Read below my new article published in Brainz Magazine.
Understanding the truth about trauma
There comes a moment in every healing journey when a profound truth begins to dawn:
The trauma you carry is not who you are.
For many of us, pain, loss, fear, and emotional wounds have become so deeply woven into our sense of self that we begin to believe they define us. We mistake the echoes of trauma for our identity. Yet, as we begin to heal, we discover that trauma is not our essence — it is an experience that happened to us, not something that is us.
I often refer to the groundbreaking work of Dr. Dan Siegel, who defines trauma as “an experience that overwhelms our capacity to cope.” This definition is simple yet revolutionary. It reminds us that trauma is not just about what happened — it is about what it did to our ability to stay connected, safe, and whole in that moment. Trauma is an energetic and emotional imprint left on the nervous system when something too big,
too fast, or too painful happens before we can process or understand it.
But here is the liberating truth:
Trauma is something that was done onto you, not something that is within you. It is not your fault. It is not your essence. It is not your destiny.
Releasing what never belonged to you
Healing, then, is not about “fixing” yourself — because you are not broken. Healing is about releasing what never belonged to you in the first place.
The fear, the blame, the shame, the self-doubt, the guilt — these are not your natural states. They are emotional residues from moments when your nervous system did everything it could to keep you safe. Your survival responses — fight, flight, freeze, fawn — were not signs of weakness. They were acts of profound intelligence. They helped you endure what was unendurable.
When we begin to see trauma this way, the narrative shifts from “What is wrong with me?” to “What happened to me — and how can I release it?”
This shift in perspective is the foundation of empowerment. Because once we stop identifying with our trauma, we reclaim the energy it held hostage. We begin to remember who we were before the wound — and who we can become beyond it.
Healing becomes less about trying to escape our past, and more about reconnecting with our essence — the unbreakable, radiant part of us that has always been whole.
I often say that healing is not becoming someone new; it is remembering who you truly are beneath the layers of survival.
This remembrance is a sacred act of self-liberation.
Practical steps to heal and reclaim your power
Healing trauma is not a linear process — it is a spiral. We revisit layers, learn, release, and rise, again and again. But every step brings us closer to freedom. Below are practical, science-backed, and soul-nourishing ways to support your journey:
1. Reconnect with your body — your safe home
Trauma often disconnects us from our bodies because, at the time, the sensations felt unbearable. Healing begins by gently re-establishing safety in the body.
Try grounding practices such as:
Placing a hand on your heart and taking slow, deep breaths.
Feeling your feet on the ground — imagine roots anchoring you safely into the Earth.
Engaging in mindful movement like yoga, walking, or dancing.
Every breath that says, “I am safe in my body now,” reclaims a piece of your power.
2. Practices self-compassion
Healing is not about perfection — it is about presence. Speak to yourself the way you would speak to a loved one in pain.
Replace self-judgment with curiosity. When a trigger appears, instead of saying “What is wrong with me?” try, “What is this feeling trying to tell me?”
This transforms pain into information, and information into empowerment.
3. Name It to Tame It
We have all had the experience of having such strong emotions that we feel totally out of control. Something happens, or someone says something, and we instantly react. Our heart rate goes up. We get tunnel vision. We cannot think or communicate clearly, and we often respond impulsively.
Whether it is fear, rage, anxiety, or spiralling negative thoughts—in moments like these, it feels less like we’re experiencing emotions and more like we are the emotions. It is difficult to see our way out of the chaos and drama.
Dr. Dan Siegel teaches the powerful concept of “Name It to Tame It.” When we label what we are feeling, we activate the part of the brain responsible for emotional regulation.
Try saying aloud:
“I feel sadness.”
“I feel fear.”
“I feel anger.”
This simple act moves emotion from chaos to clarity. It gives the inner child a voice — and the adult self the strength to listen.
4. Allow support — healing happens in connection
Trauma often isolates. Healing happens in connection. Whether it is with a therapist, coach, support group, or trusted friend, letting others see you is part of re-establishing safety in relationships.
You are not meant to walk this journey alone. Connection is medicine.
Reach out. Be witnessed. Let empathy become your healing balm.
5. Rituals of release
Healing requires release — letting go of what never belonged to you.
You might try:
Writing a letter to your younger self, offering love and forgiveness.
Visualizing old pain as smoke leaving your body with each exhale.
Saying aloud: “This pain is not mine to carry anymore.”
Rituals signal to the subconscious that transformation is taking place. They anchor your intention in the physical world.
6. Reclaim your power through purpose
Once we begin to release trauma’s grip, we rediscover the immense creative power within us. Purpose is the bridge from healing to thriving.
Ask yourself:
“How can I use what I’ve lived through to serve something greater?”
Your story becomes a source of strength, wisdom, and inspiration for others. This is how we turn pain into power, scars into symbols of resilience, and our mess into our message!
The rebirth of the authentic self
When we release what never belonged to us, we step into a new way of being — one defined not by wounds, but by wisdom.
Healing is remembering:
You are not your trauma.
You are not your pain.
You are the one who survived, who rose, who chooses to live again.
Every moment you choose healing; you are declaring to the universe:
“I am more than what was done to me. I am who I decide to become.”
And that is empowerment at its purest form.
So today, breathe deeply. Place your hand on your heart. Whisper to yourself:
“This is my time to release what never belonged to me. I am free to remember who I truly am.”
Because you are.
You always have been.
And your light — no matter what you’ve been through — has never stopped shining.
Final words
Trauma is not a life sentence. It is an invitation — a sacred call to return home to yourself. It is homecoming…
When you release what never belonged to you, you do not just heal — you rise.
And in that rising, you become the embodiment of hope for others still finding their way through the darkness.
You are not your trauma.
You are the love that remains.
You are the light that guides.
You are free.
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