
I want your trauma recovery to have legs.
By that I mean, I want it to last.
I want it to be realistic.
I want it to be sustainable.
That’s why I don’t talk about gimmicky bullsh*t on this page— because while I’m as attracted to gimmicky bullsh*t as anyone (many of you know I got into psychology because self-help books and resource literally saved my life), trauma recovery is too serious and too important to bullsh*t about.
I’ve been told that to expand my social media reach, I should, like, name my trauma recovery approach something cool.
But the truth is, I don’t have something new and different for you.
I have what has worked for trauma survivors in recovery for millennia: tools and philosophies that revolve around self talk, mental focus, and physiology, especially breathing.
The ancient Greek and Roman philosophers knew these tools.
The heroes of the Old and New Testament knew these tools.
Mental health icons from Freud to Albert Ellis knew these tools.
The tools of realistic trauma recovery— self talk, mental focus, and physiology— are not new. Literally EVERY effective trauma recovery technique revolves around them.
Including EMDR.
Including Internal Family Systems.
Including Somatic Experiencing.
Including every variant of cognitive behavioral therapy you can name, from CBT to DBT to ACT to schema therapy.
Why bother saying this? Because it’s real easy to get discouraged out here as we’re working our recovery.
It’s real easy to get up in our head about how all these therapy modalities sound cool and all— but what if they’re just, like, hypothetical constructs?
After all, we don’t do trauma recovery in the therapy room— we overwhelmingly do the work of trauma recovery out here on our own. Very often in the middle of long, dark, cold nights.
What if all this cool sounding therapy stuff doesn’t stick with us when we leave our therapy appointment?
Or— even scarier— what if we can’t afford therapy in the first place?
Or what if our history of interpersonal trauma makes a therapy relationship just not something we can do right now? What then?
The reason I’m writing this post is to tell you, with absolute certainty, that you’re not screwed.
The essential tools of trauma recovery— self talk, mental focus, and physiology— are available to you, just as they’ve been available to every trauma survivor in history.
The fact that you’re working your trauma recovery puts you squarely in the lineage of all those warriors and poets and monks and healers— trauma survivors throughout history.
You don’t have to buy into complex, sophisticated theories. You don’t have to scrounge up unrealistic amounts for therapy (although therapy is absolutely a useful tool for many survivors who are in the position of being able to access it).
I want your recovery to be more than hypothetical.
I want it to be real.
I want it to go slow— because slow is smooth, and smooth is fast.
I want your trauma recovery to have legs.









