Trauma Resources
There are two types of trauma. There's the kind tied to a specific event, something that happened that your system never fully processed. And there's the kind that accumulates over time, caused by chronic stress and emotional neglect. Both can leave the nervous system in a state of constant low-level alert. You feel reactive or numb long after whatever triggered it has passed. That's not a character flaw. It's how the body protects itself.
Where Do I Start?
You don't need to take everything in at once.
If you want a clear, grounded overview of trauma and PTSD: Start with the National Center for PTSD.
If you sometimes feel numb, disconnected, or not fully here: The Sidran Institute covers dissociation particularly well.
If you want to understand how trauma lives in the body, not just the mind: Irene Lyon’s free videos are a good introduction to nervous system basics without jargon.
If you want something practical to try right now: Therapist Aid has simple grounding and regulation exercises you can download and use immediately.
If you’ve been second-guessing whether what happened to you “counts”: Start with the RAINN or NAMI pages. Both are clear and non-judgmental.
Explore Resources
National Center for PTSD
Focus: How trauma and PTSD show up day-to-day
Why it's useful: Clear, research-backed explanations without overwhelming clinical language
Good starting point if: You want a reliable overview of symptoms and patterns
Link: https://www.ptsd.va.gov
Sidran Institute
Focus: Trauma and dissociation
Why it's useful: Particularly helpful if you feel numb or detached at times
Good starting point if: You’ve had moments of spacing out, disconnection, or lost time
Link: https://www.sidran.org
Irene Lyon(free YouTube content)
Focus: Nervous system regulation and how the body holds stress
Why it's useful: Explains how trauma gets stored somatically, not just mentally
Good starting point if: You've heard that "trauma lives in the body" and want to understand what that actually means
Centre for Clinical Interventions
Focus: Practical skills for anxiety, stress, and trauma responses
Why it's useful: Structured, step-by-step workbooks you can move through at your own pace
Good starting point if: You prefer concrete tools over reading about theory
Therapist Aid
Focus: Grounding, emotional regulation, coping strategies
Why it's useful: Simple exercises commonly used in therapy, printable, free to download
Good starting point if: You want something practical to try right away (Note: basic downloads are free; some features require a free account)
Mindful
Focus: Nervous system regulation and mindfulness
Why it's useful: Approaches that don't demand you simply relax on command
Good starting point if: Traditional mindfulness has felt frustrating or out of reach
Link: https://www.mindful.org
RAINN
Focus: Sexual trauma education and support
Why it's useful: Clear information and confidential support options
Good starting point if: You’re beginning to explore experiences you haven’t shared with anyone
Link: https://www.rainn.org
National Domestic Violence Hotline
Focus: Relationship patterns and emotional safety
Why it's useful: Helps clarify what healthy versus harmful relationship dynamics look like
Good starting point if: You’ve been questioning a past or current relationship
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
Focus: Mental health education and peer support
Why it's useful: Combines solid information with optional community connection
Good starting point if: You want both information and the opportunity to connect with others who share your experience
Link: https://www.nami.org
These resources are for education only. They are not a substitute for individual care.