What is Ego State Therapy?
Ego State Therapy is a parts-based psychodynamic approach that conceptualizes human personality as comprising multiple distinct but integrated segments called ego states. Each ego state represents an organized system of behaviors, experiences, perceptions, and affects bound together by a common principle and separated from other states by boundaries of varying permeability. Rather than viewing the psyche as a unified whole, the approach treats personality as a “family of selves” that can be addressed individually within a single person using techniques adapted from family and group therapy.
Origins & Lineage
The theoretical foundation for Ego State Therapy originates with Paul Federn (1871–1950), a Viennese psychoanalyst and member of Freud’s inner circle who first used the term “ego state” to describe subsections of personality. Federn’s concepts were detailed in his posthumous 1952 collection Ego Psychology and the Psychoses, compiled by his student Edoardo Weiss.
In the 1950s, Weiss extended Federn’s theoretical work into clinical applications and passed these concepts to John G. Watkins, who had been analyzed by Weiss. John Watkins (1913–2012), a psychologist at the University of Montana specializing in hypnosis and dissociation, developed the formal therapeutic system with his wife Helen Watkins (1921–2002). The development of Ego State Therapy as a unified intervention can be traced to the last quarter of the 20th century, with a complete edition of the American Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy dedicated to the approach in 1983. The Watkins published their definitive text, Ego States: Theory and Therapy, in 1997. Federn’s ego state concepts also influenced Eric Berne’s development of Transactional Analysis.
How It’s Practiced
Ego State Therapy practitioners work to identify, access, and communicate with specific ego states within a client, using both hypnotic and non-hypnotic conversational techniques. The therapist helps clients recognize distinct internal parts—such as a wounded child state, a protective adult, or a critical voice—and facilitates dialogue between these states to understand their function and origin.
Common techniques include guided imagery, visualization, hypnosis, and role-playing to access states that may be implicit or outside conscious awareness. Practitioners may ask clients to speak from the perspective of a particular ego state, then use various psychotherapeutic methods (behavioral, cognitive, analytic, or humanistic) to achieve integration or internal diplomacy between conflicting parts. The approach identifies four categories of ego states: vaded states (traumatized and unprocessed), conflicted states (in internal opposition), retro states (once adaptive but now maladaptive), and normal states (healthy and integrated).
Ego State Therapy Today
Contemporary practitioners encounter Ego State Therapy through certification programs offered by Ego State Therapy International (ESTI) and regional organizations like Ego State Therapy North America (ESTNA). Training typically includes foundation courses (20–40 hours), advanced specialized workshops, clinical hypnosis certification, consultation hours, and personal experiential sessions. The approach has been integrated with other modalities, particularly EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), somatic therapies, and energy psychology.
The method is applied to a range of presentations including complex trauma, PTSD, dissociative disorders, chronic pain, personality disorders, and relationship difficulties. Training programs are delivered through multi-day workshops, online courses, and masterclasses led by ESTI-certified trainers. Practitioners may also encounter the approach through Robin Shapiro’s Easy Ego State Interventions (2016) and related trauma-focused trainings.
Common Misconceptions
Ego State Therapy is frequently confused with treatment for Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) or multiple personality disorder. While the approach can be applied to dissociative conditions, ego states are understood as normal aspects of personality structure present in all individuals, not pathological fragmentation. The therapy does not assume clients have multiple personalities; rather, it recognizes that everyone navigates discrete roles and identities shaped by development and experience.
Another misconception is that hypnosis is required. While many practitioners use hypnotic techniques to access implicit states, conversational methods can achieve similar access. The approach is also not a spiritual or consciousness-expansion practice, despite surface similarities to parts work in other traditions; it remains rooted in psychodynamic and clinical psychology frameworks with empirical applications to behavioral and cognitive problems.
How to Begin
Clinicians interested in Ego State Therapy should begin with the foundational text Ego States: Theory and Therapy by John G. Watkins and Helen H. Watkins (1997). Robin Shapiro’s Easy Ego State Interventions: Strategies for Working with Parts (2016) offers practical, accessible techniques for therapists new to the model.
For formal training, seek foundation courses through ESTI-certified trainers, which typically require 20 hours of initial instruction and are often approved for continuing education credits in clinical hypnosis. Therapists already trained in EMDR, Internal Family Systems (IFS), or other parts-based approaches report that Ego State Therapy provides complementary structure and techniques. Clients seeking this approach should look for licensed mental health professionals with specialized training in trauma, dissociation, or clinical hypnosis who list Ego State Therapy or parts work among their modalities.