Frank Anderson, MD

Frank Anderson, MD Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Frank Anderson, MD, Doctor, 30 Domino Drive, Concord, MA.
(7)

04/29/2026

A lot of the behaviors we criticize most harshly in ourselves started as attempts to survive something.

Control. Shutdown. Defensiveness. People-pleasing. Overexplaining. Pulling away.

And to be clear, I’m not saying these behaviors don’t affect other people. They do. I’m not saying we should excuse harm, avoid responsibility, or let old patterns stay in charge.

I’m saying shame rarely gives us enough access to change.

When we only label a behavior as “bad,” we usually miss the fear underneath it. And if we miss the fear, we miss the reason the behavior keeps returning.

It’s important to turn toward the behavior with enough curiosity to ask:

How is it trying to help?
What are you afraid would happen if you stopped?

That question can open a different kind of change. Not change built on self-attack, but change that begins by understanding what the behavior has been trying to protect.

Conflict usually is not just about the thing you are arguing about.So often, what keeps couples stuck is what gets stirr...
04/24/2026

Conflict usually is not just about the thing you are arguing about.

So often, what keeps couples stuck is what gets stirred up underneath, old wounds, protective patterns, nervous system reactions, and ways of relating that take over under stress.

In Relationships Under Pressure, couples therapist Terry Real and trauma expert Frank Anderson will explore the deeper roots of conflict, the cycles that keep couples stuck, and what it takes to move toward real repair.

Comment PRESSURE and we’ll send you the link.

04/23/2026

A lot of people think boundary struggles start in adulthood, but they usually begin much earlier, in relationships where staying connected felt more important than having needs, limits, or space.

If you grew up feeling responsible for a parent’s emotions, you may have learned to read the room before you could read yourself. You learned how to keep the peace, soften your needs, overgive, and stay closely attuned to what other people were feeling, because closeness depended on it.

That pattern often follows us into adult relationships.

In newer relationships, it can look like ignoring early discomfort, moving too quickly into caretaking, or feeling afraid to name what is not working.

In longer-term relationships, it can look like overfunctioning, avoiding hard conversations, carrying too much of the emotional weight, or staying quiet until resentment builds.

On the surface, it can look like love, flexibility, or being the more understanding person. But underneath, the relationship may start organizing around keeping the other person okay while your own needs keep getting pushed further down.

That’s why boundaries can feel so charged. Some part of you may still connect honesty, limits, or saying no with fear of disconnection.

Healing starts when you can notice that fear earlier and respond differently. When you can pause before overgiving.

When you can tell the difference between love and emotional responsibility, and when your relationships begin to show you (slowly and repeatedly) that you can have limits and still stay connected.

A lot can change when being close to someone no longer means losing yourself.

A corrective experience doesn’t always come from the person who hurt you. In a lot of cases, it doesn’t.But it can come ...
04/22/2026

A corrective experience doesn’t always come from the person who hurt you. In a lot of cases, it doesn’t.

But it can come through a therapist, a safe person, a healing partner, a group, or even through the way you begin to show up differently for the part of you that is still carrying the pain.

And usually, it’s not one dramatic, Hollywood moment. It’s smaller moments over time that start to help the nervous system learn something new.

Healing is not only about talking about what happened. It’s also about finally receiving a different experience than the one that wounded you.

04/19/2026

A lot of us were taught to approach forgiveness by trying to get to compassion as quickly as possible.

We try to understand the other person.�We look for their wounds.�We try to get to compassion before we have really let ourselves feel what it did to us.

And all of that can come from something sincere.�It can reflect empathy and a real desire not to stay hardened.

But it can also become a way of moving past ourselves too quickly.

I’ve been thinking a lot about how many people know how to go straight into understanding the person who hurt them, but have a much harder time staying with their own anger, grief or pain.

Especially if:
- you grew up trying to keep the peace.
- you learned that being good meant not being too angry.
- forgiveness was presented to you as something you were supposed to get to quickly.

But forgiveness that asks you to skip over your pain is not freedom. It can become a way of bypassing what happened to you.

I don’t believe we get to real compassion by pretending we’re not angry. I think we get there by telling the truth about what happened, feeling what is actually there, and letting those emotions move through.

That is what creates release, because anger that never gets felt often stays with you. It keeps shaping how you relate, how you protect, and how you carry the past into the present.

Forgiveness is a choice, and it usually becomes possible later - after the pain has been felt and some of what you’re carrying has been released.

So often, when we are unpacking childhood trauma, another layer shows up later: the pain of realizing the person we depe...
04/17/2026

So often, when we are unpacking childhood trauma, another layer shows up later: the pain of realizing the person we depended on did not protect us.

In my case, I knew my mother loved me. I never questioned that. But I also knew she would choose my abusive father over me every time. That is a very painful reality for a child, because love and betrayal are now living in the same relationship.

When I talk about a survival connection, I mean the person a child depends on for emotional and physical survival.

A child can’t just walk away, make sense of what is happening, or regulate it on their own. They need someone bigger, safer, and more powerful to protect them, help them feel less alone, and help their system settle.

So when that person does not step in, the impact is profound.

This is why so many people are deeply affected not only by the abuse itself, but by the person who saw it, knew about it, or failed to interrupt it.

And often, that part doesn’t surface until much later.

Usually people get through childhood by staying attached however they can. They minimize. They adapt. They keep going.

It’s not until much later, sometimes after they think they have already worked through the trauma, that they begin to feel the full weight of that other truth: the person they turned to for connection could not or would not protect them.

This is often the next layer of the work: making space not only for what happened, but for the pain of not being protected from it.

04/15/2026

A lot of people want healing to happen without ever having to get near the pain.

They want insight. They want relief. They want the pattern to stop.

But trauma doesn’t only live in the story you tell about what happened. It also lives in the sensations your body learned to carry.

That’s why healing isn’t about forcing yourself to relive everything. And it isn’t about drowning in the pain either.

It’s about building enough steadiness and support that you can stay with what rises without getting swept away by it.

The tightness in your chest. The lump in your throat. The panic. The urge to shut down, leave, or go numb.
So much of the work is learning how to be with those experiences differently.

Not alone. Not all at once. Not without support.
But slowly, safely, with enough connection that your body can begin to process what it once had to hold onto.

There’s usually no quick way around that. But there is a way through.

When a trigger shows up, most people try to manage the reaction instead of asking what it is pointing to.They focus on t...
04/12/2026

When a trigger shows up, most people try to manage the reaction instead of asking what it is pointing to.

They focus on the defensiveness, the shutdown, the anger, or the sudden urge to prove themselves.

But often the deeper question is not just, Why did I react like that? It is, What got touched in me?

Maybe every time you feel criticized, your whole body tightens and you get sharp. Maybe every time you feel unseen, you start working harder to prove yourself. Maybe every time a certain person calls, your body reacts before the conversation even begins.

This is why patterns matter, because they help you see that your triggers are not random. They can show you where something deeper is still carrying pain, and where your system has learned to respond in familiar ways.

In The Path to Healing Trauma, I walk you through how to recognize your triggers, track your patterns, listen to what your body is communicating, and begin separating past from present so you can respond with more clarity and less automatic intensity.

Because healing is not just about changing the reaction on the surface. It’s about understanding what the reaction is carrying.

Comment PATH and I’ll send you the course link directly.

For a lot of people, this shows up most with the people they are closest to. Closeness raises the stakes, and when the s...
04/08/2026

For a lot of people, this shows up most with the people they are closest to. Closeness raises the stakes, and when the stakes feel higher, the nervous system can react more strongly.

For others, it shows up more around authority, conflict, or feeling evaluated.

The thread is the same: the more something matters to your system, the harder it can be to access your words.

That is not always a sign something is wrong between you and the other person. Often, it means the moment is touching something older in your system.

This matters because shifting this pattern usually takes more than knowing what to say. It often means working with what happens in the body when pressure rises, so you can stay more present and keep better access to your words when something important is happening.

Over time, healing can look like less freezing, less shutdown, and more ability to stay connected to yourself while you speak.

04/05/2026
03/31/2026

I know a lot of people have a hard time even imagining what healing could really look like for them.

Not just feeling a little better, but actually having more freedom. More choice. More ability to stay present when something gets hard.

When trauma has been with you for a long time, it can start to feel like this is just how life is now. Like maybe you’ll always be managing it. Always getting pulled back into the same reactions. Always feeling like one hard moment can throw off your whole day.

But I’ve seen in my own life, and in so many people I’ve worked with, that healing is possible.

Not all at once, and not in a straight line. But slowly, things really can start to change.

You can get to a place where the past is still part of your story, but it’s not running your life in the same way.

You have more agency. More clarity. More ability to respond differently.

That’s a big part of why I created The Path to Healing Trauma, a step-by-step course to help people understand how healing unfolds and move toward more freedom.

If you want to learn more: https://www.frankandersonmd.com/the-path-to-healing-trauma

03/24/2026

A lot of people try to heal trauma by thinking their way through it. They analyze their patterns. They make sense of why they react the way they do.

And don’t get me wrong, that kind of insight is a huge first step. But at some point, insight only takes you so far.

Healing eventually asks for something more. It asks you to notice what is actually happening inside you the moment you get activated.

The tightness in your chest.
The lump in your throat.
The tension in your back.

The sudden urge to overperform, shut down, get defensive, or just… disappear.

That’s not a distraction from the work. It is the work. It’s where the real path to freedom begins.

Your body is showing you exactly what still hurts. Your patterns are showing you what still feels threatening. And when you slow down long enough to notice that, you stop just understanding your story and start paying attention to how it still lives inside you.

You begin to see what your system is doing to protect you, and what may need your care now.

Moving from knowing to feeling is one of the core shifts I teach inside The Path to Healing Trauma.

Because healing is not just about understanding what happened back then. It’s about learning how to respond to what is happening inside you now.

If you’re ready for a clearer path forward, you can learn more here: https://www.frankandersonmd.com/the-path-to-healing-trauma

Address

30 Domino Drive
Concord, MA
01742

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Frank Anderson, MD posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category