01/02/2026
People often say, “I’m too emotional,” or “My feelings take over.” But panic attacks, shame spirals, dissociation, freezing, snapping, shutting down…
Those aren’t emotions. They’re trauma reactions.
They’re the body’s response to an overwhelming life experience that exceeded the system’s capacity to process it at the time. That distinction matters.
Emotions are more likely to be felt, named, and moved through when the nervous system is regulated.
Trauma reactions are different. They activate quickly, pull the body out of the present moment, and reduce access to language and reflection.
When we confuse reactions with emotions, we try to work with them using insight, logic, or self control alone. We tell ourselves to calm down, think differently, be less sensitive. When that fails, people often turn the blame inward.
But nothing is wrong with you. Your nervous system is responding exactly as it learned to under conditions of overwhelm.
Healing begins when we shift the question from “Why do I feel this way?” to “What is my body reacting to right now?”
As the reaction softens, you start to feel more choice again. You are no longer taken over.
Emotions become more accessible, coherent, and tolerable.
This is why trauma healing cannot rely on talk therapy alone. It requires an integrative approach that helps the whole system learn safety again. Body, brain, and meaning working together.
Not controlling reactions. Not overriding them.
But helping them no longer need to run the show.