Treatment Modality · Specialty of Dr. Flores

Image Transformation
Therapy (ImTT)

A rapid, imagery-based approach to trauma processing that transforms the way the mind holds distressing memories — often in fewer sessions than traditional therapies.

Overview

What Is Image Transformation Therapy?

Image Transformation Therapy (ImTT) is an evidence-informed, imagery-based psychotherapy developed by Dr. Robert Miller. It operates on the principle that traumatic memories are stored in the mind as mental images — and that by identifying, engaging with, and systematically transforming those images, the emotional charge of traumatic experience can be rapidly and durably reduced.

Unlike traditional talk therapies, ImTT does not require extensive narrative retelling of traumatic events. Instead, the therapist guides the patient to locate the disturbing image associated with the trauma, observe its qualities — size, color, texture, location in the mind's eye — and then gently facilitate its transformation using proven protocols.

The result is often described by patients as a fundamental shift in how the memory feels — from vivid, present, and overwhelming to distant, integrated, and manageable. Many patients experience significant relief within just a few sessions.

"ImTT doesn't ask you to relive your trauma. It asks you to look at the image your mind has made of it — and to discover that it can be changed."

Dr. Suzana Flores is a trained ImTT specialist and one of the leading practitioners of this modality in the United States. The Trauma Institute is committed to expanding access to ImTT and training clinicians in its application across a range of trauma presentations.

How ImTT Works
01
Locate the Image

The therapist guides the patient to identify the mental image most associated with their traumatic memory or distress. This image may be a scene, a symbol, a sensation, or an abstract visual impression.

02
Assess Its Qualities

Patient and therapist observe the image's characteristics — its size, distance, color, clarity, movement, and where it sits in the mind's field of awareness. This grounding process activates the image without overwhelm.

03
Apply Transformation Protocol

Using specific ImTT techniques, the therapist facilitates a shift in the image — reducing its intensity, altering its qualities, or guiding it toward resolution. The patient is always in control of the pace.

04
Install New Imagery

Positive, integrating imagery is introduced and reinforced, helping the mind form new associative pathways that support resilience and wellbeing.

05
Integration & Review

Changes are anchored and reviewed across sessions. Most patients experience lasting shifts in how the trauma memory feels — not suppressed, but genuinely transformed.

Comparative Overview

ImTT vs. Other Trauma Approaches

ImTT shares core goals with other evidence-based trauma therapies while offering distinctive advantages for certain presentations.

Feature ImTT EMDR Prolonged Exposure TF-CBT
Imagery-based processing
Requires trauma narrative Minimal Minimal Extensive Moderate
Avg. sessions for relief 4–8 8–12 10–16 12–20
Suitable for C-PTSD ✓ (phased) ✓ (phased)
Body-based component Moderate Strong Limited Limited
Child/adolescent adapted
Telehealth compatible
Clinical Applications

Who Can Benefit from ImTT?

Single-Incident Trauma

Accidents, assaults, medical emergencies, natural disasters — ImTT's structured imagery protocol produces rapid relief for acute traumatic memories.

Complex & Repeated Trauma

When carefully phased, ImTT is effective for complex trauma presentations including childhood abuse, domestic violence, and prolonged captivity.

Military & Combat PTSD

Veterans and active-duty personnel respond well to ImTT's direct, efficient approach — particularly those who find talk-heavy therapies frustrating.

Narcissistic Abuse Survivors

ImTT is particularly effective at targeting the intrusive images — scenes of humiliation, betrayal, or confusion — that characterize narcissistic abuse trauma.

Grief & Loss

Traumatic grief — the sudden or violent loss of a loved one — often involves persistent distressing imagery. ImTT can transform these images while honoring the loss.

Phobias & Specific Anxieties

ImTT's imagery approach is well-suited to phobias with clear visual components, producing faster results than traditional exposure approaches in many cases.

Begin Your Healing

Work with an ImTT-Trained Clinician

Dr. Flores and select clinicians at the Trauma Institute are trained in Image Transformation Therapy. To inquire about ImTT treatment or to request a referral to an ImTT-trained clinician, please contact us.