Somatics

What Is Relational Trauma?

Hero / Opening:

Most of us learn what to expect from the world through our earliest relationships.

When those relationships were safe, consistent, and attuned — when the people around us were reliably present and responsive — our nervous systems learned that the world was a place where we could relax, trust, and be ourselves.

But when those relationships were unpredictable, painful, dismissive, enmeshed, or unsafe — even subtly, even without obvious abuse — our nervous systems learned something different. They learned to stay alert. To adapt. To protect us in ways that made sense then, even if they're causing problems now.

That's relational trauma.

Section 1: What Relational Trauma Is

Relational trauma refers to the lasting impact of painful, frightening, or chronically misattuned experiences in relationship — particularly early relationships with caregivers, family members, or other significant people in our lives.

It doesn't require a single dramatic event. Relational trauma can develop through:

  • Chronic emotional unavailability or neglect

  • Inconsistent or unpredictable caregiving

  • Enmeshment — relationships where boundaries were blurred or absent

  • Emotional, physical, or sexual abuse

  • Chronic criticism, shaming, or dismissiveness

  • Growing up in a household with addiction, mental illness, or domestic conflict

  • Any relational environment where it didn't feel safe to be fully yourself

What these experiences share is this: they taught your nervous system that relationships — and by extension, the world — require a certain kind of vigilance. A certain kind of self-management. A certain kind of smallness.

And your nervous system has been living by those lessons ever since.

Section 2: How Relational Trauma Shows Up

Relational trauma doesn't always look like what people expect trauma to look like. It rarely announces itself dramatically. More often, it shows up quietly — in patterns, in relationships, in the body — in ways that can be easy to dismiss or normalize.

You might recognize it as:

In your nervous system:
Chronic hypervigilance — a felt sense of being on alert, braced, waiting for something to go wrong. Difficulty relaxing fully, even when things are objectively fine. A body that feels perpetually tense, tired, or both.

In your relationships:
Difficulty trusting others. A tendency to either merge with people or keep them at arm's length. Patterns of people-pleasing, over-giving, or losing yourself in relationships. Difficulty knowing where you end and others begin.

In your sense of self:
A fragmented or elusive sense of identity — not quite knowing who you are outside of what others need from you. Difficulty knowing what you want, feel, or believe. A chronic sense of not being enough, or of being too much.

In your patterns:
People-pleasing, perfectionism, codependency, self-abandonment, difficulty saying no, over-responsibility for others' emotions — these are among the most common expressions of relational trauma, and they often develop as intelligent adaptations to relational environments where being yourself didn't feel safe.

Section 3: Why Relational Trauma Is Different

Relational trauma is sometimes called "small t" trauma — not because it's less significant, but because it often develops gradually, relationally, and without a single identifiable event.

This distinction matters for healing, because relational trauma tends to be encoded differently in the nervous system than single-incident trauma. It's woven into the fabric of how you relate — to others, to yourself, to the world. It shapes your baseline, your defaults, your automatic responses.

Which means it often doesn't respond fully to approaches that focus primarily on processing specific memories or events. The patterns are too pervasive, too embedded, too much a part of how you move through the world.

What it does respond to is relational healing — healing that happens in relationship, over time, through repeated experiences of something different. Safety. Attunement. The felt sense that it's okay to be yourself.

That's exactly what somatic work offers.

Section 4: How Somatic Work Helps

Relational trauma is stored in the nervous system — in the body's automatic responses, its baseline level of activation, its habitual ways of bracing, adapting, and protecting.

Talk therapy can help you understand these patterns. And understanding is valuable. But understanding alone often isn't enough to change them, because the patterns live below the level of thought — in the parts of the nervous system that don't respond to insight or intention.

Somatic work reaches those parts directly.

In somatic sessions, we work with what your body is holding right now — the activation, the bracing, the places where old relational experiences are still living in the present moment. We don't ask you to re-tell your story or re-live your hardest experiences. Instead, we listen to what's already there, and we give your nervous system something it may not have had enough of: the direct, embodied experience of safety.

Not safety as a concept. Safety as something your nervous system actually feels.

Over time, those experiences accumulate. The nervous system updates. The old patterns begin to loosen — not because you've decided to be different, but because your body has learned, through direct experience, that something different is possible.

Section 5: Two Ways to Work Together

If you recognize yourself in any of the above, there are two ways we can work together:

Individual Somatic Sessions
For anyone navigating relational trauma who is ready to bring the body into their healing. Sessions are responsive and relational — tailored to where you are and what's alive for you. Available online or in person in Athens, GA.

Safe to Be Memy signature 6-week somatic container
For people specifically caught in the fawn response — the please-and-appease survival pattern at the heart of people-pleasing, perfectionism, codependency, and self-abandonment. Six weeks of 1-on-1 somatic work, between-session voice note support, and weekly enrichment practices — designed to help you finally feel safe being yourself.

Learn more about Safe to Be Me →

Section 6: Is This Right for You?

You might be in the right place if:

You've done therapy, read the books, and understand your patterns — but something still feels unresolved, unreachable, or stuck in the body.

You find yourself repeating relational patterns you can see clearly but can't seem to change.

You feel chronically on edge, exhausted, or disconnected — in ways that don't fully make sense given your current circumstances.

You sense that what you're carrying has its roots in your early relationships — and you're ready for healing that happens at that level.

You're curious about what body-based work might offer, and open to trying something different from what you've tried before.

Closing / CTA:

Relational trauma is some of the most pervasive and least-named pain people carry. It's also some of the most workable — when the healing happens at the right level.

If you're ready to explore what that might look like for you, I'd love to connect.

Book a free discovery call →

Not sure yet? You're welcome to browse my articles, explore my approach to somatic work, or simply reach out with questions. The door is open.