I’m not dismissing emotion.

What I mean is this:

When a reaction feels big, fast, intense, or younger than your actual age… there’s usually something older in the room.

From a Gestalt perspective, none of us react in a vacuum. We’re always responding inside a field — shaped by our families, our early environments, the contact we did or didn’t get.

A lot of what gets labeled as “overreacting” is actually unfinished business showing up at the contact boundary.

And usually there’s shame under it.

Shame that says:
Don’t be too much.
Don’t need.
Don’t cry.
Don’t get angry.
Don’t lose connection.

So we defend. Or we collapse. Or we attack.

And most of the time, it’s one inner child colliding with another inner child.

Our parents didn’t show up the way they did because they were villains. They showed up from their own fields. Their own trauma. Their own unprocessed shame. Their own parents.

Understanding that doesn’t erase harm.
But it does soften blame.

Field theory isn’t about excusing behavior.
It’s about widening the lens.

When we can stay in dialogue instead of going straight to defense…
When we can notice “how old do I feel right now?”…
When we can tolerate contact without collapsing into shame…

That’s how cycles shift.

Not through blame.
Through awareness.
Through responsibility.
Through compassion.

That’s the work.

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02/27/2026

EMDR therapy is often described as more than exposure. Emerging neuroscience suggests that when a memory is reactivated, it can enter a temporary state of malleability — a process known as memory reconsolidation (Nader & Hardt, 2009; Haubrich & Nader, 2016).

During EMDR, a distressing memory is held in mind while attention is simultaneously engaged through bilateral stimulation. Because working memory has limited capacity, this dual engagement appears to reduce the vividness and emotional intensity of the recalled memory (Lee & Cuijpers, 2013).

Neuroimaging research further shows that after successful EMDR treatment, patterns of neural activation shift. Studies report decreased activation in limbic regions associated with threat and emotional reactivity (such as the amygdala) and increased engagement of prefrontal cortical regions involved in regulation, integration, and cognitive control (Pagani et al., 2015; Boukezzi et al., 2017; Landin-Romero et al., 2018). These findings align with broader models of systems consolidation, in which memories become more integrated within cortical networks over time rather than remaining predominantly limbically driven.

Whether EMDR operates primarily through reconsolidation, working memory taxation, orienting responses, or overlapping mechanisms remains under active investigation. What is well supported is its clinical efficacy for PTSD and trauma-related distress.

The science continues to evolve. But attention, memory activation, and neural integration are not separate processes — they are deeply interconnected.

Note: EMDR is a structured psychotherapy that should only be conducted by a licensed and trained clinician. Bilateral stimulation tools (such as light bars) are not designed for independent trauma processing without proper therapeutic containment and preparation.

Nader, K., & Hardt, O. (2009).
A single standard for memory: The case for reconsolidation. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 10, 224–234.

Haubrich, J., & Nader, K. (2016).
Memory reconsolidation. Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences, 27, 151–176.

Lee, C. W., & Cuijpers, P. (2013).
A meta-analysis of the contribution of eye movements in processing emotional memories. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 44(2), 231–239.

Boukezzi, S., et al. (2017).
Grey matter changes associated with EMDR treatment response in PTSD. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 84, 243–252.

Landin-Romero, R., et al. (2018).
An overview of the neurobiological mechanisms of EMDR therapy. Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 1395.

Pagani, M., et al. (2012).
Neurobiological correlates of EMDR monitoring — An EEG study.
PLoS ONE, 7(9): e45753.
PMID: 23049852.

I didn’t realize how many women were struggling with thisuntil I shared a story on birth trauma.The messages.The quiet “...
02/26/2026

I didn’t realize how many women were struggling with this
until I shared a story on birth trauma.

The messages.
The quiet “me too.”
The stories that had been carried for years without language.

We don’t talk enough about birth trauma.

We don’t talk enough about the shame of having a mixed experience after birth.

The anxiety when someone else holds your baby.
The sound of beeping that still lives in your chest.
The separation.
The fear.

So many women move through this quietly, believing they’re the only one who feels this way.

But they’re not.

Birth trauma is more common than we admit.
And silence makes it heavier.

Numbness.
Paralysis.
Hypervigilance.
Tears that come out of nowhere.
An edge of anxiety you can’t quite explain.

These aren’t signs that something is wrong with you.

They are signs that something mattered deeply.

Your nervous system was protecting what you love most.

And love — especially fierce, protective love — can leave an imprint when it’s overwhelmed.

I speak about this not only as a therapist,
but as someone who understands it from the inside.

If any part of this feels familiar,
you are not alone in it.
And you do not have to carry it by yourself.

❤️‍🩹

02/25/2026

Living in survival mode doesn’t always look dramatic.
Sometimes it looks like competence. Productivity. Being the one who holds it all together.

From a somatic lens, survival mode is not a mindset — it’s a nervous system pattern.

It’s the body that never quite powers down.
The jaw subtly clenched.
The breath shallow or held.
Falling asleep exhausted but wired.
Waking up already braced.

Hypervigilance isn’t a personality trait. It’s physiology. When the nervous system has learned that the world is unpredictable or unsafe, it prioritizes protection over rest. The sympathetic branch mobilizes. Muscles prepare. The mind scans. Even stillness can feel dangerous because letting go once meant something went wrong.

Over time, this becomes embodied memory. Not a story you tell — but a posture you live inside.

Healing, from a somatic perspective, is not about convincing yourself you’re safe. It’s about helping the body experience safety in small, tolerable increments.

• Extending the exhale by a few seconds.
• Noticing where the body meets the chair.
• Allowing one muscle group to soften without forcing the whole system to collapse.
• Tracking moments of neutral or pleasant sensation.

These micro-experiences begin to update procedural memory. The vagus nerve responds to cues of safety. The bracing loosens. Sleep deepens. The mind races less because the body is no longer on constant watch.

We don’t heal survival mode by shaming it. We heal by respecting that it once protected us — and then gently teaching the nervous system that protection no longer requires constant activation.

Safety is not the absence of stress.
It is the capacity to return.

And that capacity can be restored.

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Shame has been on my mind lately.Not the obvious kind.The quiet kind. The sophisticated kind. The kind that disguises it...
02/24/2026

Shame has been on my mind lately.

Not the obvious kind.
The quiet kind. The sophisticated kind. The kind that disguises itself as self-improvement.

For me, it shows up as subtle self-criticism. Obsessing over small details of my being. Suddenly feeling like I am too much. Or not enough. Or strangely… nothing at all.

And what strikes me is how true it feels in the moment.

Gary Yontef describes something in Gestalt therapy called the mystification process. A child senses:
“Something is wrong here, but I don’t know what it is.”

Without co-regulation or accurate reflection, that confusion organizes itself into:
“It must be me.”

That is how shame embeds.

It is not dramatic.
It is developmental.

It becomes the background narrator of our lives.

Many of us — especially those who are high-functioning, competent, helpers, therapists, leaders — can operate beautifully from our competent self. We can regulate, analyze, guide, support.

Until something personal touches the old imprint.

Then the old narrative rushes in.

And instead of seeing shame, we see a list of things that need to be fixed.

But shame rarely resolves through correction.
It resolves through contact.

Through accurate mirroring.
Through nervous system regulation.
Through the slow reorganization of “it must be me” into
“something happened”
and
“I am still whole.”

If you notice yourself picking apart strange aspects of your being lately, gently ask:

Is this improvement…
or is this shame?

There is nothing wrong with you.
There may just be something old asking to be met differently.

02/23/2026

Maybe you understand your trauma.
Maybe you can recount it in great detail.
Maybe you’ve told your story many times — and the narrative hasn’t really shifted.

And still… your body may not feel safe.

Insight absolutely matters in trauma healing. Meaning-making matters. (In SE, that’s the “M” in SIBAM.)

But insight alone doesn’t renegotiate a survival response.

We know from memory research that when an experience is brought into working memory, it can be updated. Under the right conditions, the brain reconsolidates it differently.

But traumatic memory doesn’t update so easily.

When the nervous system is still braced, the memory often gets stored again with the same survival charge. No new information. No prediction error. No “this is different now.”

This is part of what we’re doing in EMDR reprocessing — we bring the memory into awareness while changing the conditions around it so it can reconsolidate in a new way.

Because trauma isn’t just the story of what happened.
It’s what happened in your nervous system.

If the body never got to complete what it prepared to do…
If activation never got to discharge…
If protection never got to organize…

Then the physiology keeps responding as if it’s still happening —
even when your mind knows it’s over.

Cognition helps us make meaning.
But safety isn’t a thought.
Safety is a state.

And states shift through sensation, pendulation, completion, and co-regulation.

We don’t exclude the story.
We don’t bypass meaning.

We integrate it with the body.

Healing deepens when the nervous system no longer has to brace for something that’s already over.

That’s when insight becomes embodied.
That’s when the system updates.
That’s when “I know I’m safe” slowly becomes “I feel safe.”

Audio .celia

✨ NEW DATE ADDED – Parent-Child Yoga Play ✨Our last class sold out, so we’ve added another one!🗓 Sunday, May 17🕚 11:00 A...
02/21/2026

✨ NEW DATE ADDED – Parent-Child Yoga Play ✨

Our last class sold out, so we’ve added another one!

🗓 Sunday, May 17
🕚 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM Claremont, CA

This playful, connection-focused class invites parents and children to move together using the yoga wall, swings, and props in a supportive, joyful way.

⚠️ Important registration note:
👉 You must book TWO spots — one for yourself and one for your child.
(Please don’t book just one spot — each participant needs their own registration.)

🌿 Limited to a small group for safety and individualized attention.

💫 Reserve your spots early — this one will fill quickly!

Thank you, for lending me this amazing photos from our last class!

April 12 | Somatic Support CircleIn light of what many are carrying right now, I’m offering a one-time somatic support c...
02/20/2026

April 12 | Somatic Support Circle

In light of what many are carrying right now, I’m offering a one-time somatic support circle for survivors of sexual assault.

This is not psychotherapy.
There will be no trauma storytelling.

This will be a guided, trauma-informed space focused on:
• Nervous system regulation
• Gentle grounding movement
• Reconnecting to internal safety
• Strengthening a sense of choice and agency

You are never required to speak.
Participation is always optional.

This is a 60-minute, in-person circle.
Capacity will be limited to maintain safety and containment.

Exchange: Donation-based. Venmo
Registration through Momence (link in bio).

If you are currently in acute crisis, this circle may not be appropriate. Please seek individual support or contact 988.

We don’t have to do this alone. ❤️‍🩹

In both Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and Gestalt therapy, recurring conflict is understood as a disruption in conta...
02/19/2026

In both Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and Gestalt therapy, recurring conflict is understood as a disruption in contact.

EFT describes this as an attachment cycle. When connection feels threatened, the attachment system activates. Partners may pursue, protest, withdraw, or shut down habitually because their nervous system is organizing around perceived relational risk.

Gestalt theory describes a similar moment as a disturbance at the contact boundary; there is a narrowing of awareness in which mutual influence becomes difficult or impossible.

The models use different theoretical language but converging insight.

When regulation drops, dialogue collapses into protection or the organism. The interaction becomes about managing threat to maintain connection to preserve the self.

Across couples, families, and even workplace dynamics, the task is not to argue more effectively, but to restore enough regulation for authentic contact to re-emerge.

Without regulation, there is no contact.
Without contact, there is no meaningful resolution.

Address

219 North Indian Hill Boulevard Suite 201
Claremont, CA
91711

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4:30pm
Tuesday 8am - 3:30pm
Wednesday 8am - 3:30pm
Thursday 8am - 4:30pm
Friday 8am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+15622817752

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