Trauma recovery doesn’t follow a straight path. Some days, you may feel strong and grounded; other days, you may wonder if you're making any progress at all. But just because healing isn’t always obvious doesn’t mean it’s not happening.
June is Men’s Mental Health Month, a powerful reminder that strength isn’t about bottling up emotions or white-knuckling your way through pain. The old script—the one where “real men” stay silent, stoic, and emotionally shut down—isn’t working.
If you’ve survived trauma, chances are you’re used to putting others first. Maybe it helped you stay safe. Maybe it was how you made sense of the chaos. But somewhere along the way, you learned that your needs could wait—or worse, didn’t matter.
Trauma recovery doesn’t follow a straight path. Some days, you may feel strong and grounded; other days, you may wonder if you're making any progress at all. But just because healing isn’t always obvious doesn’t mean it’s not happening.
Trauma bonding occurs when a person forms an intense emotional connection with someone who is abusive, manipulative, or otherwise harmful. This bond is reinforced through cycles of abuse, periods of kindness, and emotional manipulation, making it difficult for the victim to leave.
Understanding the relationship between the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and anxiety is essential to treatment. The SNS is a part of the autonomic nervous system that activates our body’s "fight or flight" response. For those with trauma histories, this response can become overactivated, even in non-threatening situations, leading to heightened and persistent anxiety.