What is trauma? The symptoms, causes, and how to cope
Clinically reviewed by Dr. Chris Mosunic, PhD, RD, MBA
Not sure if your experience counts as trauma? You’re in the right place. Learn what trauma is, why it happens, how it shows up in your body, and 11 ways to cope.
Your chest tightens when someone raises their voice. You cancel plans and pull back without quite knowing why. You snap at the people closest to you over something small, then feel awful about it afterward. For some, reactions like these are rooted in trauma, even when the connection isn't obvious.
Trauma is the body's response to an experience that feels like too much to handle. When the nervous system doesn't fully recover, the effects can linger as tension, avoidance, or emotional reactions that seem out of proportion to what's happening now.
If you've ever wondered why certain situations hit harder than expected, we’re here to help. Here's a look at what trauma is, what causes it, and how to find your way through it.
What is trauma?
Trauma occurs when your nervous system gets stuck in survival mode after something overwhelming happens, even after the situation has passed. In the moment, your body shifts into protective responses like fight, flight, freeze, or fawn — which are normal and necessary reactions.
The problem comes when that response doesn't fully switch off. Your system stays on high alert, reacting as though the threat is still present, even in situations where you’re safe.
How your body processes and stores an experience is what determines whether it becomes traumatic. Later on, trauma can show up as jumpiness, avoidance, or emotional shutdown. It can also lead to reactions that may seem more intense than the situation calls for.
Read more: What are fight, flight, freeze, and fawn responses? Plus, how to cope
What causes trauma?
Trauma can develop from a single event or from experiences that build over time. The nervous system responds to threat, unpredictability, and prolonged strain, not just moments of immediate danger.
For some, trauma comes from a sudden moment that unfolded too quickly to process. For others, it forms gradually through repeated stress, inconsistent caregiving, discrimination, financial pressure, or environments that require constant vigilance.
It can be easy to overlook or dismiss some of these experiences, especially when they don’t fit a clear or dramatic narrative in your mind. But trauma is shaped by how overwhelmed or unsupported you felt at the time, regardless of how things appear in hindsight.
20 examples of traumatic events
Trauma can look very different from person to person. But here are some general examples that may help if you're not sure whether your experience fits — though, of course, this isn’t a complete list.
Events involving sudden danger, shock, or harm
Car accidents
Medical emergencies
Physical assault or unexpected injury
Interpersonal harm
Emotional, physical, or sexual abuse
Neglect or abandonment
Domestic or intimate partner violence
Betrayal or manipulation in close relationships
Chronic or ongoing stress
Growing up in an unpredictable or high-conflict home
Long-term caregiving with little support
Financial instability
Workplace harassment or burnout
Repeated exposure to discrimination or marginalization
Loss and life transitions
Less recognized but just as impactful experiences
Bullying or social rejection
Exposure to others’ trauma in helping professions
Being shamed or humiliated repeatedly
Living in a state of constant pressure or fear of making mistakes
What are the common symptoms and effects of trauma?
Trauma may shape how you think, feel, and move through the world, often in ways that don't clearly connect back to the original experience. Symptoms can appear soon after an event or surface much later, especially if you had to keep going without time or support to process what happened.
Emotionally: You might notice mood swings, numbness, guilt, or a tendency to shut down during conflict. Intrusive memories or a persistent sense of being on edge are also common.
Physically: Trauma may show up as tension, fatigue, sleep difficulties, or chronic pain that doesn't have an obvious cause.
Behaviorally: You might find yourself avoiding certain situations, staying constantly busy, or pulling away from people you care about while still craving connection.
Relationally: Trust, boundaries, and conflict can all become complicated when your nervous system has learned to stay on guard.
Related read: Why PTSD looks different in women (and may be more common)
How to cope with trauma: 11 tips for recovery
Coping with trauma doesn’t require a lifestyle overhaul. Healing often comes from small, consistent choices that help your nervous system feel more settled over time. These tips focus on what’s realistic — adjust them based on your energy, circumstances, and comfort level.
1. Create small moments of safety
When you’ve been through something traumatic, your body may need a reminder that you’re safe now. You can create that sense of relief by making small adjustments to your environment and your body.
Try:
Placing both feet on the floor during stressful conversations
Holding a warm mug or wrapping up in a blanket
Stepping outside for a few minutes
Letting your shoulders drop and taking one slow, steady breath
Related read: Why feeling safe can be hard — and 12 tips to feel more grounded
2. Lean on the people who make you feel calm
You don’t need a large circle. One or two steady, reliable relationships can make a real difference, and connection doesn’t have to be intense to be meaningful.
Try:
Texting someone you trust when things feel heavy
Checking in with a coworker or friend you feel comfortable around
Spending time in shared spaces, even without deep conversation
3. Listen to your body with curiosity
Trauma may lead to disconnection from your body. Gentle awareness can help you understand what your body truly needs.
Try:
Noticing where you’re holding tension, like your jaw or shoulders
Placing a hand on your chest or stomach to feel your breath
Stretching slowly before getting out of bed
💙 Try a Body Scan on Calm to gently check in with your body.
4. Find small routines that work for you
When everything feels unpredictable, small routines can act as anchors. They’re quiet signals to your nervous system that some things are consistent and within your control.
Try:
Drinking a glass of water when you wake up
Washing your face at the same time each night
Playing a calming song before bed
5. Experiment with grounding techniques
When you’re feeling on edge, grounding can help bring you back to the present. It’s worth trying a few different approaches to find what suits you best.
Try:
A 5–4–3–2–1 grounding exercise
Holding something textured or familiar
Counting backward slowly or repeating a calming phrase
Walking or gentle pacing, if sitting feels difficult
6. Move your body to release tension
Trauma may leave tension in the body long after the moment has passed. Mindful movement can help your body release some of that tension.
Try:
Taking a short walk, even just around the block
Stretching while watching TV
Rolling your shoulders or shaking out your hands
💙 Even five minutes counts. Follow along with a Mindful Movement session on the Calm app to shake off some tension.
7. Move through big emotions, one moment at a time
Emotions can feel intense and fast-moving when you’re navigating trauma recovery. Small actions can help you steady yourself in the moment.
Try:
Naming what you’re feeling quietly to yourself
Stepping away before responding during stressful moments
Splashing cool water on your face or slowing your breath
Standing up or opening a window to shift your energy
💙 When emotions feel hard to hold, find a steady place to land with Calm’s Care for Difficult Emotions series.
8. Set boundaries that protect your healing
Boundaries can help you maintain a feeling of safety and integrity. Even small ones can go a long way toward protecting your healing.
Try:
Saying no to conversations you’re not ready for
Limiting time with people who feel overwhelming
Taking breaks from social media when it becomes too much
💙 New to setting limits — or just need a reminder? Learn to set Healthy Boundaries with a Daily Trip session on Calm.
9. Try structured support when difficult memories surface
Difficult memories can feel scattered or overwhelming when they surface. Having a simple structure for when they show up can make them feel a little more manageable.
Try:
Writing down what came up and how it felt
Noting what you needed in that moment
Imagining placing the memory in a container to return to later
Pausing and returning to a grounding technique
10. Seek professional support when you’re ready
Healing doesn’t have to happen alone, and professional support can take many different forms depending on what’s accessible to you right now.
Try:
Exploring trauma-informed therapy options like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), or brainspotting
Starting with a short consultation or online session
Connecting with a support group or community resource
11. Treat your progress with kindness
Healing rarely moves in a straight line, and the hard days are part of the process, too. Give yourself the same patience you’d offer someone you care about.
Try:
Noticing small changes, like reacting a little less strongly
Acknowledging effort, even on difficult days
Letting yourself pause without seeing it as a setback
💙 Practice meeting yourself with warmth in this Self-Nurturing meditation from Calm’s Relationship With Self Series.
Related read: Post-traumatic growth: turning pain into possibility
What is trauma FAQs
What is the definition of trauma?
Trauma is defined as your body’s and brain’s reaction to an experience that overwhelms your ability to cope. It’s not defined by how big the event is, but by how much it disrupts your sense of safety and control.
When your system can’t fully process what happened, the stress response can stay active, showing up as emotional, physical, or behavioral symptoms long after the moment has passed.
What are the types of trauma?
The main types of trauma are acute, chronic, complex, and secondary:
Acute trauma comes from a single distressing event
Chronic trauma develops from repeated or long-term stress, such as conflict, abuse, or instability
Complex trauma involves prolonged interpersonal harm, often beginning in childhood
Secondary or vicarious trauma affects people who support others through painful experiences
These categories aren’t boxes you need to fit into. They simply describe different patterns of impact.
Read more: What is complex PTSD? Plus, 9 tips to help you heal
How can you tell if you have trauma?
You might suspect trauma when your reactions feel stronger or more confusing than the situation calls for. Signs can include overwhelm, numbness, irritability, trouble sleeping, or feeling on edge without a clear reason.
You may avoid certain places or memories, or notice your body reacting before your mind understands why. Trauma often shows up as automatic patterns that don’t seem logical. If you feel stuck in survival mode, trauma may be part of the story.
How does trauma affect a person?
When your body stays in alert or shutdown mode as a result of trauma, it can affect how you think, sleep, relate to others, and handle stress.
You might feel overwhelmed easily, have trouble focusing, or struggle with emotions. Relationships may feel tense or unpredictable, and long-term stress can show up as pain, fatigue, or other physical symptoms. These effects are signs that your system has been working overtime.
What is trauma-informed care, and why is it important?
Trauma-informed care is an approach used in healthcare, education, mental health, and community settings that recognizes how trauma shapes a person’s reactions and needs. It’s important because it focuses on safety, choice, transparency, trust, and empowerment rather than just symptoms.
By understanding someone’s context, this approach helps prevent re-traumatization and creates environments where people feel respected and supported. Many systems overlook trauma, and this perspective makes space for healing without judgment.
Can trauma come from small or ongoing situations?
Yes, trauma can come from small or ongoing situations, including ones that are easy to dismiss. Chronic stress, unpredictable caregiving, discrimination, unstable environments, or repeated microaggressions can slowly overwhelm the nervous system.
Without time to recover, even mild stress can accumulate into a traumatic impact. Many people hesitate to call these experiences trauma because they weren’t dramatic, but the body responds to overload — not to whether the event seems “big enough.”
What is trauma bonding?
Trauma bonding is a strong emotional attachment that forms in relationships where harm and affection are mixed. These relationships often cycle between tension and moments of relief, which makes the bond feel intense and hard to leave.
Trauma bonding is shaped by an unstable emotional environment. Understanding that can make it easier to recognize.
How long does trauma last?
There’s no set timeline for how long trauma lasts. Some people improve within months, while others feel the effects for years, especially if the stress was ongoing or support was limited.
Healing depends on safety, resources, community, and access to trauma-informed care. With steady support and workable coping tools, symptoms can ease over time.
What can I do to cope with trauma symptoms?
Coping with trauma symptoms starts with small actions that may help regulate your nervous system. You might try:
Slowing your breathing, or a simple mindful meditation practice to stay connected to the present moment
Reaching out to someone you trust or spending time in supportive relationships
Using gentle movement to create a sense of grounding
Exploring sensory comforts like dimming lights, wrapping up in a blanket, or stepping outside
Working with a trauma-trained therapist for structure and long-term tools
You don’t have to fix everything at once. Small, steady care can lead to meaningful change over time.
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