Starting therapy can feel overwhelming — especially if you've experienced trauma or had difficult experiences in past therapeutic or medical environments. Trauma-informed therapy is designed to offer a different kind of experience: one grounded in safety, collaboration, and empowerment.
If you're thinking about beginning therapy or returning after a break, understanding what "trauma-informed" truly means can help ease anxiety and clarify what to expect.
What Is Trauma-Informed Therapy?
Trauma-informed therapy isn't one specific technique. It's a holistic, compassionate approach that recognizes how trauma — big or small — affects both the brain and body. A trauma-informed therapist prioritizes emotional and physical safety, acknowledges power dynamics, and creates an environment where you feel respected, heard, and supported at your pace.
This approach values:
- Safety and predictability
- Consent and choice
- Transparency and collaboration
- Awareness of how trauma impacts the nervous system
- Respect for your lived experience and boundaries
The goal is not to push you into painful memories before you're ready. Instead, it's to build trust and stability so that deeper exploration becomes possible.
Why Safety Matters
Safety is the foundation of trauma healing. Many people with trauma backgrounds expect to be rushed, judged, or pressured. Trauma-informed care ensures the opposite.
Safety means:
- No surprises — you always know what to expect
- No pressure to disclose anything before you're ready
- Respect for your boundaries, always
- A calm, grounding environment
- Predictable sessions with consistent structure
- The ability to pause, redirect, or stop at any time
You are in the driver's seat. Therapy moves at the pace your nervous system can tolerate.
Trauma and the Nervous System
Trauma-informed therapy emphasizes the body as much as the mind. Trauma activates survival responses — fight, flight, freeze, or fawn — that can stay "stuck on" long after the event.
This can look like:
- Hypervigilance or feeling constantly on guard
- Emotional numbness or disconnection
- Anxiety or panic
- Shutdown or dissociation
- Sleep difficulties
- Difficulty concentrating
- Feeling chronically on edge
Therapy supports nervous system regulation through grounding exercises, mindfulness, somatic awareness, breath work, and gentle pacing. Over time, the body learns it no longer has to stay in survival mode.
What Trauma-Informed Sessions Are Like
Every session is unique, but you can expect:
Collaboration. We work together — not in a top-down, authoritative way. You're always part of the decision-making.
Choice. You can always pause, redirect, or say "no." Nothing happens without your consent.
Transparency. I explain what I'm suggesting and why, so you never feel in the dark about the process.
Gentle pacing. We move slowly. You never have to re-experience trauma in order to heal from it.
Strength-based perspective. You already carry resilience. Therapy helps you recognize and build on it.
Nervous system tools. Grounding, mindfulness, and somatic strategies help you stay present and safe throughout our work.
Who Can Benefit?
Trauma-informed therapy helps people navigating:
- Childhood trauma
- PTSD or complex PTSD (C-PTSD)
- Emotional or relational trauma
- Grief and loss
- Medical trauma
- Anxiety or depression
- Burnout
- Life transitions
- Neurodivergence (ADHD, OCD, autism, high sensitivity)
In truth, trauma-informed therapy benefits everyone. It's simply good therapy — rooted in safety and deep respect for the whole person.
Relational Healing
As a relational therapist, I believe healing happens through connection. Trauma often occurs in relationships, so healing in the context of a safe, supportive relationship can be deeply restorative. You don't have to navigate this alone — therapy offers a place where your feelings are welcome and honored without judgment.
Animal-Assisted Support
For some clients, the presence of my dogs, Bexley and Finley, adds comfort and grounding to sessions. Therapy animals offer nonjudgmental support and help regulate the nervous system through their calm, present energy. Their participation is always optional and guided entirely by your comfort level.
You Deserve Support and Safety
If you're seeking a compassionate, trauma-informed space to explore your experiences, you're not alone. Therapy can help you find steadiness, confidence, and deeper self-understanding — at a pace that honors where you are right now.
Reach out today to learn more or schedule your first session.