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Internal Family Systems (IFS), developed by American psychotherapist Richard C. Schwartz, is an evidence-based psychotherapeutic model increasingly recognized in trauma-focused psychotherapy.
IFS is based on a differentiated understanding of the mind: our psychological life is organized into distinct internal parts that interact with each other. These parts are not pathological but functions that developed to protect us from difficult or traumatic experiences.
These parts attempt to maintain control and prevent painful emotions from being activated.
They may manifest as perfectionism, excessive self-demand, over-intellectualization, or a strong need for control.
Their function is to prevent the system from coming into contact with overwhelming memories or emotions carried by the exiles.
They contain traumatic experiences, intense emotions, and memories of abandonment, shame, fear, or devaluation.
They are often kept “isolated” within the system because their emotional load is difficult to sustain.
They act reactively when the emotions of the exiles break into the system.
They attempt to quickly extinguish distress through impulsive behaviors, avoidance, substance use, emotional numbing, or hyperactivation.
At the center of the model lies the Self, understood as the person’s innate capacity to relate to their internal parts with clarity, emotional regulation, and stability.
The therapeutic work does not aim to eliminate parts, but to strengthen access to the Self so it can lead the internal system in a coherent and secure way.
In complex trauma, strong internal polarization often occurs: rigid protective parts try to maintain control while exiles remain burdened with pain and seek recognition and integration.
IFS provides a structured and regulated framework to:
Gradually access traumatic memories
Reduce persistent internal conflicts
Improve emotional regulation
Promote more stable psychological integration
IFS does not aim to eliminate “problematic” parts.
Even those that initially seem hostile, critical, or self-destructive — especially protective parts — developed to ensure emotional survival under stress or trauma.
The therapeutic goal is to get to know the parts, understand what they are trying to protect, and recognize their function within the system.
When a part feels heard and understood, extreme strategies often soften. What seemed harmful reveals its protective intention.
The process is not about fighting against oneself, but promoting a more coherent internal organization, where parts can assume less extreme, more adaptive roles.
From this perspective, therapeutic change is based on understanding, regulation, and gradual integration of internal experience.