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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

PTSD & Trauma Recovery 


PTSD and trauma affect more than thoughts and memories — they shape the body, brain, and nervous system.Long after a traumatic event has passed, the nervous system may remain on high alert, leading to symptoms such as hypervigilance, sleep disruption, emotional flooding or numbness, and a persistent sense of threat.


This Trauma & PTSD Recovery space is grounded in a bottom-up, nervous-system-informed approach to healing. Rather than asking “What’s wrong with me?”, we begin with understanding how the body learned to survive — and how safety, regulation, and choice can be restored over time.


Here you’ll find education and resources that help make trauma responses understandable and reduce shame, alongside gentle, trauma-informed practices that support recovery. Healing is approached with pacing, compassion, and respect for each person’s lived experience — recognizing that recovery is not about erasing the past, but about reclaiming a sense of steadiness, meaning, and agency in the present.


The No, It’s Not All In Your Head series explores the relationship between trauma, the nervous system, emotional experience, and the body. These articles examine how trauma can affect physiology, memory, regulation, and healing through a trauma-informed, nervous-system-centered lens grounded in integrative mental health care.


Explore the "No, It’s Not All In Your Head" Series:

Part One: No, It's Not All in Your Head


An overview of common PTSD symptoms and lived experiences, reframing them as nervous-system responses rather than personal weakness.


Part Two: No, It's Not All in Your Head - The Neuroplatform of Emotion


Explores how trauma shapes the underlying neurobiological platform that influences emotional responses outside conscious awareness.


Part Three: No, It's Not All in Your Head - The Vagus Nerve


Examines the role of the vagus nerve and polyvagal theory in trauma responses, including patterns of safety, mobilization, and shutdown.


Part Four: No, It's Not All in Your Head - Memory Encoding


Explains how traumatic experiences are encoded differently in the brain than everyday memories, and why trauma can feel present long after danger has passed.


A Gentle Reminder

Healing from PTSD does not require understanding neuroscience. Many people recover through safety, relationship, somatic support, meaning, or time.


This series is simply here for those moments when knowledge itself feels grounding.

​If you’re looking for practical tools or supportive approaches, you may wish to return to the broader PTSD Hub for coping-focused resources.




Latest Insights + Articles

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DBT Mindfulness “What” Skills: Using Coloring Books for Adults
Coloring is a way to practice mindfulness. You can incorporate the DBT mindfulness “What” skills of Observe, Describe and Participate into mindful coloring in order to help your mind and body fully be in the moment.
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6 DBT Skills to Nurture Your Mental Health During the Holiday Rush
This post reflects how I personally use DBT skills during high-stress seasons. It is an illustration of using DBT in a lived experience. Lots of us get flustered during the busy holiday season. If you’re already coping with challenges such as grief, depression, anxiety, PTSD, or bipolar disorder, staying grounded in healthy routines becomes even more important. As I started thinking about cooking for Thanksgiving—something I usually enjoy—I noticed myself feeling unexpectedly irritable. I...
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What Makes Therapy Successful? Eight Evidence-Based Keys (Plus One Bonus)
The evidence shows that common factors, not specific techniques, are the strongest contributors to successful therapy outcomes.
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Most Popular Posts of 2018
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ACCEPTS: A DBT Skill for Coping With Overwhelming Thoughts and Emotions
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8 Mental Health Tips to Avoid Holiday Stress
The holiday season can be joyful — and it can also be exhausting, emotional, and overwhelming. If you’re feeling stretched thin, you’re not doing anything wrong. Holiday stress is common, and there are gentle ways to take care of yourself without forcing cheer or perfection. 1. Be Kind to Yourself Start by noticing your inner dialogue. If your self-talk becomes harsh or critical, pause and ask yourself: Would I say this to a friend I care about? If the answer is no, gently reframe the...
Matrescence Workbook Cover Image
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Matrescence Bath Ritual Guide & Workbook

A guided ritual for rest, reflection, and nervous system support during the transition into motherhood.

Motherhood changes us emotionally, physically, relationally, and spiritually. Yet many women move through this profound developmental transition without space to pause, reflect, or tend to themselves with care.

The Matrescence Bath Ritual was created as a gentle companion for this season of change.

This offering includes:

an 8-minute guided Matrescence reflection

a beautifully designed ritual guide & workbook

prompts for emotional processing and identity reflection

nervous system–supportive self-care practices

a quiet space to pause during the transition to motherhood

Created by Kathy Morelli, LPC, SEP Integrative psychotherapist specializing in trauma, attachment, and perinatal mental health.

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