Many of the words we use to describe our life experiences undergo a change in meaning over time – trauma is surely one.
Today it appears frequently in casual conversations, articles, and on social media. Often, painful experiences are described as trauma. While suffering deserves recognition and care, in therapeutic work, we attach a specific meaning to the word.
Understanding this distinction can bring clarity to our experiences and open up the possibility for healing.
Not Simply A Troubling Event
When starting therapy, people often begin by speaking about a difficult event from the past.
Sometimes it sounds deeply significant. At other times, someone may quietly, almost apologetically say, “Nothing very serious happened to me.”
Yet, as we slowly start paying attention to the body as well, another layer often appears: a breath that does not quite settle or shoulders that remain slightly raised.
It could even be a nervous system that moves quickly into alertness even in ordinary moments. Over time, it becomes clear that trauma is defined not just by what happened externally.
Two people may experience the same situation very differently. One may gradually move through the experience with support and integration, while another may find that their nervous system continues to respond as if something inside is incomplete or waiting to be heard.
“Trauma is not what happens to us, but what we hold inside in the absence of an empathetic witness.”
— Trauma therapist Dr.Peter Levine, the founder of Somatic Experiencing
In this sense, trauma is less about the event itself and more about what the nervous system has had to carry alone.
A Nervous System Facing Overwhelm
To understand this better, it helps to look at the role of our nervous system. It is designed to respond intelligently to danger.
When we face a threat, the body naturally responds with fight or flight. If escape is not possible, the system may move into stillness or freeze. These responses are not problems. They are part of our biological wisdom.
However, when an experience is too sudden, intense, or when we face it without enough support, the nervous system may not be able to complete these responses. The body then carries traces of the pent-up energy that our survival instinct produced. Over time, the nervous system continues to organise itself as though the threat has not fully passed.
This often appears in obvious expressions such as anxiety or fear. At other times, it is more subtle.
A constant state of vigilance.
Difficulty settling into rest.
The feeling of being slightly outside one’s own experience.
Trauma Is Also About A Void
Trauma is not always connected to a dramatic event. Sometimes it forms quietly through what was absent:
- Experiences of safety
- Protection
- Empathy and presence in moments when we are vulnerable
When these experiences are missing over time, the nervous system tends to rely on staying vigilant rather than being at ease.
Jungian analyst Donald Kalsched, in The Inner World of Trauma, describes how the psyche under unbearable stress organizes itself into a kind of internal division
“One part absorbing the pain, another standing guard over it, ensuring it doesn’t overwhelm consciousness. These protective structures, he argues, are not signs of damage. They are the psyche’s way of keeping a person alive.”
Imprints On the Body
Trauma is not only a story etched in our mind but also one our body remembers. Often this memory appears through sensations, patterns of tension, emotional states, or impulses that we can’t clearly put in words. This is why understanding trauma intellectually does not always bring relief.
In contrast, when therapeutic work includes the body, the nervous system can gradually rediscover how to regulate, feel safe, and experience vitality.
Trauma Is Not the End of the Story
The most important thing to understand is that trauma does not mean someone is broken.
Human beings carry an extraordinary capacity for resilience and healing rarely appears suddenly. More often than not it unfolds quietly as the body begins to recognise that the present moment is different from the past.
With time and supportive conditions, our nervous system can learn new experiences of safety, connection, and choice. Patterns that once formed around survival can slowly soften. Precious energy that was spent in protecting or reassuring yourself can begin to move again.
Starting With A Small Practice
You might like to explore the following practice gently. Take your time and move slowly.
Sit comfortably in a chair and allow your feet to rest on the ground.
Take a moment to notice the contact between your body and the chair.
Feel the support of the floor beneath you.
Then slowly look around the room.
Let your eyes rest on something that feels neutral or pleasant. Perhaps a colour, a texture, or an object that draws your attention.
Stay there for a few moments.
Notice what happens in your body as you allow your attention to rest there. You may notice a small softening, a deeper breath, or a sense of settling.
You might like to explore the following practice gently. Take your time and move slowly.
Sit comfortably in a chair and allow your feet to rest on the ground.
Take a moment to notice the contact between your body and the chair.
Feel the support of the floor beneath you.
Then slowly look around the room.
Let your eyes rest on something that feels neutral or pleasant. Perhaps a colour, a texture, or an object that draws your attention.
Stay there for a few moments.
Notice what happens in your body as you allow your attention to rest there. You may notice a small softening, a deeper breath, or a sense of settling.
Simply orienting to the present is one of the ways the nervous system begins to rediscover safety. These small moments help the body remember that it can move between stress and rest.
Disclaimer
The content shared on this blog is intended for informational and reflective purposes only.
While it draws on professional training and clinical experience as a therapist, it does not constitute therapy, counselling, psychological advice, diagnosis, or treatment of any kind. Reading this blog does not establish a therapist-client relationship.
The reflections here sit at the intersection of depth psychology, somatic awareness, and inner inquiry, and are offered in the spirit of exploration rather than prescription.
If you are navigating emotional difficulty or mental health concerns, please reach out to a qualified mental health professional for personalised support.
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