Why Trauma-Informed Care Matters—and How to Stay Equipped as a Trauma Champion

Trauma affects more people than we realize. Whether in schools, healthcare, workplaces, or communities, the need for trauma-informed care has never been greater. Professionals on the frontlines—therapists, teachers, social workers, leaders, and advocates—are increasingly recognizing that understanding trauma is not optional; it’s essential.

But here’s the challenge: staying current with trauma-informed best practices can feel overwhelming. New research, new strategies, and new demands necessitate ongoing resources to remain effective and avoid burnout. That’s precisely why I created the Trauma Champions Newsletter.


What Is Trauma-Informed Care?

At its core, trauma-informed care is an approach that:

  • Recognizes the widespread impact of trauma
  • Identifies the signs and symptoms in individuals, families, and organizations
  • Responds with policies, practices, and programs that foster safety and healing
  • Prevents re-traumatization, ensuring care is supportive and empowering

This approach matters because trauma doesn’t just affect individuals—it ripples across families, schools, workplaces, and entire communities. When professionals are equipped with trauma-informed strategies, they don’t just treat symptoms; they create conditions for long-term resilience and growth.


Introducing the Trauma Champions Newsletter

The Trauma Champions Newsletter is my way of making trauma-informed care practical, accessible, and sustainable for busy professionals.

Each issue includes:

  • Practical strategies you can apply immediately in clinical, educational, and community settings
  • Insights on the latest trauma-informed care research and methods
  • Tools for preventing burnout and compassion fatigue
  • Resources to help leaders and organizations build trauma-sensitive cultures

Thousands of professionals worldwide have already participated in my training and certification programs. This newsletter brings that same expertise straight to your inbox.

👉 Subscribe free today at TraumaChampions.com


Why Join?

By subscribing, you’ll not only stay up to date—you’ll join a growing movement of Trauma Champions committed to transforming care. Together, we’re working to:

  • Make trauma-informed care the standard across schools, agencies, and organizations
  • Provide families with hope and healing tools
  • Build stronger, more resilient communities

If you’re passionate about trauma-informed practice, this is your space to grow, connect, and lead.


Take the Next Step

Don’t miss out on tools, training, and encouragement designed to help you thrive in this critical work.

👉 Sign up now at TraumaChampions.com and start receiving trauma-informed insights directly in your inbox.

Together, we can turn trauma into resilience—and create real change.

The Hidden Messages in Your Discomfort: Why Processing Emotions is Your Path to Freedom

You know that feeling—a nagging unease in your stomach, a restlessness you can’t quite name, or a vague sense that something isn’t right even when everything looks fine on the surface. Most of us try to push these feelings away, distract ourselves with work, social media, or other activities. But what if these uncomfortable sensations aren’t problems to be solved, but messengers trying to deliver critical information?

The Weight of Unfinished Emotional Business

That persistent discomfort you’re experiencing might not be a warning about what’s coming—it could be an echo from your past that’s been quietly traveling with you. Unprocessed emotions don’t simply disappear because we ignore them. They settle into our bodies and minds like uninvited houseguests, taking up space and influencing how we move through the world.

Think of these unresolved feelings as unopened letters from earlier versions of yourself. Some contain wisdom and insights that could guide you forward. Others are simply remnants from chapters of your life that have already ended but haven’t been adequately acknowledged or grieved. All of them represent parts of you that are still waiting to be heard and integrated.

These emotional fragments aren’t trying to torture you—they’re signals pointing toward aspects of yourself that haven’t been fully understood or accepted. They’re like a persistent knock at the door from the parts of you that remain unfree, asking for attention and care.

Creating Space for Healing

When you’re ready to stop running from these feelings and start listening to them, the process begins with creating a sense of safety. This means finding physical and emotional spaces where you can turn toward your discomfort rather than away from it. It’s about developing the courage to ask, “What are you trying to tell me?”

This journey often brings up forgotten memories and long-buried emotions. You might suddenly remember moments from childhood that shaped how you see yourself, or realize that specific triggers—anger, sadness, anxiety—have been trying to wake you up to unmet needs or unacknowledged pain.

The healing process isn’t always gentle. It might involve crying for losses you never properly mourned, revisiting difficult memories to offer your younger self the comfort or voice they never had, or simply sitting with emotions you’ve spent years avoiding. But as you move through this process, something remarkable happens: you begin to feel lighter, as if you’re literally releasing weight you didn’t realize you’d been carrying.

Your body, too, holds onto emotional experiences. Physical practices such as exercise, stretching, or allowing yourself to shake or tremble can help release stored tension and trauma. Sometimes the body knows how to let go in ways the mind hasn’t figured out yet.

The goal isn’t to eliminate all discomfort from your life, but to learn how to be present with your feelings as they arise. When you can face what’s wrong without immediately trying to fix or escape it, you begin to uncover parts of yourself that have been buried under layers of personas, beliefs, and protective strategies.

You were never actually lost—just hidden. The discomfort was your authentic self’s way of reminding you that it was still there, waiting to be reclaimed.

Discomfort as Your Growth Partner

Here’s something our culture rarely teaches us: discomfort is often the seed of positive change. Most transformations begin not with a sudden burst of inspiration but with experiences that initially bring uncertainty, fear, and anxiety. This happens because we’re remarkably good at adapting to situations that aren’t quite right for us, often waiting until crisis forces our hand before we make necessary changes.

Your discomfort isn’t punishment—it’s information. It’s your inner wisdom communicating that something needs to shift, that there’s another way forward even if you can’t see it clearly yet. Think of discomfort as a caring friend who’s willing to tell you brutal truths that others might avoid.

Many people resist this messenger, which is why their lives can feel stuck or repetitive. But learning to sit with discomfort, to let it reveal what it needs to show you, is one of the most valuable skills you can develop. Discomfort, like anger, grief, and jealousy, serves a purpose—it’s trying to guide you toward something meaningful.

The Sneaky Ways We Resist Our Own Growth

Even when we intellectually understand that change would benefit us, our minds have clever ways of keeping us stuck. These psychological patterns often operate below conscious awareness, sabotaging our best intentions:

The Comfort of Familiar Discomfort. Strangely, we often unconsciously sabotage ourselves when life gets too good. If you’re used to struggle or chaos, peace and happiness can feel foreign and threatening. Your mind might create problems or find ways to return to familiar levels of stress, even when that familiar state isn’t pleasant. Change—even positive change—feels uncomfortable until it becomes your new normal.

The Limits of Our Imagination. Our minds are remarkably good at solving problems we’ve encountered before, but they struggle to envision genuinely new possibilities. When contemplating change, we often can only imagine variations of what we’ve already experienced. This limitation can lead us to believe that our current options are more limited than they actually are. Real growth requires accepting uncertainty and exploring unknown territory, which can feel deeply unsettling.

Expecting the Worst. Human brains are wired to notice and remember negative experiences more vividly than positive ones. This survival mechanism once kept our ancestors alive, but now often keeps us playing small. We tend to overestimate the likelihood and severity of bad outcomes while underestimating our ability to handle challenges or create positive change. This negativity bias can make staying in uncomfortable but familiar situations seem safer than taking risks toward something better.

The Sunk Cost Trap. Sometimes we remain committed to jobs, relationships, or life paths that aren’t working simply because we’ve already invested a significant amount of time, energy, or money in them. The thought of “wasting” that investment can keep us trapped in situations that no longer serve us, preventing us from pursuing options that might be much more fulfilling.

First Impressions Stick. Our brains tend to give special weight to early experiences and first impressions, making it harder to see new possibilities later. Suppose you learned early in life that you weren’t good at something, or that specific dreams were unrealistic. In that case, these initial conclusions can overshadow evidence to the contrary that emerges as you grow and change.

Temporary Feelings, Permanent Decisions. When we’re going through difficult emotions or challenging periods, it’s easy to assume these temporary states represent permanent realities. A bad week can feel like a prediction of a bad life. A period of sadness can seem like evidence that happiness isn’t possible. Learning to recognize the temporary nature of most emotional states can prevent us from making major life decisions based on passing feelings.

Insight Without Action. Sometimes, we become so caught up in understanding our patterns and having revelations about ourselves that we forget to actually implement the changes. Self-reflection can become its own form of avoidance when we use it to delay the often mundane, repetitive work of building new habits and sticking to healthier choices.

Living More Intentionally

Processing emotions and working through discomfort isn’t about reaching a state where you never feel bad again. It’s about developing the capacity to live more fully in each moment, experiencing your feelings in real-time rather than carrying around emotional baggage from the past or anxiety about the future.

When you can look directly at what’s bothering you—when you can sit with discomfort long enough to understand its message—you begin to access parts of yourself that may have been hidden for years. You discover that beneath all the protective layers you’ve built up, your authentic self has been there all along, waiting to be acknowledged and expressed.

This process isn’t always comfortable, but it leads to something invaluable: the freedom to respond to life from a place of choice rather than reaction, to make decisions based on who you actually are rather than who you think you should be, and to experience the full range of human emotion without being overwhelmed by it.

Your discomfort has been trying to tell you something important. Maybe it’s time to finally listen.

Finding Light in Dark Times: The Science of Positive Coping

When life hits hard, most of us naturally focus on damage control. We try to solve problems, push through negative feelings, or simply survive until things get better. But what if there’s another way to cope—one that doesn’t ignore the tough stuff but adds something powerful to the mix?

A Different Approach to Stress

Professor Judith Moskowitz, a researcher at Northwestern University, stumbled onto something important while studying people going through one of life’s most difficult experiences: watching a partner die from AIDS. She was asking participants about their stress, pain, and struggles when something unexpected occurred. The participants pushed back.

“You’re only asking us about the bad stuff,” they told her. “What about the good things that are helping us get through this?”

At first, this seemed almost impossible. How could people facing such devastating loss talk about positive experiences? But as Moskowitz listened, she realized something profound: even in the darkest moments, people were finding glimmers of light. And those who could see these bright spots seemed to be coping better overall.

This observation changed everything. Instead of focusing solely on reducing negative emotions, Moskowitz began studying how positive emotions could serve as a tool for handling life’s inevitable challenges.

It’s Not About Pretending Everything’s Fine

Before we go further, let’s be clear about what this approach is not. It’s not about slapping on a fake smile, pretending problems don’t exist, or falling into the trap of “toxic positivity”—that harmful idea that you should just think your way out of every situation.

Life is complicated, and so are our emotions. You can feel grateful and sad at the same time. You can find moments of joy even while grieving. You can appreciate a sunset while worrying about tomorrow. The goal isn’t to replace difficult emotions but to make room for helpful ones alongside them.

Think of it like this: if you’re walking through a storm, you don’t pretend it’s sunny. But you might notice a sturdy tree that offers shelter, or feel grateful for the warm coat you’re wearing. The storm is still real, but you’re not missing the resources that can help you weather it.

A Toolkit for Tough Times

Moskowitz and her team developed a practical set of skills that anyone can learn and use. These aren’t magic solutions—they’re more like exercises for your emotional well-being. Just like physical exercise, they are most effective when practiced regularly.

Notice the Good Stuff

This might sound obvious, but when we’re stressed, our brains naturally focus on threats and problems. We must intentionally seek out positive moments, no matter how small. Maybe it’s your morning coffee tasting just right, a text from a friend, or noticing that the traffic light turned green just as you approached it.

The key is actively paying attention. Good things happen every day, but we often miss them when we’re caught up in our worries.

Savor the Positive Moments

When something good does happen, don’t let it slip by unnoticed. Take a moment to really experience it. Share it with someone, write it down, or simply pause to appreciate it fully. Think of it like a slow-motion replay for positive experiences—you’re amplifying the good feeling by giving it your full attention.

Practice Gratitude

This goes beyond just saying “thanks.” It’s about intentionally noticing things you appreciate, from the big (having people who love you) to the small (having clean water to drink). Some people keep gratitude journals, others just take a few minutes each day to mentally list what they’re thankful for.

Stay Present

When we’re stressed, our minds often race between past regrets and future worries. Mindful awareness means gently bringing your attention back to the present moment. This isn’t about meditation retreats or complicated techniques—it can be as simple as focusing on your breathing for a few minutes or really noticing what you’re seeing, hearing, or feeling right now.

Being present also helps you notice those joyous moments that are easy to miss when your mind is elsewhere.

Look for Silver Linings

Positive reappraisal means finding ways to reframe challenging situations. This isn’t about convincing yourself that bad things are actually good—it’s about looking for any genuine positives that might exist alongside the negatives.

Perhaps a job loss led to the discovery of a new career path. Possibly a health scare motivated you to take better care of yourself. Or maybe a difficult situation taught you something about your own strength. Moskowitz says this is her personal go-to skill because it can be used in almost any situation.

Recognize Your Strengths

When life feels overwhelming, it’s easy to feel helpless. But you have resources, skills, and strengths that have helped you through tough times before. Taking time to identify these qualities—whether it’s your sense of humor, your ability to listen to others, or your determination—can remind you that you’re not powerless.

Set Small, Achievable Goals

Big problems can feel impossible to solve, but breaking them down into tiny, manageable pieces makes them less overwhelming. Instead of “get my life together,” try “organize one drawer today” or “call one person back.” Each small accomplishment gives you a little boost of positive emotion and builds momentum.

Moskowitz found this particularly helpful during the pandemic, when everything felt uncertain and out of control.

Do Something Kind

Helping others—even in small ways—shifts your focus outward and often brings unexpected positive feelings. It doesn’t have to be dramatic. You might let someone merge in traffic, send an encouraging text, or help a neighbor with their groceries.

Acts of kindness remind us that we can still make a positive difference, even when we’re struggling ourselves.

Be Gentle with Yourself

Self-compassion means treating yourself with the same kindness you’d show a good friend going through a hard time. Instead of harsh self-criticism, try to understand that suffering is a natural part of being human, and you deserve care and patience, especially from yourself.

The Evidence Is Real

This might all sound like common sense, but research shows these practices actually work. Studies have found connections between gratitude and improved physical health. Moskowitz’s own research has shown that people who learn these skills experience improved emotional well-being, and some studies are even finding effects on physical health measures.

The approach has been tested with people facing various challenges: those dealing with depression, caregivers, people with chronic pain, and everyday folks just trying to cope with life’s stresses.

Making It Work in Real Life

Like physical fitness, these emotional skills require regular practice to see sustained benefits. You can’t just try gratitude once and expect lasting change. The key is building these practices into your daily routine until they become as automatic as brushing your teeth.

Start small. Pick one or two skills that resonate with you and practice them for a few weeks. Notice what happens. You might be surprised at how such simple practices can help you feel more resilient and capable of handling whatever life throws your way.

The Bottom Line

When you’re going through tough times, don’t underestimate the power of positive emotions. They’re not frivolous add-ons to “real” coping—they’re legitimate tools that can help you navigate challenges more effectively.

You don’t have to choose between acknowledging your problems and finding moments of positivity. You can do both. And when you do, you might find that you’re not just surviving difficult times—you’re building skills that make you stronger for whatever comes next.

The research is clear: these simple practices might seem small, but their impact can be significant. In a world that often feels overwhelming, that’s a message worth holding onto.

The Cost of Caring: Burnout and Its Kin

Mental health professionals enter their field with a deep desire to help others heal and grow. Yet paradoxically, the very act of caring that draws them to this work can become a source of profound personal distress. Understanding burnout and its related phenomena is crucial for both individual practitioners and the field of mental health as a whole.

Understanding Burnout: More Than Just Being Tired

Burnout is formally recognized as an occupational phenomenon resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed. It manifests through three distinct dimensions: overwhelming exhaustion that exceeds normal fatigue, depersonalization, where providers develop cynical attitudes toward their work and clients, and a diminished sense of personal accomplishment or efficacy in their professional role.

This isn’t simply about having a bad day or feeling overwhelmed occasionally. Burnout represents a systematic erosion of engagement, energy, and effectiveness that develops over time in response to chronic stressors in the workplace environment.

The Family of Caring-Related Stress

While burnout is perhaps the most widely recognized form of work-related distress among mental health professionals, it exists alongside several related but distinct phenomena that can profoundly impact practitioners.

Compassion Fatigue represents a decreased capacity to empathize or feel compassion for others, resulting from repeated exposure to client suffering and trauma, unlike burnout, which primarily relates to workplace conditions, compassion fatigue explicitly addresses the emotional toll of witnessing pain and distress. Practitioners may find themselves becoming emotionally numb or struggling to connect with clients’ experiences in ways that once came naturally.

Vicarious Trauma involves negative changes in a practitioner’s worldview, spirituality, or internal experience that result from cumulative exposure to client trauma narratives. This isn’t about developing specific symptoms, but rather about how repeatedly hearing traumatic stories can alter one’s fundamental beliefs about safety, trust, and meaning in the world. A therapist working with abuse survivors, for example, might find their own sense of security in relationships becoming compromised.

Secondary Traumatic Stress (STS) manifests as trauma-related symptoms—such as intrusive thoughts, avoidance behaviors, or hypervigilance—that develop as a result of witnessing or hearing about another person’s trauma. Unlike vicarious trauma, which develops gradually, STS can have a relatively quick onset and presents with symptoms similar to those experienced by direct trauma survivors.

The Perfect Storm: Contributing Factors in Mental Health Settings

Mental health work environments often create conditions that are particularly conducive to burnout and related stress responses. High caseloads mean practitioners juggle numerous complex cases simultaneously, each requiring significant emotional and cognitive resources. The severity and complexity of client presentations have increased over time, while resources and support systems have often remained static or decreased.

A lack of autonomy and control over working conditions exacerbates these challenges. Many mental health professionals find themselves constrained by institutional policies, insurance requirements, and administrative demands that conflict with their clinical judgment or values. When practitioners cannot practice in ways that align with their professional standards or personal values, the resulting moral distress contributes significantly to burnout.

The reward structure in mental health work is often misaligned with the demands of the job. While the work is emotionally intensive and requires high levels of skill and training, compensation frequently fails to reflect this reality. Recognition for good work may be minimal, while criticism for poor outcomes can be harsh and public.

Community and collegiality serve as crucial buffers against work-related stress, yet many mental health settings struggle with isolation, competition, and lack of meaningful peer support. When practitioners feel isolated in their struggles or are unable to process complex cases with colleagues, the burden of care becomes exponentially heavier.

Perceived unfairness in workload distribution, advancement opportunities, or organizational decision-making processes creates additional stress. When practitioners feel that their workplace operates according to different standards or that some individuals receive preferential treatment, it undermines their investment in the organization and their commitment to the work.

Perhaps most significantly, the emotionally taxing nature of mental health work itself creates unique challenges. Practitioners regularly encounter human suffering, crisis situations, and complex ethical dilemmas. They must maintain therapeutic boundaries while remaining genuinely engaged, balance hope with realism, and navigate the delicate process of facilitating change while respecting client autonomy.

Staffing shortages and high turnover rates create a vicious cycle. The remaining staff must absorb additional responsibilities, making it even more challenging to provide quality care and maintain a work-life balance. The constant need to orient new staff members and the loss of experienced colleagues further erode the stability and support that might otherwise buffer against stress.

The Ripple Effect: Consequences for Providers and Clients

The impact of burnout extends far beyond individual discomfort, creating cascading effects that touch every aspect of mental health service delivery.

For practitioners themselves, burnout takes a severe toll on both physical and mental health. Chronic stress contributes to cardiovascular problems, compromised immune function, sleep disturbances, and increased susceptibility to anxiety and depression. The irony of mental health professionals struggling with their own psychological well-being while trying to help others cannot be overstated.

Professional disengagement follows naturally from burnout. Practitioners may find themselves going through the motions, providing adequate but uninspired care, or avoiding challenging cases. The creativity, empathy, and genuine connection that characterize excellent mental health treatment become casualties of chronic stress and exhaustion.

Ultimately, many burned-out practitioners leave the field entirely, representing a devastating loss of training, experience, and institutional knowledge. This exodus particularly affects specialized areas of practice and underserved populations, where experienced practitioners are already in short supply.

The consequences for clients are equally serious. Reduced access to services occurs as practitioners leave the field or reduce their availability. Those who remain may provide lower-quality care, lacking the energy and engagement necessary for effective treatment. Continuity of care suffers as clients must repeatedly establish new therapeutic relationships, disrupting progress and potentially retraumatizing vulnerable individuals.

Perhaps most concerning, burned-out practitioners may inadvertently cause harm through impaired judgment, boundary violations, or inadequate attention to safety issues. When the helpers are struggling, everyone suffers.

Moving Forward: Recognition as the First Step

Understanding burnout and its related phenomena is not about creating despair or discouraging people from mental health careers. Instead, it’s about acknowledging the very real challenges inherent in caring work and developing realistic strategies for maintaining both professional effectiveness and personal well-being.

Recognition that these experiences are normal responses to abnormal levels of stress is crucial. Mental health professionals are not immune to the effects of chronic stress, nor should they be expected to be. Creating cultures that normalize the discussion of these challenges and provide concrete support for practitioners is essential.

The cost of caring is real, but it need not be insurmountable. By understanding what we face, we can begin to develop the individual skills and systemic changes necessary to preserve both the healers and those they serve.

Beyond “I Do”: Building a Trauma-Informed Marriage When One Partner Has a Trauma History

Understanding how past wounds can become pathways to deeper connection


Marriage vows promise “for better or worse,” but few couples anticipate how past trauma can profoundly shape their relationship. When one partner carries invisible wounds from their history, it affects everything from daily conversations to intimate moments. Yet with understanding and intentional care, these challenges can become opportunities for unprecedented closeness and resilience.

When the Past Lives in the Present

Sarah freezes when her husband Mark raises his voice—even during playful moments. What Mark doesn’t initially understand is that his tone triggers memories of an unpredictable childhood, making Sarah’s nervous system react as if danger is imminent.

Similarly, Emily physically healed from a serious car accident, but her body remembers the trauma. Highway driving now feels impossible, creating tension whenever she and her husband, David, plan trips together.

These scenarios illustrate what trauma expert Dr. Bessel van der Kolk describes in The Body Keeps the Score: trauma literally reshapes how our brains and bodies perceive safety and connection. For partners, understanding this isn’t just helpful—it’s transformative.

The Ripple Effects: How Trauma Touches Every Corner of Marriage

Emotional Landscapes

Living with trauma often means experiencing intense emotional swings—from overwhelming anxiety to profound numbness. Your partner might seem to “shut down” or react strongly to seemingly small triggers, leaving you feeling like you’re walking on eggshells.

Communication Barriers

Trauma can make it incredibly difficult to articulate internal experiences. What feels like defensiveness or withdrawal might actually be your partner’s nervous system protecting them from perceived threats.

Intimacy Challenges

Both emotional and physical closeness can feel threatening when trauma has shattered someone’s sense of safety. Touch, vulnerability, and even eye contact might trigger distressing memories or sensations.

Trust and Connection

Even in loving relationships, trauma can create persistent doubts about safety, consistency, and loyalty. This isn’t about you personally—it’s about how trauma rewires the brain’s threat-detection systems.

Daily Life Disruptions

Chronic anxiety, sleep disturbances, concentration difficulties, and avoidance behaviors can affect everything from household routines to social activities.

The Hidden Impact on Supporting Partners

While focus naturally centers on the trauma survivor, supporting partners face their own challenges that deserve recognition and care.

Secondary trauma can develop from repeatedly witnessing your partner’s pain or hearing traumatic details. You might experience:

  • Emotional exhaustion and anxiety
  • Sleep disruption and irritability
  • Feelings of helplessness or inadequacy
  • Isolation from the unique nature of your situation

Relationship dynamics can shift dramatically:

  • Feeling more like a caregiver than an equal partner
  • Frustration when your support efforts seem ineffective
  • Resentment about lost spontaneity or social activities
  • Guilt about having your own needs and feelings

Remember: Acknowledging these impacts isn’t selfish—it’s essential for sustaining your ability to support your partner and maintain your own well-being.

Building Your Trauma-Informed Partnership: A Roadmap

1. Invest in Individual Therapy

This is your foundation. Both partners benefit from professional support:

  • For trauma survivors: Processing experiences safely and developing coping tools
  • For supporting partners: Managing secondary trauma and maintaining emotional health

2. Become Trauma-Literate Together

Understanding how trauma affects the nervous system transforms confusion into compassion. When you recognize that your partner’s “overreactions” are actually their brain protecting them from perceived danger, everything changes.

Key insight: Those fight, flight, freeze, or fawn responses aren’t choices—they’re automatic survival mechanisms.

3. Practice Compassionate Communication

  • Lead with curiosity instead of judgment
  • Recognize when someone is triggered and focus on safety first
  • Use “I” statements to express your own needs
  • Create agreements about how to handle overwhelming moments

4. Embrace the Marathon Mindset

Trauma healing isn’t linear. There will be breakthroughs followed by setbacks, as well as good weeks and difficult ones. Progress might look like three steps forward, two steps back—and that’s completely normal.

5. Co-Create Safety

Transform your relationship into a haven by:

  • Establishing predictable routines when possible
  • Learning nervous system regulation techniques together (breathing exercises, grounding techniques, mindful movement)
  • Identifying and minimizing environmental triggers
  • Developing safety signals and check-in practices

6. Consider Trauma-Informed Couples Therapy

A therapist specializing in trauma can guide you through rebuilding trust, improving communication, and navigating intimacy challenges. Generally, this approach works best after the trauma survivor has established some degree of individual stability.

7. Prioritize Your Own Oxygen Mask

For supporting partners, self-care isn’t optional—it’s essential for everyone’s wellbeing:

  • Maintain friendships and hobbies outside the relationship
  • Set healthy boundaries around what you can and cannot do
  • Seek your own support through therapy, support groups, or trusted friends
  • Remember that you can’t heal your partner’s trauma for them

The Unexpected Gift

While navigating trauma’s impact on marriage presents real challenges, many couples discover something remarkable: trauma can become a pathway to extraordinary intimacy and resilience. When you learn to hold space for each other’s deepest vulnerabilities, when you develop skills to co-regulate during difficult moments, when you choose understanding over judgment, you create a bond that can weather almost anything.

The marriage that emerges from this crucible often becomes stronger, more authentic, and more compassionate than many couples ever experience. It’s a relationship that truly embodies “for better or worse”—not because it’s easy, but because it’s real.


If you’re navigating trauma in your relationship, remember that seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. Consider reaching out to a trauma-informed therapist who can provide personalized guidance for your unique situation.

Resources:

  • “The Body Keeps the Score” by Bessel van der Kolk
  • Psychology Today’s therapist directory (filter for trauma specialists)
  • National Center for PTSD resources for families
  • Local support groups for trauma survivors and their partners

The Poison Within: Understanding and Releasing Bitterness and Anger

We’ve all experienced that corrosive feeling that settles in after being hurt, betrayed, or mistreated. It starts as a sharp pain and then becomes more persistent: bitterness. Like a slow-acting poison, bitterness seeps through our emotional system, fundamentally altering how we see ourselves and the world around us.

The Bitter Cycle

Bitterness rarely exists in isolation. It’s typically accompanied by its volatile cousin, anger. While anger can be a healthy, natural response to injustice, bitterness occurs when that anger isn’t processed or released. Instead, it calcifies, becoming a lens through which we view our experiences.

Dr. Maya Thompson, a clinical psychologist specializing in emotional regulation, explains: “Bitterness is essentially anger turned inward and preserved. While immediate anger can be protective and motivating, chronic bitterness becomes self-destructive, affecting everything from our physical health to our capacity for joy.”

Research supports this view. Studies have shown correlations between unresolved anger and increased risks for cardiovascular problems, weakened immune function, and disrupted sleep patterns. Our bodies weren’t designed to carry this emotional weight indefinitely.

Recognizing the Signs

How do you know if bitterness has taken root in your life? Here are some common indicators:

  • You find yourself repeatedly revisiting old hurts, mentally rehearsing what happened and what you should have said or done
  • Cynicism has become your default perspective
  • You experience satisfaction when those who hurt you face difficulties
  • Trusting others feels increasingly impossible
  • You find yourself withdrawing from relationships to avoid potential hurt
  • Physical symptoms like tension headaches, jaw clenching, or digestive issues become frequent companions

The irony of bitterness is that while it begins as a response to being hurt by others, it ultimately hurts us more than anyone else. As the ancient proverb suggests, harboring bitterness is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.

The Path to Release

Breaking free from bitterness doesn’t happen overnight, but it is possible. Here are some approaches that can help:

1. Acknowledge the hurt

Bitterness often thrives in denial. By honestly acknowledging what happened and how it affected you, you begin to loosen its grip. This doesn’t mean dwelling on the hurt but giving yourself permission to feel it fully, perhaps for the first time.

2. Practice self-compassion

Beating yourself up for feeling bitter only compounds the problem. Instead, try relating to yourself with kindness. “We often judge ourselves harshly for not being able to ‘just get over it,'” notes therapist James Rivera. “But healing isn’t linear, and self-compassion creates the emotional safety needed for real change.”

3. Reframe your narrative

The stories we tell ourselves about what happened and why can either entrench bitterness or help dissolve it. Consider whether there might be alternative interpretations of events. This doesn’t mean excusing harmful behavior but freeing yourself from a narrative that keeps you stuck.

4. Set boundaries

Sometimes, bitterness persists because we remain in situations that continually reopen wounds. Setting clear boundaries—including limiting contact with certain people—can create the space needed for healing.

5. Practice forgiveness (on your own terms)

Forgiveness is often misunderstood. It doesn’t mean what happened was okay or the relationship must be restored. Instead, it’s a decision to stop allowing the hurt to control your life. As author and researcher Brené Brown puts it, “Forgiveness is not forgetting or walking away from accountability or condoning a hurtful act; it’s the process of taking back and healing our lives so we can truly live.”

6. Seek professional support

Sometimes, professional guidance becomes essential, mainly when the hurt is deep or complex. Therapies like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), and EMDR have proven effective in addressing persistent negative emotions tied to past experiences.

Finding Freedom

A 42-year-old teacher, Maria Chen, describes her journey: “After my divorce, I was consumed by bitterness. It affected my health, my work, and even how I parented. The turning point came when I realized my ex-husband had moved on completely while I was still carrying this massive emotional burden. I decided then that I deserved to be free, too.”

For Maria, healing involved therapy, journaling, and eventually, a deliberate choice to focus on rebuilding her life rather than ruminating on its collapse. “I still have moments,” she admits, “but they’re just moments now, not my entire existence.”

The Gift on the Other Side

Perhaps the most compelling reason to address bitterness is what awaits on the other side: the return of possibility. When we no longer view life through the distorted lens of past hurts, we can engage more fully with the present. Relationships become sources of joy rather than potential threats. Creativity flows more freely. We become more compassionate—both with ourselves and others.

Releasing bitterness doesn’t mean forgetting the lessons learned through difficult experiences. In fact, many find that working through bitterness eventually yields wisdom that wouldn’t have been accessible otherwise. The hurt becomes part of your story without defining it.

As you consider your own relationship with bitterness and anger, remember that seeking help isn’t a sign of weakness but of courage. In reaching for healing, you’re reclaiming your emotional well-being and your right to a future unconstrained by the past.


Creating a Safe Space for Adoption Conversations: A Guide for Parents

For transracial adoptees, having a safe space to discuss their adoption story, birth family, and cultural identity is crucial for healthy emotional development. Yet many parents struggle to create this environment despite their best intentions. This article explores what constitutes a safe space for these conversations, what barriers parents might face in providing one, and why overcoming these challenges benefits the entire family.

What Makes a Safe Space for Adoption Conversations?

A safe space for adoption conversations includes several key elements:

Emotional safety is the foundation. Children need to feel they can express any emotion—sadness, anger, confusion, curiosity—about their adoption without parents becoming defensive, dismissive, or overly emotional themselves. Parents should validate these feelings rather than trying to “fix” them.

Non-judgment allows children to ask questions or share thoughts about their birth family, cultural heritage, or identity without fear of upsetting their parents. This includes accepting when children may express grief or loss alongside a love for their adoptive family.

Age-appropriate honesty builds trust. Parents should share truthful information about the adoption story at developmentally appropriate stages, without hiding challenging aspects but presenting them with sensitivity.

Regular, casual opportunities for conversation help normalize adoption discussions. Rather than making these talks formal or rare events, weaving them naturally into everyday life shows children that adoption isn’t a taboo topic.

Child-led pacing respects the child’s emotional readiness. Some children may want frequent conversations, while others need more time. Parents should follow their child’s lead while occasionally opening the door for discussion.

Consistent reassurance of permanence and love provides security. Children need to know that exploring feelings about the birth family doesn’t threaten their place in the adoptive family.

Cultural resources and connections demonstrate respect for the child’s heritage. Books, cultural events, and relationships with others who share their background show children that their identity is valued.

Barriers Parents May Face

Despite good intentions, parents can struggle to create this safe space for several reasons:

Fear of Rejection

Many adoptive parents worry that their child’s interest in their birth family or culture signifies rejection of them as parents.

“It’s natural to feel threatened when your child expresses curiosity about their birth family,” says Dr. Emily Martinez, adoption psychologist and author. “But remember, a child’s desire to understand their origins isn’t about replacing you—it’s about completing their identity puzzle.”

Insecurity About “Real” Parenthood

Some parents struggle with societal messaging that biological connections are more “real” than adoptive ones.

“I’ve worked with many parents who confess they feel like ‘imposters’ when their child asks about their birth family,” explains adoption counselor James Wilson. “This insecurity can make it difficult to create the open environment children need.”

Discomfort with Difficult Emotions

Adoption stories often include complex, sometimes painful elements. Parents may want to protect their children—and themselves—from these difficult emotions.

“Parents often tell me they want to wait until their child is ‘old enough’ to handle the hard parts of their story,” says Dr. Lisa Chen, a family therapist specializing in adoption. “But avoidance usually creates more issues than it solves. Children sense when topics are off-limits, which can lead to shame and secrecy.”

Cultural Disconnection

For transracial adoptees, discussions about identity often include race and culture. Parents who haven’t done their own cultural education work may feel ill-equipped for these conversations.

Why Creating a Safe Space Benefits Everyone

Though challenging, creating this safe space ultimately strengthens family bonds and promotes healthy development:

For the child: Research shows that adoptees who can openly discuss their adoption experiences have better self-esteem, more vigorous identity formation, and fewer psychological issues in adulthood.

For parents: Open communication builds trust and deepens the parent-child relationship. It also prevents the buildup of unspoken questions and concerns that can create distance.

For the family unit: Families who can navigate these conversations develop resilience and communication skills that benefit all aspects of family life.

A Real-Life Example

When 8-year-old Mei began asking questions about her birth mother in China, her adoptive mother, Sarah, initially felt anxious. “I worried she was unhappy with our family,” Sarah admits. “I found myself changing the subject or giving brief answers to end the conversation quickly.”

After joining an adoptive parent support group, Sarah recognized her defensive reactions were more about her fears than Mei’s needs. She began creating space for these conversations, starting with books about adoption and gradually moving to more personal discussions.

“The turning point came when I told Mei it was okay to love her birth mother and wonder about her,” Sarah recalls. “The relief on her face was immediate. She said, ‘I thought it would hurt your feelings if I talked about her.'”

Today, at 13, Mei speaks openly about her adoption story and Chinese heritage. “These conversations haven’t diminished our bond,” Sarah says. “They’ve made it stronger because Mei knows she can bring her whole self to our relationship.”

Expert Advice

Dr. Martinez offers this guidance: “The best gift you can give your adopted child is permission to explore all aspects of their identity without feeling they’re betraying you. This isn’t always easy, but it’s essential.”

Wilson adds: “Remember that your child’s story belongs to them. Your role is not to control the narrative but to help them understand and integrate it into their life healthily.”

Dr. Chen concludes: “Creating this safe space isn’t a one-time event but an ongoing process. Be patient with yourself and your child as you navigate these waters together. The ultimate goal is to raise a child who feels whole and secure in all aspects of their identity.”

By facing their own fears and insecurities, parents can create the safe space their children need to thrive—not despite their adoption story, but with it fully integrated into their sense of self.

10 Things Transracial / Transcultural Adoptees Want Their Parents To Know

Download a PDF infographic of this article here!

1. Racial Mirroring is Crucial for Identity Development

Transracial and transcultural adoptees often express the need to see and interact with people who share their racial or ethnic background. This mirroring is vital for their identity development, helping them to form a positive self-image and understand their place in the world.

2. The Challenges of a “Color-Blind” Approach

While a “color-blind” approach may stem from good intentions, it can hinder an adoptee’s ability to explore their racial identity and navigate experiences of discrimination. Recognizing and discussing race openly is essential for fostering a healthy understanding of identity.

3. Experiencing Racism and Microaggressions

Adoptees may encounter racism and microaggressions that their adoptive parents might not fully recognize or understand. Parents must educate themselves about these experiences and provide support when their children face such challenges.

4. Importance of Birth Culture Connections

Maintaining connections to their birth culture is essential for adoptees’ sense of self and belonging. Parents should actively encourage and facilitate these connections to help their children feel grounded in their heritage.

5. Identity Confusion from Cultural Disconnection

Many adoptees report feeling disconnected from both their adoptive family’s culture and their birth culture, leading to confusion about their identity. Open discussions about these feelings can help alleviate some of this confusion.

6. Open Communication About Adoption

Having open conversations about their adoption story and birth family is important for adoptees’ emotional well-being. Parents should create a safe space for these discussions, allowing their children to express their feelings and questions.

7. Active Involvement in Heritage Exploration

Adoptees benefit from their parents’ active involvement in helping them explore and celebrate their heritage. This can include participating in cultural events, language learning, and engaging in activities that reflect their background.

8. The Need for Mentors and Role Models

Having mentors or role models from their racial or ethnic background can significantly impact an adoptee’s self-esteem and identity. Parents should seek opportunities for their children to connect with individuals who can provide guidance and support.

9. Exposure to Diverse Environments

Living in a diverse community or having regular exposure to diverse environments can help adoptees feel less isolated. Parents should consider the importance of diversity in their children’s social circles and experiences.

10. Addressing Emotional Challenges

Adoptees may struggle with issues related to attachment, anger, anxiety, or perfectionism due to their adoption experiences. Parents must know these potential challenges and seek appropriate support and resources to help their children navigate them.

By understanding these key points, adoptive parents can better support their transracial and transcultural children, fostering a nurturing environment that honors their unique identities and experiences.

Trauma Recovery: The Healing Power of Rituals

Looking for ways to heal after trauma? Rituals are more than just cultural practices; they’re powerful tools for creating a sense of peace and grounding. Whether it’s a morning meditation, a weekly journaling practice, or a sacred ceremony, rituals can provide structure and meaning during your healing journey.

Safe Space for Healing

Rituals create a protected container for processing emotions and experiences at your own pace.

Connection to Self

Regular practices help rebuild trust in yourself and your body’s wisdom

Restored Sense of Control

Through intentional actions, rituals help reclaim your power and agency

Join us as we explore how ancient wisdom and modern understanding support your healing journey. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to deepen your practice, discover how reclaiming rituals can help you find healing, empowerment, and renewed purpose.

Does your child seem like a “Square Peg in a Round Hole”?

When Your Child Doesn’t Seem to “Fit”: Understanding and Supporting Neurodivergent Kids

Picture trying to fit a square block into a round hole in a shape sorter. No matter how hard you push or turn it, it just won’t fit. This is how many neurodivergent children feel every day in schools, social situations, and even at home. These are the kids who might have ADHD or autism or simply think and experience the world differently than most. But here’s the thing – they’re not broken blocks that need reshaping. They’re unique individuals who need the right space to shine.

“Why Can’t My Child Just…?”

If you’ve ever asked yourself, “Why can’t my child just follow simple directions?” or “Why do they struggle with things other kids find easy?” you’re not alone. Dr. Ross Greene, who has worked with countless families, puts it beautifully: “Kids do well if they can.” This simple but powerful idea turns traditional thinking on its head. When our children struggle, it’s not because they’re being difficult – it’s because something in their environment doesn’t match their needs or abilities.

It’s Not About Trying Harder

Consider asking someone nearsighted to “just try harder” to see clearly. Sounds ridiculous, right? Yet we often expect neurodivergent kids to “try harder” to fit into situations that aren’t designed for their way of thinking or processing information.

Robyn Gobbel, who specializes in helping parents better understand their children, explains that connecting with our kids is more important than trying to correct their behavior. When children feel understood and supported, they’re much more likely to develop the skills they need to navigate challenging situations.

Your Child’s Brain: A Different Kind of Beautiful

Dr. Daniel Siegel helps us understand that every child’s brain develops in its own unique way. Just like some people are naturally artistic while others are mathematical, neurodivergent children have unique ways of thinking and learning. Instead of seeing this as a problem to fix, we can view it as a different kind of gift to nurture.

Making Room for All Shapes

So, how can we help our square pegs thrive in a world full of round holes? Here are some practical ideas:

  • Create “just right” challenges: Break big tasks into smaller, manageable pieces
  • Look for the message behind the behavior: When your child struggles, ask, “What’s making this hard?” instead of “Why won’t they cooperate?”
  • Celebrate different ways of doing things: Maybe your child needs to move while learning or draw while listening.
  • Trust your instincts. You know your child best. If something isn’t working, it’s okay to try a different approach.

A New Way Forward

Instead of trying to make our children fit into spaces that weren’t designed for them, we can work on creating spaces that welcome all kinds of minds. This might mean:

  • Talking with teachers about flexible learning options
  • Finding activities where your child’s unique traits are strengths, not challenges
  • Connecting with other parents who understand your journey
  • Most importantly, helping your child understand that different isn’t wrong – it’s just different

The Real Goal

The goal isn’t to turn square pegs into round ones. It’s to create a world where all shapes are welcomed and valued. Your child isn’t a problem to solve – they’re a person to understand and support.

Recommended Resources

For parents wanting to learn more:

  1. “The Explosive Child” by Dr. Ross Greene
  • Learn about collaborative problem-solving and working with your child instead of against them
  1. “Lost at School” by Dr. Ross Greene
  • Understanding how to advocate for your child in educational settings
  1. “The Whole-Brain Child” by Dr. Daniel Siegel and Dr. Tina Payne Bryson
  • Practical strategies for understanding your child’s development and behavior
  1. “Beyond Behaviors” by Mona Delahooke
  • Understanding and helping children with behavioral challenges
  1. “Building the Bonds of Attachment” by Daniel Hughes
  • Insights into connection-based parenting approaches

Online Resources:

Remember, you’re not alone on this journey. These resources are here to support both you and your child as you navigate this path together.