Understanding Trauma

What Does Trauma Feel Like?

Trauma is not just what happened—it’s how the nervous system continues to respond after something overwhelming, frightening, or deeply distressing.

You might notice:

Persistent anxiety or hypervigilance
Intrusive memories or flashbacks
Emotional numbness or detachment
Difficulty trusting others
Sleep disturbances or nightmares
Strong reactions that feel out of proportion to the situation

Trauma responses are not a sign of weakness. They are the mind and body trying to protect you.

Common Forms

Trauma doesn’t look the same for everyone

s

Acute Trauma

A single distressing event such as an accident, medical crisis, loss, or sudden threat.

How therapy helps:

We gently process the experience, reduce lingering distress, and help the nervous system regain a sense of safety and stability.

Chronic Trauma

Ongoing exposure to stress, instability, or emotional harm—often in relationships, work environments, or family systems.

How therapy helps:

We identify survival patterns that developed over time and build healthier emotional and relational responses.

Complex Trauma

Repeated relational trauma, often beginning in childhood, that affects identity, attachment, and emotional regulation.

How therapy helps:

Therapy focuses on rebuilding safety, strengthening self-understanding, and developing new ways of relating to yourself and others.

Developmental Trauma

Disruptions in early caregiving, emotional neglect, or inconsistent attachment that shape how a person experiences connection and self-worth.

How therapy helps:

We work on emotional awareness, self-compassion, and relational healing to support a more secure sense of self.

Secondary or Vicarious Trauma

Emotional impact from exposure to others’ suffering—common among caregivers, healthcare workers, therapists, and first responders.

How therapy helps:

We address emotional fatigue, restore resilience, and create strategies for boundaries and recovery.

How It Works

Trauma Therapy

Trauma therapy is not about reliving painful experiences. It’s about helping the mind and body process what was overwhelming so it no longer controls your present.

In therapy, we may focus on:

Nervous system regulation and grounding
Building emotional safety and stability
Understanding trauma triggers and responses
Processing unresolved experiences at a manageable pace
Strengthening identity, resilience, and self-trust
Improving relationships and boundaries

The goal is not to erase the past—but to loosen its hold on your daily life.

When to Seek Support

You might benefit from trauma-informed therapy if:

You feel stuck in survival mode
Certain memories or experiences still feel "alive" in your body
You avoid situations that remind you of the past
You struggle with trust, connection, or emotional safety
You feel numb, disconnected, or overwhelmed

A Growth-Oriented Approach

Trauma work is grounded in safety, respect, and pacing. Nothing is forced. Healing unfolds through understanding, regulation, and meaningful connection.

You can learn to:

Feel safer in your body and environment
Respond to stress with greater flexibility
Build trust and meaningful connection
Reclaim your identity beyond what happened to you

Somatic Breathing to Reduce Stress

Somatic breathing is a mindful, body-based approach to respiration that reconnects awareness with the physical act of breathing. Rather than mechanically controlling the breath, the practice emphasizes observing sensations, emotions, and posture while allowing breathing to return to its natural, diaphragmatic rhythm.

Somatic breathing reduces stress by activating the parasympathetic nervous system through the vagus nerve, signaling safety and allowing the body to rest and recover. Research shows that slower breathing—around five to six breaths per minute—can lower heart rate, regulate blood pressure, and reduce anxiety.

Most adults lose natural breathing patterns due to accumulated tension, stress, and emotional conditioning. Somatic practice restores these patterns through four principles: quiet (non-forced), deep (diaphragmatic), steady (rhythmic), and slow breathing. With consistent practice, somatic breathing can improve emotional regulation, mental clarity, and overall well-being.

Ready to take the first step on your journey?

Let's explore what's possible when you no longer have to navigate anxiety alone. Whether in-person or via telehealth, I'm here to support you.

706-951-7644 | Keith Edmonds, Ed.D., LPC, CPCS — Licensed Professional Counselor