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			When someone experiences trauma—whether a single event or repeated stress over time—the impact often goes far beyond thoughts or emotions. Trauma lives in the body. It disrupts your nervous system, your ability to feel safe in your own skin, your sense of agency and connection. For many people, traditional talk-therapy alone doesn’t fully meet the need of “feeling safe in the body again.”
That’s where trauma-sensitive yoga (sometimes called trauma-informed yoga) comes into play. This approach to yoga adapts the physical movement, breath work, and mindfulness of yoga to honour the specific needs of trauma survivors—to help you reconnect, regulate, and reclaim your body and mind in healing.
The term emerged to describe yoga practices adapted for people who have endured trauma and might feel triggered or unsafe in a standard yoga class.
Key features include:
In essence, trauma-sensitive yoga is not a “regular yoga class” with more pillows—it’s a therapeutic complement to trauma healing, acknowledging how trauma lives in the body and offering an accessible pathway for embodied healing.
Research and clinical commentary point to several ways trauma-sensitive yoga supports healing.
Because trauma often manifests not just in memories but in physiological patterns—tightness, hyper-arousal, dissociation—the body-based approach of trauma-sensitive yoga can access what talk therapy alone cannot.
Every teacher and program differs, but here’s a rough sketch of what you might experience:
The key is safety, choice, awareness.
Trauma-sensitive yoga is not just for individuals diagnosed with PTSD—it can assist anyone who has experienced trauma (big or small), feels disconnected from their body, struggles with anxiety, hyper-arousal, dissociation, chronic stress, or simply the sense of “not feeling at home” in their body.
It’s best used as a complement to other trauma-informed therapies (e.g., psychotherapy, EMDR, somatic experiencing), not as a standalone cure. The mind–body connection benefits enhance other treatment work.
Trauma-sensitive yoga offers a powerful avenue for healing that honors the body, honors your history, and invites you back into a relationship with yourself that is safe, grounded, and compassionate. When paired with a trauma-informed counseling environment like Waterford Counseling & Psychological Services, located in Oswego, Aurora, and Crest Hill, this integrated approach can give you both the mind-work and the body-work needed to reclaim your life from trauma.
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