Topics
Choose what you want to understand today.
auto_awesome Synthesis & Guidance
Trauma is not just what happened to you; it is how your body and mind adapted to survive. Here, we move from “What is wrong with me?” to “What happened to my nervous system?” Explore these curated clusters to find language for your experience.
Your Nervous System and Survival Responses
Understanding Alert States
Hypervigilance
A state of constant assessment for threats, even in safe environments. It is your body’s attempt to never be caught off guard again.
The Shutdown (Freeze)
When the threat feels insurmountable, the body conserves energy by going numb. It is an ancient survival mechanism for inescapable pain.
Emotional Flashbacks
Unlike visual memories, these are intense surges of feeling—dread, shame, or smallness—that belong to the past but feel like the present.
Reactions before thinking
Your amygdala processes danger in milliseconds, long before your rational brain can intervene. This is why you react before you realize why.
“The body keeps the score, and it always speaks first.”
Shame, Identity, and Long-Term Patterns
The stories we were handed about who we are — and what we do with them.
Guilt vs Shame
Guilt: “I did something bad.”
Shame: “I am bad.”
Trauma weaponizes shame to keep the survivor from seeking help or connection.
Intergenerational Trauma
Sometimes the patterns we carry aren’t just ours. We inherit the nervous system adaptations of the generations that came before us.
For C-PTSD and the sense that different “parts” of you are at war, continue just below—this cluster stays focused on shame, lineage, and intergenerational patterns.
C-PTSD, childhood grief, and when identity feels fragmented
Stillness & identity
C-PTSD, childhood grief, and when identity feels fragmented
Complex PTSD arises from prolonged exposure to trauma where escape was impossible. It often results in identity fragmentation—feeling like different “parts” of you are at war. The section below gives that experience room to breathe on its own.
When different “parts” feel real
Fragmentation is often a protective response: separate aspects of self held separate truths because one whole story would have been unbearable. Naming this as adaptation, not a character flaw, can soften internal conflict. Friction between modes you move through is information your system is offering, not proof that you are broken.
If reading brings overwhelm, pause and use the one-minute grounding check on Tools before you continue.
Relationships, Boundaries, and Connection
How what happened in private follows us into the rooms we share with others.
“The Fawn response is a survival strategy that looks like kindness.”
On Boundary Guilt
In relationships, trauma often manifests as attachment styles. An anxious style seeks constant reassurance to soothe a fear of abandonment, while an avoidant style creates distance to protect against being overwhelmed.
Fawn Response
Prioritizing others’ needs to avoid conflict and maintain safety.
Family Dynamics
The ‘roles’ we were assigned as children often follow us into adulthood.
Specific Contexts and Systems
The institutions and structures that were supposed to protect — and did not.
Medical Trauma
Painful procedures or life-threatening illness that leaves the body feeling betrayed.
Medical Gaslighting
When a provider dismisses your symptoms, compounding physical pain with psychological trauma.
Religious Trauma
The use of spiritual doctrine to control, shame, or isolate individuals from their own intuition.
Workplace Trauma
Systemic toxicity or abuse of power that mimics early family dynamics in a professional setting.
Common Questions
Common Questions
What is the difference between PTSD and C-PTSD? expand_more
Why do I feel sudden waves of shame for no reason? expand_more
What does dissociation feel like? expand_more
How can I support someone with C-PTSD? expand_more
I’m overwhelmed. Where should I start? expand_more
There is somewhere to go from here.
When reading stirs more than answers
Ground in short, practical tools—or reopen Start Here when you want the map instead of another chapter.