When children grow up in environments where connection depends on keeping others calm, predictable, or satisfied, the nervous system adapts.
It learns that relationships feel safest when you manage the emotional climate. It is an adaptive survival strategy.
Many trauma survivors become highly attuned to subtle shifts in tone, facial expression, or energy in others. The brain and body are constantly scanning for signs of tension or disconnection, because historically, these cues signalled potential threat.
Over time, responsibility for others’ emotions can feel automatic:
- monitoring how others feel
- smoothing over conflict quickly
- avoiding disagreement
- prioritising harmony over authenticity
- feeling disproportionate anxiety when someone is upset
- feeling responsible when others are dysregulated
Neurobiologically, this reflects a nervous system shaped by repeated experiences where safety depended on minimising relational rupture. The system learns that maintaining connection is protective.
But in adulthood, this can create an invisible burden -
feeling responsible for everyone’s comfort, reactions, or wellbeing.
Healing often involves gradually learning that another adult’s emotions are not your responsibility to regulate.
Connection can survive disagreement and closeness does not require self-abandonment.
Just like safety does not require constant emotional management.
The work is not to stop caring about others, it’s to loosen the belief that relationships depend on your constant regulation of them.
Often, this begins with noticing - Where do I feel responsible for something that is not actually mine to carry?
✨ If this resonates, you might find my grounding & stabilisation guide helpful (link in bio).
#trauma #complextrauma #traumahealing #traumarecovery
Avoidance is one of the central processes involved in post-traumatic stress disorder (alongside re-experiencing and hyperarousal).
When experiences feel overwhelming, the nervous system learns very quickly what might trigger distress. This can include not only external reminders (places, people, situations), but also internal experiences such as thoughts, memories, emotions and body sensations.
Avoidance develops because it works. And it’s adaptive at the time.
By reducing contact with reminders of threat, it reduces distress in the short term. From a learning perspective, this is negatively reinforcing, the nervous system learns that avoidance helps regulate internal discomfort.
Over time, this can generalise. The brain becomes increasingly sensitive to anything that resembles the original experience, even in subtle ways.
Importantly, avoidance does not always look obvious.
Many forms of avoidance are socially reinforced because they resemble competence: productivity, reliability, emotional control, independence, high achievement, caring for others.
These strategies can be adaptive in the short term. They can help people function, maintain relationships, and build stability.
However, when avoidance becomes the primary way of managing internal experience, it can also prevent new learning from taking place.
The brain does not get the opportunity to update its predictions about safety.
So the nervous system can continue to respond as though the threat is current, rather than in the past.
From an information-processing perspective, traumatic experiences can remain insufficiently integrated, meaning reminders continue to activate distress even when the present environment is objectively safe.
Trauma therapy supports the brain to process experiences in a way that allows them to be stored as past events, reducing the need for ongoing avoidance.
When this happens, the nervous system no longer has to work so hard to maintain a sense of safety.
#trauma #traumatherapy #traumarecovery #traumahealing #emdr
Trauma doesn’t just affect memories - it changes how the brain detects and responds to danger.
When something genuinely threatening happens, the brain’s survival system is meant to activate quickly. The amygdala detects potential danger and signals the release of stress hormones such as adrenaline and cortisol, preparing the body to react fast. At the same time, areas of the prefrontal cortex involved in reflection and flexible thinking have less influence, allowing the brain to prioritise immediate survival over careful evaluation.
This response is highly functional when danger is real. It helps you act quickly to protect yourself.
The difficulty is that after trauma, the threat system can become sensitised. The brain learns that danger can appear suddenly, so it becomes more likely to activate even when the present situation is objectively safe. Subtle reminders of past experiences, such as tone of voice, conflict, feeling criticised, or feeling out of control, can trigger the same survival response.
This is why trauma responses can feel immediate or overwhelming, even when part of you knows you are safe. Your nervous system is using old information to try to protect you.
These responses are not signs of weakness. Actually they are learned survival adaptations. With the right support, the brain can gradually update its predictions about danger, helping the nervous system respond more accurately to what is happening now, rather than what happened then.
And that’s where EMDR comes in. It actually helps your brain rewire and update itself.
#trauma #complextrauma #psychoeducation #amygdala #brain