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Glossary›Comprehensive Resource Model

Glossary

Comprehensive Resource Model

A neurobiologically-based trauma therapy developed by Lisa Schwarz that builds layered internal resources to heal complex trauma without retraumatization.

What is Comprehensive Resource Model?

The Comprehensive Resource Model (CRM) is a neurobiologically-based therapeutic approach designed to heal complex trauma, dissociative disorders, and attachment wounds. Developed by Lisa Schwarz, M.Ed., a licensed psychologist and marriage and family therapist, CRM integrates various therapeutic modalities such as somatic experiencing, attachment theory, ego state therapy, and mindfulness practices. Unlike traditional talk therapy or standard trauma processing methods, CRM is a psychotherapy that clears distressing emotional memories from traumatic experiences by having clients reprocess them in a resourced state. Being resourced means that the nervous system feels safe and isn’t engaged in an active defense response (fight, flight, freeze, or dissociate).

The model’s defining feature is its systematic construction of what practitioners call a “neurobiological scaffolding” — a neurobiological scaffold is built by introducing resources in unique sequences and combinations to help you feel safe enough to fully step into and clear the memories of traumatic experiences (sensations, emotions, thoughts, and beliefs) without getting overwhelmed. These resources include specialized breathwork, somatic grounding, attachment neurobiology activation, eye position anchoring, sacred geometry, toning, and connection to what CRM calls “core self” or spiritual essence. CRM is an emotion-focused midbrain-based therapeutic modality, whose primary mechanism of change is emotional memory reconsolidation. It aims to access, orient towards, re-member, feel fully and release the most unbearable, horrific pain that creates the need for our defense responses–the symptoms that bring people to treatment.

Origins & Lineage

Lisa Schwarz is the founder and developer of The Comprehensive Resource Model (CRM), and the primary author of The Comprehensive Resource Model: Effective therapeutic techniques for the healing of complex trauma. For the past 40 years, Lisa has been dedicated to creating innovative treatment methods for working with severe dissociative disorders, attachment disorders, in-utero and ancestral trauma. Schwarz is a Pennsylvania-based licensed psychologist who began presenting CRM at international professional conferences in 2009.

The Comprehensive Resource Model was developed by Lisa Schwarz as a response to the limitations of existing trauma treatment approaches for clients with complex, developmental, and attachment-based trauma. Her work emerged from decades of clinical practice with clients experiencing severe dissociative disorders, Complex PTSD, and attachment disruption — populations for whom conventional trauma therapies often proved insufficient or destabilizing.

Her work bridges neuroscience, spirituality, and consciousness through a blend of traditional psychotherapy, somatic therapy, and indigenous healing practices. Lisa is a certified practitioner of Colin Ross’s Trauma Model and Robert Schrei’s Source Point therapy. She is trained in Usui Reiki, transpersonal psychology, and has studied the breathwork and somatic concepts of Richard Brown, MD, Jeremy Youst, and Barbara Barnett. CRM synthesizes attachment neuroscience, affective neuroscience, memory reconsolidation research, and ancient wisdom traditions into a unified therapeutic framework.

How It’s Practiced

In a CRM session, the therapist guides the client through a structured, sequential process fundamentally different from traditional trauma processing. What makes CRM unique is its use of multiple, simultaneous “resources” to keep the brain in a state of calm while processing trauma. In a CRM session, your therapist helps you layer several physiological and psychological anchors: Internal Power Focused Breathing: Specific breathing patterns that regulate the vagus nerve and signal safety to the brainstem.

The practice unfolds in phases. First comes extensive resourcing: CRM uses specific breathing techniques, grounding skills, activation of intuition and the development of secure attachment neurobiology to resource a client’s nervous system. This includes body-based grids (somatic mapping), sacred place visualization, protective figure work, eye position anchoring to activate neural pathways associated with safety, and techniques involving sound (toning) and visual symbols (sacred geometry).

CRM is a neuro-biologically based trauma treatment model which facilitates targeting of traumatic experiences by bridging the most primitive aspects of the person and their brain, to their purest, healthiest part of the self. This bridge catalyzes the mind and body to access all forms of emotional trauma and stress by utilizing layers of internal resources such as attachment neurobiology, breathwork skills, somatic resources, our connection to the natural world, toning and sacred geometry, and one’s relationship with self, our intuition, and higher consciousness.

Only after this foundation is established does the therapist guide the client to engage traumatic material — and even then, the resources remain actively layered throughout. CRM juxtaposes the remembering of the painful traumatic memory with a robust scaffold of internal resourcing. This juxtaposition of mismatched experiences enables the brain to rewire the way it has stored and learned emotional responses to the trauma memory, reconsolidating into responses that do not hold any energetic charge and dismantling the need for symptoms that bring people to treatment.

Comprehensive Resource Model Today

CRM has gained international recognition among trauma therapists, particularly those working with complex PTSD, dissociative disorders, and developmental trauma. Lisa Schwarz and a growing network of certified CRM practitioners offer basic and advanced training internationally, clinical consultation, and therapeutic intensives. The model is taught through multi-day workshops and ongoing mentorship programs.

Clients typically encounter CRM through licensed therapists who have completed formal CRM training. Sessions may occur in traditional office settings, though some practitioners incorporate elements like equine-assisted work (CRM EQUUS). The approach is particularly sought by individuals who have found conventional talk therapy insufficient, those who experienced overwhelm or destabilization with EMDR or other trauma processing methods, and people addressing attachment wounds, prenatal trauma, or what CRM terminology calls “soul-level” healing.

CRM is grounded in attachment theory, affective neuroscience, memory reconsolidation, and a deep respect for ancient wisdom traditions. It allows clients to access the neurobiological portals to expanded consciousness while staying fully resourced and connected to self. It offers a map for navigating trauma not only as a wound, but as a gateway to personal and spiritual transformation. This positioning bridges clinical psychology and consciousness-oriented healing communities.

Common Misconceptions

CRM is not simply another resource-building technique. While both use eye positions, EMDR focuses on moving through a memory quickly. CRM focuses on staying with the memory while being so “resourced” that the memory no longer feels threatening. Many clients find CRM provides a deeper sense of core safety than EMDR. The distinction lies in the depth, sequencing, and simultaneity of resourcing rather than in resource development as a preparatory phase.

CRM is not exclusively imagery-based or spiritually-dependent, despite its incorporation of protective figures and connection to “core self.” While CRM uses internal imagery (like a “protective figure”), the model is grounded in neurobiology. The imagery is a tool to trigger specific neural pathways associated with safety. Your therapist will work with whatever concepts feel most authentic to you. The language of spirituality serves neurobiological function; practitioners adapt terminology to client orientation.

CRM does not bypass difficult emotion or eliminate the challenge of trauma work. CRM does not eliminate the difficulty of trauma work. It creates the neurobiological conditions under which that difficulty can be metabolised rather than bypassed or endured. It is rigorous, not gentle in the colloquial sense; the difference is structural nervous system support during intensity.

Finally, CRM is not a brief intervention. Building comprehensive neurobiological scaffolding for complex trauma requires sustained therapeutic engagement and specialized practitioner training.

How to Begin

For those exploring what is Comprehensive Resource Model therapy or seeking Comprehensive Resource Model for beginners, start by understanding that CRM requires work with a trained practitioner — it is not a self-guided practice. Locate a CRM-trained therapist through the official Comprehensive Resource Model website (comprehensiveresourcemodel.com), which maintains a directory of certified practitioners.

The primary text is The Comprehensive Resource Model: Effective Therapeutic Techniques for the Healing of Complex Trauma by Lisa Schwarz, Frank Corrigan, Alastair Hull, and Rajiv Raju (Routledge, 2016). This book provides theoretical foundation, neurobiological rationale, and case illustrations, though it is written for clinicians rather than general readers.

Prospective clients should seek practitioners who have completed at least basic CRM training and ideally ongoing consultation with Schwarz or senior CRM faculty. Initial sessions typically focus on stabilization and resource installation before addressing traumatic material. This is appropriate work for those with complex trauma histories, dissociative symptoms, or those who have found standard trauma therapy insufficient or destabilizing — but it requires readiness for deep therapeutic engagement and financial/time commitment to sustained treatment.

Related terms

somatic experiencingemdr therapyinternal family systemstrauma releasepolyvagal therapybreathwork facilitator
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