Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is often misunderstood as a condition that only affects the mind. But in reality, trauma is stored in the body as much as in the brain.
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is often misunderstood as a condition that only affects the mind. But in reality, trauma is stored in the body as much as in the brain. Many people living with PTSD struggle with persistent physical symptomsfrom chronic pain and muscle tension to fatigue, dizziness, and shortness of breath. These are not imagined. They are real, biological responses to traumatic stress.
At Your Form Sux, we take a trauma-informed physiotherapy approach that acknowledges the full-body nature of PTSD. Our treatments are designed not just to reduce pain or improve movement, but to restore a sense of safety, agency, and regulation in the nervous system.
Understanding the Physical Impact of PTSD
PTSD alters the way the brain and body communicate. A trauma survivors nervous system may become chronically stuck in fight, flight, or freeze mode. This dysregulation manifests physically in ways such as:
Chronic muscle tension
Neck, back, and shoulder pain
Fatigue and low energy
Shallow breathing or hyperventilation
Poor posture or body stiffness
Sleep disturbances
Digestive issues and headaches
These symptoms are often overlooked or misdiagnosed. But for those living with PTSD, they are constant reminders that the body hasnt fully returned to a state of calm or balance.
Why Physiotherapy Is Effective for PTSD Recovery
Physiotherapy can help retrain the bodys response to stress. By improving physical function while also calming the nervous system, trauma-informed physiotherapy provides a safe, supportive environment to explore healing through movement.
At Your Form Sux, our approach helps clients:
Gently release muscular tension
Restore mobility and posture
Improve breathing patterns
Build body awareness and confidence
Reduce physical reactivity and hyperarousal
Lets explore the key physiotherapy techniques we use to manage PTSDs physical effects.
1. Breathwork for Nervous System Regulation
People with PTSD often develop irregular or shallow breathing patterns. This restricts oxygen flow, increases anxiety, and tightens the muscles around the chest and diaphragm.
Physiotherapists teach diaphragmatic breathinga deep, belly-focused technique that activates the parasympathetic nervous system (the bodys rest and digest mode). Over time, this calms the brain-body connection and reduces panic-like symptoms.
2. Myofascial Release and Manual Therapy
Trauma can cause the fasciaconnective tissue that wraps around musclesto become tight and rigid. This contributes to chronic tension, pain, and stiffness.
Manual therapy and myofascial release are gentle hands-on techniques that reduce these restrictions. At Your Form Sux, our trauma-informed practitioners use slow, soothing pressure to release tension without overwhelming the nervous system.
3. Postural Re-Education and Movement Correction
PTSD can change how people carry themselves. Protective or collapsed postures develop unconsciously and reinforce physical discomfort or emotional shutdown.
We assess and correct posture through targeted exercises, core stabilization, and ergonomic guidance. Restoring alignment not only reduces pain but also helps clients feel more open, strong, and grounded in their bodies.
4. Somatic Awareness and Gentle Movement
Trauma can lead to dissociationa disconnect between body and mind. This is why many individuals with PTSD struggle to feel present in their own bodies.
Our physiotherapists use somatic practices like body scans, guided movement, and proprioceptive training to restore that lost connection. These techniques are gradual, allowing clients to safely explore and rebuild their sense of embodiment.
5. Exercise Programs for Strength and Resilience
Once a foundation of safety and mobility is reestablished, we introduce gentle strengthening and mobility work. These movements are:
Adapted to your emotional and physical capacity
Focused on building core stability and muscular endurance
Designed to foster empowerment and confidence
This stage is critical for reclaiming a sense of agency in the healing process.
6. Vestibular and Balance Rehabilitation
Some clients with PTSD experience dizziness, disorientation, or a feeling of being off-balance. This can be linked to trauma-related vestibular dysfunction or hyperarousal.
Vestibular rehabilitation exercises and balance training help recalibrate spatial orientation and reduce anxiety-driven motion sensitivity.
Trauma-Informed Care Is Essential
Physiotherapy for PTSD must be conducted through a trauma-informed lens. At Your Form Sux, our therapists are trained to create a calm, respectful environment where:
Consent is prioritized at every step
Techniques are adapted to avoid re-traumatization
Clients are supported at their own pace
Communication is clear, non-judgmental, and client-centered
We recognize that every trauma story is unique. Your bodys experience of it is validand it deserves care that reflects that truth.
Who Can Benefit from PTSD-Focused Physiotherapy?
This approach is ideal for individuals who:
Have been diagnosed with PTSD or complex trauma
Live with chronic physical pain linked to emotional stress
Feel on edge, fatigued, or disconnected from their bodies
Want a more holistic way to manage trauma symptoms
Prefer a gentle, somatic route to healing over invasive treatments
You Deserve to Feel Safe in Your Body Again
PTSD may live in the nervous system, but physiotherapy helps you reconnect with your body in a way that feels grounded, supported, and safe. With compassionate care, the physical symptoms of trauma can softenand your capacity for calm, strength, and resilience can grow.
Book your trauma-informed physiotherapy consultation at Your Form Sux today, and take the first step toward integrated recovery. Healing isnt linear, but every session brings you closer to wholeness.






