Trauma affects more than just the mind. It changes the bodyhow it moves, how it holds tension, and how it feels day to day.
Trauma affects more than just the mind. It changes the bodyhow it moves, how it holds tension, and how it feels day to day. If youre recovering from trauma, you may be dealing with pain, fatigue, tightness, or a sense of disconnection from your own body.
At Your Form Sux, we believe trauma recovery should include the body. Physiotherapy plays a powerful, often overlooked role in trauma healing, helping restore physical function, regulate the nervous system, and rebuild trust in the body itself.
In this comprehensive guide, we explore how physiotherapy supports trauma recoverygently, holistically, and effectively.
What Is Trauma?
Trauma is not defined by the event itself, but by how the body and mind respond to it. Traumatic experiencessuch as accidents, abuse, grief, or chronic stresscan overwhelm your nervous system, leading to long-lasting physical and emotional effects.
When trauma occurs, your brain and body activate survival responses. These may include:
Fight or flight (increased heart rate, muscle tension, hyperarousal)
Freeze (shutdown, numbness, loss of sensation)
Fawn (people-pleasing or dissociation to stay safe)
These responses are protective, but if they dont fully resolve, they get stored in the body. Over time, this creates patterns of pain, tightness, and dysfunctionoften without a clear injury or medical explanation.
How Trauma Affects the Body
The physical effects of trauma may appear immediately or gradually over time. Common symptoms include:
Muscle tension and joint stiffness
Chronic neck, shoulder, or back pain
Fatigue, low energy, and sleep issues
Pelvic pain or postural imbalances
Digestive or breathing difficulties
Reduced body awareness or dissociation
Headaches or TMJ dysfunction
These symptoms can feel frustrating or even frighteningespecially when standard treatments dont help. Thats where trauma-informed physiotherapy makes a difference.
The Role of Physiotherapy in Trauma Recovery
Physiotherapy offers more than injury rehabilitation. When trauma is involved, it becomes a tool to restore physical and emotional safety, function, and freedom. At Your Form Sux, our trauma-informed physiotherapists understand how to treat the body with compassion, patience, and clinical precision.
We focus on four pillars of trauma recovery:
1. Regulating the Nervous System
Trauma dysregulates the nervous system, keeping it stuck in hypervigilance or shutdown. Physiotherapy techniques such as gentle breathwork, soft tissue release, and slow, mindful movement help calm the bodys stress response.
This reduces:
Chronic pain
Muscle tension
Restlessness or numbness
Sensory overload
By calming the nervous system, clients feel safer and more grounded in their bodies.
2. Releasing Stored Tension and Pain
Unresolved trauma often causes the body to stay in a protective, braced posture. This leads to:
Tight hips and shoulders
Compromised posture
Limited mobility
Manual therapy and stretching techniques can gently unwind these patterns, releasing tension and reducing discomfort.
We also use fascial release techniques, as trauma is often stored in fasciathe connective tissue that holds muscles, bones, and organs in place.
3. Rebuilding Body Awareness and Movement Confidence
Many trauma survivors become disconnected from their bodies or feel unsafe in movement. Through guided therapeutic exercise, our physiotherapists help clients:
Relearn how to move without fear or pain
Reconnect with sensations and breath
Restore natural posture and alignment
Regain confidence and control over their bodies
This empowers people to reclaim physical agencyone step at a time.
4. Personalized, Consent-Based Care
Trauma-informed physiotherapy is always guided by consent, collaboration, and choice. We tailor every session to meet your needsemotionally and physically.
Youll never be touched or asked to move in ways that feel unsafe. We create a space where:
You set the pace of your recovery
You have full control over your care
You feel heard, respected, and supported
Techniques Used in Trauma-Informed Physiotherapy
At Your Form Sux, we use a combination of hands-on and movement-based treatments to help clients heal from trauma, including:
Manual therapy and myofascial release
Breathwork and relaxation training
Somatic awareness exercises
Postural correction and stabilization
Pelvic floor therapy (if applicable)
Nervous system regulation techniques
Trauma-sensitive education and support
Every technique is adapted to be gentle, grounding, and emotionally safe.
Who Can Benefit from Trauma-Informed Physiotherapy?
This approach is ideal for individuals who are:
Recovering from a traumatic injury or accident
Living with PTSD or complex trauma
Managing chronic pain linked to stress or anxiety
Struggling with fatigue or burnout
Experiencing physical symptoms with no clear diagnosis
Wanting to reconnect with their body safely and intentionally
Physiotherapy doesnt replace mental health careit complements it. By working with the body, we access parts of trauma that talk therapy may not reach.
Taking the First Step Toward Healing
If your body feels tight, fatigued, or painfuland you suspect stress or trauma might be a factorknow that you are not alone. At Your Form Sux, we help you feel at home in your body again.
Recovery isnt about pushing through pain. Its about listening to your body, moving at your own pace, and rebuilding trust in yourself.
Were here to guide yousafely, gently, and with deep respect for your healing journey.
Begin Your Recovery with Your Form Sux
You deserve a healing approach that honors both your body and your story. Whether youre recovering from emotional trauma, a physical injury, or long-term stress, our trauma-informed physiotherapists are here to help.
Book your consultation with Your Form Sux today and take the next step toward whole-body recovery.
Would you like the next blog on:
Trauma and the Nervous System: Why Physiotherapy Helps
Somatic Healing in Physiotherapy: What It Means and How It Works
The Link Between Chronic Pain and Unresolved Trauma?





