Thoughtful, evidence-based therapy to support healing, regulation, and emotional safety
Trauma can affect how you think, feel, and respond to the world long after an experience has passed. You may notice heightened anxiety, emotional reactivity, numbness, difficulty trusting, or a persistent sense of being on edge. For some people, trauma shows up quietly through avoidance, disconnection, or chronic stress rather than vivid memories.
Trauma therapy provides a supportive, structured space to help the nervous system become more regulated and to restore a sense of emotional safety and steadiness. Many clients experience meaningful relief as therapy focuses on practical regulation skills, emotional awareness, and restoring a sense of control.
How trauma often shows up
People seek trauma therapy for concerns such as:
- Feeling hypervigilant, anxious, or easily startled
- Emotional numbness or disconnection
- Difficulty trusting others or feeling safe in relationships
- Strong emotional reactions that feel hard to control
- Avoidance of reminders or situations linked to past experiences
- Chronic stress, tension, or nervous-system overload
Trauma responses are not a sign of weakness. They reflect how the brain and nervous system adapt to overwhelming or threatening experiences.
Trauma therapy in my practice
My approach to trauma therapy is integrative, collaborative, and grounded in evidence-based care. I do not use EMDR. Instead, trauma treatment focuses on helping clients understand and regulate trauma responses in ways that feel safe, steady, and manageable.
Trauma therapy may include:
- Neuroscience-informed care to understand how trauma affects the brain and nervous system
- Somatic approaches to address how trauma is held in the body and to support regulation
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)</strong> to address trauma-related thinking patterns and avoidance
- Attachment-based work</strong> to explore how trauma affects relationships, trust, and emotional safety
- Practical grounding and stabilization strategies
Rather than reliving traumatic experiences, therapy emphasizes present-moment awareness, emotional regulation, and restoring a sense of choice and control. This approach allows healing to unfold at a pace that feels supportive rather than overwhelming.
How these approaches support trauma healing
Trauma affects both the mind and the body. By combining brain-based understanding with body awareness and cognitive strategies, therapy helps reduce reactivity, increase emotional tolerance, and build resilience.
Many clients find that as their nervous system becomes more regulated, trauma-related symptoms such as anxiety, emotional overwhelm, or shutdown begin to ease—often within a relatively short period of time.
Who trauma therapy may be helpful for
Trauma therapy may be a good fit for individuals who:
- Feel emotionally reactive or shut down
- Notice trauma affecting relationships or daily functioning
- Want a steady, grounded approach to healing
- Prefer therapy that emphasizes regulation and understanding
- Are seeking practical tools rather than re-experiencing the past
Faith-informed trauma therapy (available if desired)
For individuals who request it, I offer faith-informed trauma therapy that thoughtfully integrates Christian faith with professional, evidence-based care. Faith can be incorporated in a way that supports meaning, grounding, and hope.
Faith is never assumed or required. Many clients prefer a neutral, clinical approach, and therapy is always guided by your goals, values, and comfort level.
Getting started
If you are considering trauma therapy, you are welcome to:
- Schedule an appointment using the online appointment calendar
- A complimentary 15-minute video consultation is available for those who would like to connect before scheduling their first session.
Trauma therapy can help you feel more grounded, regulated, and present—often sooner than you may expect—at a pace that respects your experience.
