Trauma Therapy That Helps You Feel Safer, Steadier, and Less Trapped by What Happened
Trauma can keep affecting your life long after the event is over. You may feel constantly on edge, emotionally numb, disconnected, irritable, or unable to fully relax even when there is no immediate danger.
At Evolution Counselling & Wellness, trauma and PTSD counselling is built to help you understand how trauma is showing up in your mind, body, and daily life. The goal is not to force you to relive everything. It is to help you regulate your nervous system, process what needs to be processed, and rebuild a greater sense of control and safety.
This is a regulated counselling (therapy) service provided within the scope of a Registered Social Worker.
Whether you are dealing with PTSD, complex trauma, generational trauma, or trauma-related stress that has never been clearly named, support can help you move forward in a way that feels manageable.
While lifestyle and physical health factors may be explored where relevant, structured wellness and nutrition services are offered separately.
Book a Free 15-Minute Clarity CallUnderstanding Trauma and PTSD
Trauma is your mind and body’s response to overwhelming or distressing experiences. PTSD refers to the longer-term impact when those responses persist, intensify, and begin interfering with daily life.
Not everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD, but when symptoms like flashbacks, nightmares, avoidance, emotional numbness, or constant hyper-alertness continue over time, it becomes important to address them directly.
This work is grounded in counselling (therapy) and focuses on trauma processing, emotional regulation, and nervous system functioning.
Trauma May Come From:
Single incidents such as accidents, assaults, or disasters, or repeated experiences over time such as chronic stress, abuse, neglect, relational instability, or prolonged exposure to unsafe environments.
PTSD Often Shows Up As:
Symptoms that continue after the event and begin affecting your sleep, sense of safety, mood, relationships, and ability to feel settled in daily life.
Common Trauma and PTSD Symptoms
Trauma affects people differently, but there are common patterns that often show up when the nervous system has been overloaded for too long.
Intrusive Memories
Flashbacks, unwanted memories, nightmares, or intense emotional and physical reactions to reminders of what happened.
Avoidance
Trying not to think about the experience, avoiding places or people, or organizing your life around not being triggered.
Negative Changes in Mood and Thinking
Hopelessness, shame, self-blame, emotional distance, difficulty trusting others, or a persistent sense that the world is unsafe.
Physical and Emotional Reactivity
Hypervigilance, irritability, startle response, anger, sleep problems, or feeling like your system is always braced for something.
These are not signs of weakness. They are your nervous system trying to protect you, even when that response is now creating more difficulty than safety.
Complex Trauma and Generational Trauma
Complex Trauma (cPTSD)
Complex trauma often develops through long-term or repeated experiences rather than one isolated incident. It can affect identity, emotional regulation, relationships, and your basic sense of safety.
- Difficulty regulating emotions
- Persistent shame or negative self-perception
- Problems with trust, closeness, or feeling connected to others
Generational Trauma
Trauma can also be passed through families and communities across generations, often through learned survival patterns, emotional shutdown, chronic stress, and unresolved pain that continues shaping present life.
Healing that pattern starts with awareness, structure, and support that is compassionate without becoming vague.
How Trauma Therapy Works
Trauma therapy is not about diving into everything all at once. It is about working at a pace that feels safe enough for your system to actually process change.
Stabilize First
We begin by understanding how trauma is affecting your stress response, sleep, emotional control, and ability to feel grounded.
Build Regulation Tools
You learn practical ways to manage triggers, regulate your nervous system, and reduce the sense of being constantly overwhelmed or on guard.
Process What Needs Processing
When appropriate, we work with the past in a structured way that helps reduce the intensity of its ongoing impact without forcing you to relive everything.
Rebuild Safety and Control
The aim is to help both mind and body feel safer again so daily life becomes less reactive and more workable.
Our Therapeutic Approaches
We use evidence-based and integrative methods that support trauma processing, nervous system regulation, and practical day-to-day recovery.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
CBT helps identify and rework the patterns of thought and behaviour that keep trauma symptoms reinforced.
Trauma-Focused CBT
This provides a more specific trauma-informed structure for addressing PTSD and the ongoing impact of traumatic experiences.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy
DBT supports emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and more stable coping when stress responses feel intense or difficult to manage.
Polyvagal-Informed Work
This helps make sense of how the nervous system responds to trauma and why safety, shutdown, or hyper-alertness can feel so hard to control.
Natural Nutrition
Trauma affects the body as well as the mind, so within counselling we may consider sleep, energy, stress physiology, and nutrition as part of a broader, integrated perspective.
For individuals seeking more structured and in-depth support, separate wellness and nutrition services are available.
Motivational Interviewing
This can help when part of you wants to heal and another part feels hesitant, unsure, or guarded about starting the work.
Solution-Focused Therapy
Even when trauma is part of the picture, it helps to have a clear sense of what progress looks like and how to build toward it in practical terms.
Grounding and Mindfulness
Grounding and mindfulness support present-moment awareness and can reduce the intensity of anxiety, dissociation, and nervous system reactivity.
Grounding and Mindfulness
Is This the Right Time to Start?
This May Be a Good Fit If You:
- Notice trauma symptoms affecting daily life, sleep, mood, or relationships
- Feel constantly on edge, emotionally numb, or easily triggered
- Want a structured trauma-informed approach that moves at a safe pace
- Need support even if you have been carrying this for years
Important Note
You do not have to tell the full story on day one. Safety comes first. In many cases, the early work is about building enough stability that deeper healing becomes possible without overwhelming you.
How This Service Differs From Wellness Services
This page focuses on trauma and PTSD counselling (therapy).
Counselling addresses trauma processing, emotional regulation, nervous system responses, and psychological functioning.
Wellness and nutrition services focus on physical systems such as energy, digestion, sleep, and stress physiology.
Counselling services are available only in Newfoundland and Labrador and Ontario.
Wellness services are available across Canada and are offered separately.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this therapy or coaching?
This is a regulated counselling (therapy) service provided within the scope of a Registered Social Worker.
Do I need to live in Newfoundland and Labrador or Ontario?
Yes. Counselling services are available only to residents of Newfoundland and Labrador and Ontario. Wellness services are available across Canada.
What is trauma and how do I know if it’s affecting me?
Trauma is your mind and body’s response to overwhelming or distressing experiences.
It can come from a single event or from repeated experiences over time. If you notice things like emotional numbness, anxiety, irritability, difficulty sleeping, or feeling constantly on edge, trauma may be playing a role.
What is PTSD and how is it different from trauma?
Trauma refers to the experience. PTSD refers to the lasting impact.
PTSD can include symptoms such as flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive thoughts, avoidance, and heightened stress responses. Not everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD, but when symptoms persist and interfere with daily life, support becomes important.
What are the common symptoms of trauma or PTSD?
Symptoms can vary, but often include:
- Intrusive memories or flashbacks
- Nightmares or disturbed sleep
- Emotional numbness or disconnection
- Irritability or anger
- Avoidance of people, places, or situations
- Feeling constantly on edge or unsafe
These are not signs of weakness. They are your nervous system trying to protect you.
How does trauma therapy actually work?
Trauma therapy focuses on helping you safely process what happened while also learning how to regulate your nervous system.
In our work together, we focus on:
- Understanding how trauma is showing up in your life
- Building tools to manage stress and emotional responses
- Processing past experiences at a pace that feels safe
- Rebuilding a sense of control, stability, and safety
This is not about reliving everything. It is about working through it in a way that supports healing.
What approaches do you use for trauma and PTSD?
I use a combination of evidence-based and integrative approaches, including:
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
- Polyvagal-informed work for nervous system regulation
- Trauma-informed strategies tailored to your experience
The goal is not just insight, but helping your body and mind feel safe again.
Do I have to talk about everything that happened?
No.
You are always in control of what you share and when. Trauma work is done at your pace. In many cases, we begin by building stability and coping tools before exploring deeper experiences.
Safety comes first.
How long does trauma therapy take?
There is no fixed timeline.
Some people begin to feel relief within a few sessions, especially as they learn tools to regulate stress. Deeper trauma work can take longer, depending on your history and what you want to work through.
We move at a pace that is effective, not overwhelming.
Can trauma affect my body and physical health?
Yes.
Trauma is not just psychological. It impacts the nervous system, stress response, and even physical health. This is why we also look at lifestyle factors, including nutrition, to support recovery and overall well-being.
Is online trauma therapy effective?
Yes.
Research shows that virtual mental health counselling can be comparable to in-person therapy for conditions like PTSD, anxiety, and depression, making it a strong option when accessibility or comfort is a concern.
What if I’ve been dealing with this for years?
That is very common.
Many people carry trauma for years without fully understanding it. Healing is still possible, regardless of how long it has been. The work is not about how long you have struggled, but about what you are ready to address now.
Do you work with complex trauma (cPTSD)?
Yes.
Complex trauma often comes from long-term or repeated experiences and can affect identity, relationships, and emotional regulation. This type of work requires a structured, trauma-informed approach focused on both safety and deeper pattern work.
How do I get started with trauma therapy?
The first step is booking a free 15-minute clarity call.
This gives you the opportunity to ask questions, talk through what is going on, and determine if this feels like the right fit before moving forward.
Ready to Start Your Healing Journey?
If trauma has been affecting how you sleep, feel, react, or move through the world, you do not have to keep carrying it alone. A free 15-minute clarity call is a simple place to begin.
Book a Free 15-Minute Clarity Call