Trauma has a lasting impact not only on the mind but also on the body. Whether the trauma is physical, emotional, or psychological, survivors often experience chronic pain, stiffness, fatigue, postural changes, and nervous system imbalance.
Trauma has a lasting impact not only on the mind but also on the body. Whether the trauma is physical, emotional, or psychological, survivors often experience chronic pain, stiffness, fatigue, postural changes, and nervous system imbalance. While talk therapy helps address the emotional layers of trauma, the body also needs a path to heal.
At Your Form Sux, we believe in the power of movement as medicine. Through trauma-informed physiotherapy, we help survivors reconnect with their bodies, rebuild trust in movement, and support long-term recovery in a safe, natural way.
How Trauma Affects the Body
Trauma triggers a survival responsefight, flight, freeze, or fawnwhich can become chronically activated when trauma remains unresolved. Over time, this leads to:
Muscle tension and guarding
Breathing dysfunction
Postural imbalances
Chronic pain and fatigue
Digestive issues
Pelvic floor dysfunction
Sensitivity to touch or movement
Survivors may begin to disconnect from their bodies or avoid movement altogether, which only worsens symptoms. Thats where physiotherapy comes in.
The Role of Movement in Trauma Recovery
Movement plays a critical role in trauma healing. When introduced gently and mindfully, movement can:
Calm the nervous system
Restore healthy physical patterns
Release stored tension
Rebuild confidence and agency
Increase resilience and body awareness
Unlike high-intensity exercise, trauma-informed physiotherapy uses low-impact, client-centred movement to help survivors feel safe, grounded, and in control.
Physiotherapy Approaches That Support Trauma Recovery
At Your Form Sux, our treatments are always guided by trauma-informed principles. Here are some of the core movement-based approaches we use with trauma survivors:
1. Somatic Movement and Body Awareness
Somatic therapy teaches survivors to tune into physical sensationshelping to rebuild the connection between brain and body. Slow, mindful movements reduce dissociation, increase awareness, and promote safety.
2. Breath-Focused Movement
Breath is often held or restricted in trauma survivors. Integrating diaphragmatic breathing with movement helps regulate the autonomic nervous system, promoting calm and reducing muscular tension.
3. Restorative Mobility and Stretching
Gentle joint and tissue mobilization is used to ease restrictions caused by guarding or fear-based postures. These movements are slow, fluid, and designed to reduce pain while restoring flexibility.
4. Postural Re-Education
Trauma can influence how we hold ourselvesshoulders may round, the chest may collapse, or the pelvis may tilt. Corrective exercises help reestablish a strong, confident, and emotionally supportive posture.
5. Pelvic Floor Physiotherapy
Pelvic tension, pain, and dysfunction are common in trauma survivors, particularly after sexual trauma or childbirth trauma. We offer gentle, discreet, and respectful pelvic floor care to support release, regulation, and recovery.
6. Functional Movement Training
Helping clients relearn daily movementslike reaching, bending, walking, or getting out of bedcan restore both physical independence and psychological empowerment. Movement is always adapted to the individuals readiness.
Trauma-Informed Care: The Foundation of Our Practice
Not all physiotherapy is trauma-informed. At Your Form Sux, we specialize in trauma-sensitive treatment environments where:
Consent is prioritized at all times
Touch and movement are introduced slowly and respectfully
Clients are empowered to set boundaries and lead their healing
Emotional responses are acknowledged, not dismissed
We understand that for trauma survivors, the goal isnt just recoveryits reclaiming a sense of ownership over your body.
Who Can Benefit from Trauma-Informed Physiotherapy?
This approach is ideal for anyone experiencing physical symptoms related to trauma, including:
Survivors of accidents or injury
Individuals with PTSD or complex trauma
People recovering from surgery or medical trauma
Survivors of emotional, physical, or sexual abuse
Those living with chronic pain, fatigue, or anxiety
You dont need a formal diagnosis to begin. If your body feels disconnected, overwhelmed, or “stuck,” physiotherapy can help you reconnect and heal.
Final Thoughts
Recovery from trauma is not just about talkingits also about moving. Through trauma-informed physiotherapy, survivors can safely release physical tension, retrain the nervous system, and reclaim their right to feel at home in their own bodies.
At Your Form Sux, were proud to offer compassionate, evidence-based care that honours the full complexity of trauma. You dont have to push through the painyou just need the right support to start moving again, one step at a time.





