Your gentle guide to emotional health
Thought-out daily plans
Daily plans to support your healing process via strengthening your mental&physical health in combination.
Soothing yoga
A special sequence of yoga sessions with mindful breathing for healing your inner self via the body.
Science-backed solutions for healing trauma symptoms
Yoga and meditation
The research shows that the combination of physical postures, controlled deep breathing, and mindful meditation can greatly alleviate depression, stress, emotional dysregulation, and anxiety—the common symptoms of PTSD. These practices help the brain focus on the present moment rather than getting carried away by destructive thoughts. Moreover, gentle and slow yoga sessions can help to stop dissociation and, step by step, get back to feeling a body and emotions to the full extent.
Social support group
Knowing that other people are struggling with the same problems makes psychological trauma less of a burden. At social support gatherings, trauma survivors discuss their daily issues with each other, offer a friendly ear to those in the crisis, and share coping strategies that help them overcome problems. It enables you to let the aftermath of trauma go away as you feel less isolated in your experiences of shame, guilt, and anger with compassionate people who understand you.
Healthy self-care
Trauma recovery goes much smoother when one doesn’t forget about keeping a normal routine, taking care of one’s body, and working on mental well-being. Those with post-traumatic stress disorder may subconsciously punish themselves for what has happened and deprive themselves of food, hygiene, and the basic joys of life. In this case, it’s necessary to work with a mental health professional who will help you understand that only a perpetrator is to be shamed for a traumatic event. At the same time, you need to learn how to become your own caring and loving companion.
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)
The research on EMDR shows great results in not only alleviating PTSD symptoms (paranoid thoughts, psychosis, fatigue, impaired social functioning, etc.) but also depression and anxiety. This type of psychotherapy is based on the idea that traumatic memories are stored differently in the brain. That’s why an EMDR psychotherapist aims to engage two brain hemispheres to stop these memories from affecting your life. Using this mechanism of bilateral stimulation, EMDR helps to replace the negative beliefs about oneself, caused by a traumatic experience, and substitute them with the positive ones.
FAQ
1. What’s the difference between trauma and PTSD?
2. What’s the correct way to heal from traumatic events?
3. Are there natural ways to heal from trauma?
4. What’s the difference between PTSD and CPTSD?