Maybe It Wasn't Just One Thing.
Sometimes trauma comes from a single event. Sometimes it comes from years of carrying too much, feeling unsafe, walking on eggshells, or learning that your needs came second. Whatever the source, therapy can help you understand how those experiences may still be affecting you today.
Trauma Doesn't Always Look Like Trauma
Many women don't think of themselves as having experienced trauma.
Instead, they describe feeling anxious, emotionally exhausted, disconnected from themselves, constantly on edge, or responsible for everyone else's needs.
Trauma can come from difficult relationships, childhood experiences, loss, chronic stress, emotional neglect, family conflict, or growing up in environments where you didn't feel safe, seen, or supported.
You don't need to have experienced a single catastrophic event for your experiences to have a lasting impact.
You find yourself replaying conversations or situations long after they're over.
You struggle with people-pleasing, perfectionism, or guilt.
You feel responsible for everyone else's emotions.
You have difficulty trusting yourself or others.
You often feel anxious, overwhelmed, or emotionally exhausted.
You know where some of your patterns come from but still feel stuck in them.
Certain memories, relationships, or experiences continue to affect you today.
Trauma Therapy May Be Helpful If...
What Does Trauma Therapy Look Like?
Trauma therapy isn't about forcing you to relive painful experiences or telling your story over and over again.
We begin by understanding your experiences, identifying patterns that continue to affect your life, and building tools to help you feel grounded and supported.
Depending on your needs, therapy may incorporate EMDR, parts work, mindfulness, and other trauma-informed approaches to help you move toward healing at a pace that feels manageable.
No. Trauma therapy is not about having a perfect memory or telling your story repeatedly. We focus on understanding how past experiences may be affecting you in the present and helping you move forward from there.
Do I need to remember every detail of what happened?
What if I don't consider my experiences "traumatic"?
Many women who seek trauma therapy initially say the same thing. Difficult experiences don't have to fit a specific definition to have a lasting impact. If something continues to affect how you feel, think, relate to others, or view yourself, it's worth exploring.
If you find yourself stuck in patterns that no longer serve you, feeling emotionally overwhelmed, or struggling to move past certain experiences, trauma therapy may be helpful. We can determine together whether this approach is a good fit for your needs.
How do I know if trauma therapy is right for me?
You Learned How to Survive. Therapy Can Help You Learn Something More.
The patterns that helped you get through difficult experiences may no longer be serving you. Therapy creates space to understand where those patterns came from, what they're protecting, and what life can look like when you no longer have to carry everything by yourself.