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What Happened to You Matters. So Does What Comes Next.

Trauma Therapy for Adults & Teens

Trauma doesn't always come from a single catastrophic event. It can come from years of chronic stress, a difficult childhood, a relationship that slowly wore you down, or an experience you've told yourself wasn't "bad enough" to count. Whatever the source, trauma is what happens when an experience overwhelms your nervous system's ability to process it — and until it's processed, it keeps showing up. In your reactions. In your relationships. In the way your body tightens before you even know why.

Trauma therapy isn't about reliving what happened or being forced to talk about painful details before you're ready. It's about helping your brain and body finally finish processing what got stuck — so the past stops bleeding into the present, and you can move through your life without carrying the full weight of it everywhere you go.

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What UnresolvedTrauma Can Look Like

Trauma doesn’t always look like flashbacks or nightmares — though it can. For many people, it shows up in subtler ways that are easy to attribute to personality, stress, or just “how I am”:

  • Hypervigilance — always scanning for danger, never fully able to relax
  • Emotional numbness or feeling disconnected from yourself and others
  • Flashbacks, intrusive memories, or nightmares related to past experiences
  • Strong, disproportionate reactions to situations that remind you of past events
  • Difficulty trusting people or feeling safe in relationships
  • Shame, guilt, or a deep belief that something is fundamentally wrong with you
  • Avoiding people, places, or situations that trigger difficult memories
  • Chronic anxiety, depression, or irritability with no clear current cause
  • Physical symptoms — tension, chronic pain, fatigue — that don’t have a clear medical explanation
  • Feeling stuck, like you can’t fully move on no matter what you try

If any of this sounds like you — whether the experience was recent or decades ago — trauma therapy can help. Old trauma is just as treatable as new trauma. You don’t have to keep living with it.

Trauma Comes in Many Forms

One of the most common barriers to seeking trauma therapy is the belief that what you went through wasn't serious enough to warrant it. That belief is one of the most damaging things trauma does — it convinces you that you're the problem, not the experience. Melanie works with trauma of all kinds, including:

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Childhood and Developmental Trauma

Neglect, emotional or physical abuse, instability at home, or growing up in an environment where you didn't feel safe or valued — these experiences shape the nervous system in foundational ways that show up throughout adulthood, often long after the circumstances have changed.

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Relational and Interpersonal Trauma

Betrayal, emotional abuse, controlling relationships, infidelity, or a relationship that left you questioning your own reality — relational trauma can be some of the hardest to name, because it rarely comes with a clear single event. But its impact on trust, self-worth, and intimacy is profound.

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PTSD and Acute Trauma

A car accident, assault, medical emergency, witnessing violence, or any experience that was sudden, overwhelming, and threatening — acute trauma can cause PTSD symptoms that last long after the event itself, including flashbacks, avoidance, and a nervous system that never quite resets.

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Complex PTSD (C-PTSD)

When trauma is chronic — repeated over time rather than tied to a single event — it often produces a more layered pattern of symptoms known as complex PTSD. This includes difficulties with emotional regulation, identity, and relationships that go beyond classic PTSD symptoms, and it requires a therapist experienced in working with complexity and nuance.

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Grief and Loss as Trauma

Sudden or violent loss, the death of a child, losing someone to suicide, or any loss that your nervous system couldn't absorb at the time can become traumatic grief — a form of loss that doesn't follow the usual arc and benefits significantly from trauma-informed care.

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Secondary and Vicarious Trauma

First responders, healthcare workers, teachers, caregivers, and anyone regularly exposed to others' pain or crisis can develop secondary trauma — the accumulated weight of witnessing suffering over time. It's real, it's valid, and it deserves the same care as direct trauma.

How Trauma Therapy Works with
Bloom Within Counseling

Trauma therapy at Bloom Within Counseling is built on a foundation of safety first. Melanie doesn't push clients into painful material before they're ready — the therapeutic relationship and a sense of genuine safety come first, every time. From there, the work moves at a pace that's right for you, using the most effective trauma-focused approaches available:

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EMDR Therapy — The Core of Trauma Treatment Here

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is Melanie's primary tool for trauma work — and for good reason. It is one of the most thoroughly researched and effective treatments for trauma and PTSD available today. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense both recognize EMDR as a strongly recommended, evidence-based treatment for PTSD. Unlike traditional talk therapy, EMDR works at the level of memory processing — helping the brain integrate traumatic experiences so they lose their emotional charge and stop driving present-day symptoms. Learn more about how EMDR therapy works and what to expect in sessions.

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Trauma-Focused CBT (TF-CBT)

Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy addresses the thought patterns and beliefs that trauma leaves behind — the shame, the self-blame, the distorted sense of danger or worthlessness that forms when the nervous system has been under sustained threat. TF-CBT helps reshape those patterns at the cognitive level while also processing the trauma itself.

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Somatic and Body-Based Awareness

Trauma lives in the body. Long after the mind has moved on, the nervous system stays locked in protective patterns — tension, bracing, hyperarousal, or shutdown. Melanie incorporates body-aware techniques to help clients recognize and release the physical residue of trauma, creating safety in the body as well as the mind.

What to Expect in Trauma Therapy

First Session

The first session is about establishing safety and beginning to understand your experience — not jumping straight into trauma material. Melanie will learn about what's brought you to therapy, what your history looks like, and what you're hoping to get from the work. You are never required to share more than you're ready to share, and that's true in the first session and every session after.

Ongoing Sessions

Trauma therapy unfolds in phases — building stability and coping capacity first, processing traumatic material when you're ready, and then consolidating the gains and integrating what you've learned into your daily life. This isn't a linear process, and Melanie adjusts the approach regularly based on what you need. Most clients find that as the work progresses, the weight of the past genuinely begins to lift — not just temporarily, but for good.

Between Sessions

Trauma work can stir things up between appointments. Melanie equips clients with grounding tools and stabilization techniques to use outside of sessions — practical ways to regulate the nervous system when difficult feelings arise between appointments. You won't be left to navigate that alone.

Trauma Therapy FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No — and a trauma-informed therapist won't push you to. Effective trauma therapy, including EMDR, doesn't require you to narrate every detail of what happened. The goal is to process the emotional and neurological impact of the experience — not to produce a complete account of it. You share what you're ready to share, and the pace is always yours to set.
Trauma refers broadly to any experience that overwhelms the nervous system's ability to process it. PTSD is a specific clinical diagnosis that can develop after trauma, characterized by symptoms like flashbacks, avoidance, negative changes in thinking and mood, and heightened reactivity. Not everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD — but both benefit from trauma-informed care, and you don't need a formal diagnosis to deserve support.
The age of the trauma doesn't determine whether it's treatable. In fact, many people carry unprocessed experiences from childhood or early adulthood for decades before seeking help — and still experience significant, lasting relief through trauma therapy. The nervous system doesn't have a statute of limitations on what it's holding.
EMDR is Melanie's primary tool for trauma work, but it's not the only one. Depending on your history, the nature of your trauma, and what feels right for you, sessions may also incorporate trauma-focused CBT, somatic awareness, or narrative approaches. The treatment plan is always built around you — not a protocol.
Yes. Complex PTSD — which develops from chronic, repeated trauma rather than a single event — requires a more layered approach that addresses emotional regulation, identity, and relational patterns alongside the trauma itself. Melanie is experienced in working with complexity, and the phased approach she uses is well-suited to C-PTSD.
It varies significantly depending on the nature and duration of the trauma, how long symptoms have been present, and the individual. Some clients with single-incident trauma experience meaningful relief within 8–12 sessions of EMDR. Complex or longstanding trauma typically takes longer. Melanie doesn't operate on an arbitrary timeline — progress is assessed regularly, and the work continues for as long as it's genuinely useful.

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Mon - Thurs: 9 AM - 5 PM
Fri: 9 AM - 3 PM
Sat - Sun: Closed

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