Innovations in Contemporary Internal Family Systems (IFS): Clinical Practice and Documentation
About This Series
About this Series:
As clinicians, many of us are trained in a limited number of psychotherapy approaches, yet over time our clinical work often expands to include a broader range of therapeutic modalities and client needs. This series explores contemporary psychotherapy approaches, with a focus on their clinical applications, therapeutic interventions, and documentation in practice.
While each modality – such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), psychodynamic therapy, EMDR, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and others – has its own theoretical foundation, there is often meaningful overlap in the core therapeutic processes they address, including emotion regulation, relational patterns, attachment, trauma, insight, and behavioral change. Many recent developments in psychotherapy also reflect a growing integration of ideas across approaches, including mindfulness-based, somatic, neurobiological, and acceptance-oriented perspectives.
As clinicians, we may also find ourselves drawn toward particular therapeutic approaches based on our training, clinical style, client populations, or evolving professional interests. At the same time, it can be valuable to remain open to models that may be less familiar or less represented within our original training backgrounds.
This series is written from a clinician’s perspective to support ongoing professional learning, thoughtful reflection, and the development of clear, meaningful clinical documentation. The goal is not to promote any single orientation, but to encourage an integrative and clinically grounded approach to psychotherapy practice.
Introduction: From Parts Language to a Comprehensive Clinical Framework
General Description Internal Family Systems (IFS) is a parts-based psychotherapy model that understands the mind as composed of different “parts” or internal states, each with its own emotions, beliefs, and protective functions. IFS helps individuals develop greater Self-leadership, compassion, and internal harmony through exploration and healing of vulnerable and protective parts.
Internal Family Systems, developed by Richard C. Schwartz, has evolved from a relatively novel parts-based model into one of the most widely integrated and clinically influential contemporary psychotherapy approaches. Initially conceptualized as a way of understanding internal multiplicity and internal conflict, IFS now occupies an important place within trauma-informed, attachment-oriented, somatic, and integrative psychotherapy practice.
At its core, IFS proposes that the mind is naturally multiple and composed of distinct “parts,” each with its own emotional tone, perspective, protective role, and relational function. Rather than viewing symptoms or internal conflict as pathological, IFS conceptualizes many problematic behaviors and emotional reactions as adaptive attempts by protective parts to manage pain, vulnerability, fear, or relational injury.
Contemporary developments in IFS emphasize not only identifying these parts, but also understanding the dynamic internal relationships between them and facilitating increased Self-leadership, internal compassion, regulation, and integration. Modern IFS practice increasingly recognizes the complexity of internal systems and the importance of pacing, embodiment, attachment, and nervous system regulation within therapeutic work.
As IFS has evolved, it has become increasingly integrated into trauma-focused therapy, EMDR, somatic therapies, mindfulness-based interventions, and even cognitive-behavioral approaches, contributing to its growing versatility within contemporary psychotherapy.
What Has Evolved in Internal Family Systems
Expansion into Trauma and Complex Clinical Presentations
One of the most significant developments within IFS has been its increasing application to trauma treatment, particularly complex and developmental trauma. The model’s non-pathologizing stance toward protective parts has proven especially meaningful when working with:
- dissociation
- chronic shame
- emotional dysregulation
- attachment trauma
- self-criticism
- internal conflict
- self-destructive behaviors
Rather than attempting to eliminate symptoms directly, contemporary IFS clinicians often seek to understand the protective function of behaviors, emotional reactions, and defensive responses within the individual’s internal system.
This shift can be especially important for individuals who experience intense internal conflict or who have historically felt ashamed of their emotional reactions or coping strategies.
Greater Integration with Somatic and Attachment-Based Therapies
While earlier IFS work focused heavily on internal dialogue, imagery, and relationship-building with parts, contemporary IFS increasingly incorporates:
- somatic awareness
- nervous system regulation
- attachment-focused interventions
- mindfulness practices
- trauma-informed pacing
Modern clinicians recognize that parts are often experienced physiologically as well as emotionally and cognitively. Patients may notice parts through:
- bodily tension
- constriction
- activation
- collapse responses
- posture shifts
- emotional flooding
This increasing emphasis on embodiment has strengthened the integration between IFS and somatic therapy approaches. Susan McConnell’s work in Somatic IFS has contributed significantly to this development.
Contemporary IFS clinicians also increasingly attend to co-regulation, relational safety, and attachment dynamics within therapy itself.
Expansion Beyond Trauma Treatment
Although IFS is strongly associated with trauma work, its applications now extend far beyond trauma-focused psychotherapy alone. Contemporary clinicians increasingly utilize IFS-informed interventions within work involving:
- anxiety disorders
- depression
- perfectionism
- identity development
- relational conflict
- chronic self-criticism
- obsessive-compulsive patterns
- emotional avoidance
- eating disorders and addictions
This broader application reflects the flexibility of IFS as both a clinical model and a conceptual framework for understanding emotional and relational experience.
Core Concepts in Contemporary IFS
Parts and Internal Systems
IFS conceptualizes the psyche as consisting of multiple interacting parts rather than a singular unified self-state. Contemporary IFS emphasizes that these parts are not pathological fragments, but adaptive aspects of the personality that developed in response to life experiences.
Parts are often categorized broadly as:
- managers
- firefighters
- exiles
Managers generally function proactively to maintain control, prevent vulnerability, and protect the system from emotional overwhelm.
Firefighters tend to emerge reactively when emotional pain or vulnerability becomes activated, often through impulsive behaviors, emotional numbing, avoidance, or distraction.
Exiles are understood as vulnerable parts that carry emotional pain, shame, fear, grief, or unmet attachment needs.
Modern IFS work increasingly emphasizes fluidity and complexity within these categories rather than rigid classification systems.
Self-Energy and Self-Leadership
One of the defining features of IFS is the concept of Self-energy—a state characterized by qualities such as:
- calmness
- curiosity
- compassion
- confidence
- clarity
- connectedness
The goal of therapy is not for the therapist to “fix” the patient’s parts, but to support increased access to Self-energy so that individuals can develop healthier internal relationships and greater internal leadership.
Contemporary IFS clinicians increasingly view Self-leadership as an ongoing process rather than a static endpoint.
Unblending and Internal Awareness
A central intervention within IFS involves helping patients “unblend” from activated parts. Rather than being completely immersed in a critical, anxious, ashamed, or reactive state, individuals gradually learn to observe and relate to these parts with greater awareness and compassion.
This process may support:
- increased emotional regulation
- decreased reactivity
- greater reflective functioning
- improved internal communication
- reduced shame and self-judgment
Modern IFS practice often integrates mindfulness and somatic awareness into unblending work.
Clinical Application in Session
Contemporary IFS sessions are often fluid, experiential, and relationally attuned. Clinicians track shifts in:
- emotional states
- internal dialogue
- bodily experience
- protective responses
- activation and regulation
Sessions frequently involve:
- identifying and mapping parts
- facilitating unblending from activated states
- developing compassionate relationships with protective parts
- exploring fears and concerns of managers and firefighters
- accessing vulnerable or exiled parts
- supporting processes of witnessing, healing, and unburdening
IFS clinicians generally avoid confrontational approaches. Instead, therapeutic work emphasizes curiosity, compassion, pacing, and respect for protective systems.
Modern IFS also increasingly emphasizes stabilization and regulation prior to deeper trauma processing, particularly when working with highly activated or dissociative individuals.
The Therapeutic Relationship in IFS
Contemporary IFS increasingly recognizes the importance of relational safety within treatment. The therapist’s stance is often characterized by:
- curiosity
- calmness
- nonjudgmental exploration
- attunement
- collaborative pacing
Rather than positioning themselves as experts directing change, IFS therapists frequently facilitate the patient’s own relationship with their internal system.
This collaborative stance often reduces shame and defensiveness while strengthening internal self-awareness and regulation.
Documentation Considerations
IFS presents distinctive documentation challenges because the work is often:
- experiential
- internally focused
- nonlinear
- relational rather than directive
Effective documentation should ideally capture:
- the type of parts engaged
- their protective or vulnerable roles
- interventions utilized
- the patient’s relationship to those parts
- observed shifts in regulation or awareness
Common documentation pitfalls include:
- vague references to “parts work”
- overly narrative descriptions lacking clinical structure
- failure to identify the protective function of parts
- omission of patient response or internal shifts
For example:
“Worked on anxious parts”
does not adequately communicate:
- the role of the part
- the intervention used
- the therapeutic process
- the patient’s response
More clinically meaningful documentation may reflect:
- unblending interventions
- dialogue with protective parts
- exploration of fears and functions
- increased Self-energy
- internal shifts in compassion or regulation
Sample IFS Intervention Language
internal family systems interventions focused on identifying and mapping protective parts associated with anxiety and emotional avoidance
interventions supported unblending from critical internal voices to increase reflective awareness and emotional regulation
therapeutic work involved developing compassionate engagement with vulnerable and exiled parts
interventions emphasized understanding the protective function of defensive and self-critical parts within the internal system
dialogue-based interventions facilitated communication between conflicting internal parts
therapeutic exploration focused on increasing awareness of polarized internal dynamics and competing protective strategies
interventions supported development of increased Self-energy characterized by curiosity, calmness, and compassion
protective parts were engaged collaboratively to explore concerns regarding vulnerability and emotional exposure
unburdening processes were initiated to address longstanding emotional experiences associated with exiled parts
somatic awareness interventions supported recognition of physiological responses associated with activated parts
interventions emphasized strengthening internal cooperation, regulation, and self-leadership
mindfulness-informed strategies were integrated to support observation of parts without excessive blending or reactivity
therapeutic work focused on reducing shame and self-judgment toward protective coping responses
attachment-oriented interventions explored relational dynamics reflected within the patient’s internal system
integration-focused interventions emphasized increased internal harmony and coordination between parts
Integrating Clinical Practice with Documentation
With Note Designer, clinicians have access to structured Internal Family Systems intervention content organized across domains such as:
- mapping self-parts
- unblending
- working with protective and exiled parts
- Self-leadership
- internal dialogue
- integration and internal harmony
This supports documentation that:
- captures the specificity of parts-based work
- reflects both intervention and process
- avoids vague or overly narrative language
- supports continuity and clarity within integrative psychotherapy practice
This can be particularly valuable for:
- experienced IFS clinicians seeking concise documentation language
- clinicians integrating parts work into trauma therapy, EMDR, somatic therapy, or attachment-focused work
Clinical Reflection
Internal Family Systems offers a powerful contemporary reframe of psychological distress, positioning symptoms not as pathology, but as adaptive responses within a complex internal system attempting to maintain safety and functioning. Contemporary IFS practice invites clinicians to approach emotional suffering with curiosity, compassion, and respect for the protective functions that symptoms may serve.
This work often requires a significant shift in therapeutic stance—from directing change toward facilitating internal awareness, dialogue, regulation, and integration. As such, documentation becomes an important extension of clinical thinking, requiring language that reflects both the structure and fluidity of the therapeutic process.
The continued evolution of IFS reflects broader developments within psychotherapy toward integration, trauma-informed practice, embodiment, and compassionate approaches to emotional suffering.
Recommended Readings
Schwartz, R. C., & Sweezy, M. (2019). Internal Family Systems Therapy (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.
A foundational and clinically comprehensive text outlining the core principles, interventions, and evolution of the IFS model.
Schwartz, R. C. (2021). No Bad Parts: Healing Trauma and Restoring Wholeness with the Internal Family Systems Model. Sounds True.
An accessible yet clinically meaningful exploration of IFS concepts emphasizing Self-leadership, compassion toward parts, and trauma healing.
Anderson, F. G., Sweezy, M., & Schwartz, R. C. (2017). Internal Family Systems Skills Training Manual: Trauma-Informed Treatment for Anxiety, Depression, PTSD & Substance Abuse. PESI Publishing &Media.
A practical and clinically oriented guide to implementing IFS interventions across a range of clinical presentations, including trauma and emotional dysregulation.
McConnell, S. (2020). Somatic Internal Family Systems Therapy: Awareness, Breath, Resonance, Movement and Touch in Practice. North Atlantic Books.
An important contemporary text integrating IFS with somatic and nervous system-oriented approaches.
Sykes, C., Sweezy, M., & Schwartz, R. C. (2023). Internal Family Systems Therapy for Addictions: Trauma-Informed, Compassion-Based Interventions for Substance Use, Eating Disorders, Gambling and More. PESI Publishing & Media.
Explores the application of IFS within addictions and compulsive behaviors using a non-pathologizing and trauma-informed framework.

Patricia C. Baldwin, Ph.D.
Clinical Psychologist
President of Note Designer Inc.