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Trauma Is Trauma: Understanding Re‑Wounding

March 16, 2026

Trauma Is Trauma: Understanding Re‑Wounding

Many people have heard the terms “big T” and “little t” trauma. While these labels can sometimes help professionals organize information, they often miss the point. The truth is simple: trauma is trauma, and your experience matters — even if others have dismissed it or you’ve been told it “wasn’t a big deal.” As you wrote, “Trauma is trauma no matter how the incident has unfolded or is experienced.”
When we minimize or deny someone’s experience, we also deny their reality. And that can make healing harder.


🌱 When Old Wounds Wake Up

You might notice strong emotional reactions in situations that don’t seem to “match” what’s happening. Many people call this being “triggered,” but that word can feel harsh or out of control. I prefer — and you prefer — gentler, more accurate language like re‑wounding or reawakening.
These reactions often happen because something in the present echoes something from the past. Especially early experiences — even ones we didn’t fully understand at the time — can leave deep impressions. When something in our current life touches that old imprint, the wound can reopen.
As your document puts it: “These big feelings not only reinforce that primary early feeling, but it brings the thoughts and feelings related to it, to the surface.”
This isn’t a failure. It’s your nervous system trying to protect you.


💛 Why Support Matters

Working through these moments in a compassionate, grounded environment can help you understand what’s happening and begin to heal the original wound — not just the reaction.
Therapy offers space to slow down, make sense of these patterns, and reconnect with the parts of you that learned to survive.


✨ EMDR as a Healing Approach

You mention that you’re trained in EMDR, a powerful trauma‑informed therapy that helps people process and integrate overwhelming experiences. EMDR can be especially helpful for those who feel stuck in old emotional loops or who notice that certain situations bring up reactions that feel “bigger” than the moment.

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