A Trauma-Informed Guide to Understanding Your Healing Journey
Trauma is not simply something that lives in the past. It’s an experience that can shape how you think, feel, react, and relate to the world long after the original event is over. Many of my clients come to therapy feeling confused by their own reactions or frustrated that they “can’t just move on.” Trauma is not a character flaw or a lack of willpower — it’s a physiological imprint on the brain and nervous system.
In my work with clients throughout Montrose, Glendale, Burbank, Pasadena, and Los Angeles, I often hear things like:
- “I don’t understand why I react so strongly.”
- “I know I’m safe now, but my body doesn’t feel that way.”
- “Why do I keep thinking about something that happened years ago?”
- “Why do small things feel overwhelming?”
These questions are incredibly common. Trauma affects the parts of your brain responsible for memory, emotion, survival, and regulation. When something overwhelms your ability to cope, your brain adapts to protect you — even long after the danger has passed.
This article will help you understand why your mind and body respond the way they do, and why healing requires compassion rather than judgment.
What Exactly Is Trauma?
One of the biggest misunderstandings about trauma is the belief that the event itself determines whether something is traumatic. But trauma is not defined by the event — it’s defined by its impact.
Two people can go through the same situation and have completely different responses. Trauma occurs when an experience overwhelms your nervous system and leaves you feeling:
- Helpless
- Unsafe
- Terrified
- Powerless
- Alone
Trauma can come from many different experiences, including:
- Physical, emotional, or sexual abuse
- Neglect or emotional abandonment
- Car accidents
- Sudden loss
- Medical procedures
- Bullying
- Chaotic or unpredictable childhood environments
- Having emotionally unavailable parents
- Chronic stress
- Breakups or betrayal
- Growing up in a household where emotions were minimized or unsafe
Even if your mind doesn’t “label” something as traumatic, your body might. The nervous system stores experiences differently than the thinking brain. You may forget details, but your body remembers the fear, the tension, or the sense of vulnerability.
How Trauma Changes the Brain
Trauma impacts three main areas of the brain:
1. The Amygdala — Your Internal Fire Alarm
The amygdala is designed to protect you. It detects danger and activates the fight-or-flight response. After trauma, the amygdala becomes hypervigilant, constantly scanning the environment for threats — even when you are objectively safe.
This can look like:
- Being startled easily
- Feeling “on edge”
- Overthinking small details
- Difficulty relaxing
- Always expecting the worst
- Worrying something bad is about to happen
Your amygdala is not malfunctioning — it’s overprotecting you based on past experiences.
2. The Hippocampus — Your Memory and Time-Stamp Center
The hippocampus helps your brain distinguish past from present. Trauma can dysregulate or shrink the hippocampus, making memories feel fragmented, intrusive, or “unfinished.”
Trauma-related changes in this area can lead to:
- Flashbacks
- Intrusive memories
- Difficulty remembering parts of the event
- Feeling like the trauma is happening again
- Trouble concentrating
When clients tell me, “It feels like I’m reliving it,” this is often because the hippocampus is struggling to properly organize the memory into the past.
3. The Prefrontal Cortex — Your Logic, Calm, and Reasoning Center
The prefrontal cortex helps you:
- Regulate emotions
- Make decisions
- Think clearly
- Problem-solve
- Pause before reacting
During trauma — or when triggered later — this part of the brain goes “offline,” allowing the survival system to take control. This is why, in moments of overwhelm, you may:
- Say things you don’t mean
- Feel unable to control your emotions
- Make decisions impulsively
- Feel frozen or shut down
You are not thinking poorly — your survival brain has simply taken over.
Why Trauma Is Stored in the Body
While your mind may try to move forward, your body can remain stuck in survival mode. The nervous system stores trauma through physical sensations, not just thoughts. This can show up as:
- Tight shoulders
- Stomach knots
- Chronic pain or tension
- Trouble sleeping
- “Out of nowhere” anxiety
- Feeling disconnected from your body
- Feeling exhausted but unable to rest
Trauma healing often requires working directly with the body — not just the mind — because your nervous system learned to stay alert, vigilant, and protective.
Why You Can’t “Just Get Over It”
Many clients feel frustrated that they “know” they’re safe but don’t feel safe.
Statements like:
- “I know the danger is over, so why am I still reacting?”
- “I know they didn’t mean to hurt me, so why do I still feel triggered?”
- “My life is good now — so why am I anxious?”
…are incredibly common.
This happens because trauma lives in the nervous system, not just in your thoughts. You cannot outthink a survival response. The brain and body must be shown that the danger has passed — slowly, gently, and consistently.
How Trauma Healing Works
Healing trauma requires helping the nervous system return to a sense of safety. In my practice, I integrate several trauma-informed modalities:
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)
Helps the brain reprocess traumatic memories so they feel less overwhelming.
Somatic Therapy
Works with the body, breath, and nervous system to release stored tension and survival energy.
Mindfulness-Based Therapy
Cultivates awareness, presence, and emotional regulation.
Parts Work / IFS (Internal Family Systems)
Helps you understand and bring compassion to different inner parts of yourself — especially the parts that protect you or carry emotional wounds.
These approaches support healing on both the emotional and physiological level.
Subtle Signs of Trauma You Might Overlook
Trauma responses aren’t always obvious. Many clients assume their symptoms are personality flaws, when in reality, these are adaptations to overwhelming experiences.
Some overlooked signs include:
- Feeling “on edge” frequently
- Overexplaining or apologizing
- Fear of abandonment
- Overthinking conversations
- Difficulty trusting others
- People-pleasing
- Avoiding vulnerability
- Being overly independent
- Emotional shutdown during stress
- Feeling disconnected from your physical body
These behaviors were once strategies to survive — not signs of weakness.
Neuroplasticity: The Brain Can Heal
One of the most hopeful aspects of trauma research is the discovery of neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to change and rewire itself. With the right support, old survival patterns can soften. You can learn to feel safe, grounded, and connected again.
Healing does not erase what happened, but it transforms your relationship to it.
What Healing Feels Like
Healing is not about “feeling good all the time.” It often involves becoming more aware, more present, and more connected to yourself.
Signs of healing include:
- Responding instead of reacting
- Feeling safe in your own body
- Setting boundaries without guilt
- Trusting yourself
- Sleeping better
- Feeling calmer in relationships
- Experiencing joy without waiting for something bad to happen
- Feeling more grounded and resilient
Healing is a journey, not a race. You set the pace.
You’re Not Broken — You’re Healing
Your reactions make sense in the context of what you’ve lived through. Your brain protected you the best way it knew how. Now, with support, you can teach your mind and body a new way of being — one rooted in safety, connection, and compassion.
If you’re exploring trauma healing — whether through telehealth or in-person sessions — you don’t have to do it alone.
Touchstone Trauma Therapy
2441 Honolulu Ave, Suite 120
Montrose, CA 91020
(626) 824-8572
Serving Montrose • Glendale • Burbank • Pasadena • Los Angeles