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Glossary›Trauma Healing

Glossary

Trauma Healing

An umbrella term for therapeutic approaches that address psychological and physiological impacts of overwhelming experiences through body-based, nervous system–focused, and memory-processing modalities rather than talk therapy alone.

What is Trauma Healing?

Trauma healing encompasses therapeutic modalities that address the ways overwhelming experiences—ranging from single incidents to chronic developmental adversity—become stored in the nervous system, body, and brain. Unlike traditional talk therapy, which primarily engages cognitive processing, trauma healing approaches target the somatic, sensory, and autonomic responses that keep individuals locked in survival states of fight, flight, freeze, or collapse. The field rests on the recognition that traumatic memories are often fragmented, non-verbal, and encoded as bodily sensations rather than coherent narratives, requiring interventions that work directly with the body and nervous system to restore regulation and integration.

Origins & Lineage

The modern somatic trauma field has roots in Wilhelm Reich’s “body armoring” concept from the 1930s-40s, followed by Alexander Lowen’s Bioenergetic Analysis in the 1950s-60s. The contemporary landscape began taking shape in the 1970s with converging developments: Bessel van der Kolk’s work with Vietnam War veterans at the Boston VA Clinic and Peter Levine’s formal development of Somatic Experiencing through the 1970s into the 1980s.

Three major frameworks emerged in subsequent decades: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) was developed by Francine Shapiro in 1987 after she noticed eye movements reduced distressing thoughts during a walk; Internal Family Systems was developed in the 1980s by Richard Schwartz, a family therapist who observed clients describing inner “parts” with distinct roles; and Polyvagal Theory was developed in 1994 by Stephen Porges, providing a neurophysiological framework for understanding safety and threat responses. Van der Kolk founded the Trauma Center in Brookline, Massachusetts in 1982, and his 2014 book The Body Keeps the Score brought trauma healing concepts to mainstream audiences. Van der Kolk received the first NIH grants to study EMDR and yoga for trauma.

Critical scholarship has challenged aspects of this field: a 2023 editorial criticized van der Kolk and Levine for promoting treatments with limited evidence and veering toward pseudoscience, while a 2023 review found broad consensus that basic physiological assumptions of polyvagal theory are untenable. Psychologist Richard McNally described recovered memory therapy inspired by van der Kolk’s approach as “arguably the most serious catastrophe to strike the mental health field since the lobotomy era”.

How It’s Practiced

Trauma healing modalities share common elements while employing distinct techniques. Somatic Experiencing is a body-oriented approach that focuses on the psychophysiological consequences of traumatic events, helping people safely complete interrupted survival actions and gradually discharge trapped energy. Practitioners guide attention to internal sensations—interoceptive, kinesthetic, and proprioceptive experience—to complete thwarted self-protective responses and discharge excess autonomic arousal.

EMDR helps the brain process traumatic memories through bilateral stimulation, such as eye movements or tapping. Sessions typically follow an eight-phase protocol, though EMDR usually needs adaptation for complex or childhood trauma. Internal Family Systems views the psyche as composed of “parts” that argued, protected, or carried pain, with therapy facilitating dialogue between parts and what IFS calls the “Self”—a core state marked by curiosity and compassion.

Many practitioners now integrate multiple approaches. Parts work is vital for most clients with childhood or complex trauma, with some practitioners combining both parts work and EMDR. Body-based practices including yoga, neurofeedback, theater, and breathwork have also been incorporated, though efficacy varies.

Trauma Healing Today

Seekers encounter trauma healing through licensed psychotherapists trained in specific modalities (Somatic Experiencing practitioners complete multi-year certification; EMDR requires specialized training beyond basic licensure), trauma-informed yoga classes, group therapy formats, residential treatment programs, and self-guided resources. The National Child Traumatic Stress Network had grown to 150 sites by 2019. The field has expanded into workplaces, schools, and social services under the banner of “trauma-informed care.”

Popular books—particularly van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score—have created widespread interest, though this visibility has also generated criticism about oversimplification and commercialization of therapeutic approaches still under investigation.

Common Misconceptions

Trauma healing is not a single method but an umbrella term covering diverse, sometimes incompatible approaches. It does not replace medical or psychiatric care for conditions requiring medication. While drugs can render people more functional in crisis, they cannot restore full functionality and mask real issues.

Not all trauma requires or benefits from explicit memory processing; SE specifically avoids direct evocation of traumatic memories, approaching them indirectly. The notion that trauma is “stored in the body” is metaphorical rather than literal; what persists are patterns of nervous system dysregulation and learned protective responses. The field is not universally evidence-based: while EMDR has substantial research support for PTSD, many body-based approaches have limited controlled studies. Trauma healing does not promise erasure of difficult experiences but rather changed relationship to them.

How to Begin

Start with psychoeducation: van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score (2014) and Levine’s Waking the Tiger (1997) offer accessible overviews, though read critically. For academic perspectives, consult peer-reviewed literature rather than popular sources. Seek licensed mental health professionals with specialized training—credentials include Certified Somatic Experiencing Practitioner (SEP), EMDR certification, or IFS training. What matters beyond modality is therapeutic relationship quality, practitioner attunement, and whether the approach adapts to your nervous system rather than forcing you to fit the approach. Many practitioners offer consultations to assess fit. For self-regulation, trauma-sensitive yoga or mindfulness practices may serve as adjuncts, not replacements, for professional support when trauma significantly impacts functioning.

Related terms

somatic experiencingemdrinternal family systemsnervous system regulationembodimentbreathwork
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