5 Ways Trauma Changes Your Brain and Body (And How You Can Start Taking Back Control)

5 Ways Trauma Changes Your Brain and Body (And How You Can Start Taking Back Control)

Erin Berenz, PhD

Erin Berenz, PhD

Erin Berenz, PhD, is cofounder and Chief Product Officer of Rebound, the first self-guided, evidence-based trauma recovery app. As a former NIH-funded Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, Dr. Berenz is a recognized expert in trauma recovery and its integration into addiction treatment. She has led the development of trauma-informed programs within community health and digital health settings. Drawing on her extensive clinical research and program development experience, Dr. Berenz’s work emphasizes trauma-informed approaches that empower providers and survivors alike, fostering safety, compassion, and long-term healing.

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5 Ways Trauma Changes Your Brain and Body (And How You Can Start Taking Back Control)

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Trauma has a way of leaving its mark—not just in your memories but in the way your brain and body work every day. These changes can feel confusing or overwhelming, but understanding them is a powerful first step toward healing. Let’s explore five distinct ways trauma affects you—and what that might look like in your life.

1. Your Alarm System Becomes Overactive

After trauma, your brain’s amygdala—the part responsible for detecting threats—goes into overdrive. It starts treating everything as a potential danger, even things that used to feel safe.

This can make you feel constantly on edge, jumpy, or like your body is braced for something bad to happen. Even small triggers, like a sudden noise or a crowded room, can feel overwhelming. It’s as if your alarm system is stuck in the “on” position, keeping you in survival mode.

2. Your Memory Feels Unpredictable

Trauma can interfere with the hippocampus, the part of your brain that organizes and stores memories. This is why you might have trouble recalling what happened during the traumatic event, or why certain memories seem to come out of nowhere, as vivid as the day they occurred.

This disconnect can feel disorienting, like your brain isn’t on your side. It can also make it hard to trust your own sense of time and reality, leaving you unsure of where the trauma ends and the present begins.

3. Your Body Holds the Stress

Trauma doesn’t just affect your mind—it leaves physical imprints, too. Chronic stress from trauma can settle into your muscles and tissues, leading to tension, pain, or unexplained fatigue.

You might feel this as a constant ache in your shoulders, a tightness in your chest, or even digestive issues that seem to come out of nowhere. It’s your body’s way of holding onto the trauma, even if your mind is ready to move forward.

4. Your Nervous System Struggles to Reset

When you experience trauma, your autonomic nervous system (responsible for fight, flight, or freeze responses) ramps up to protect you. But after the event, it can have trouble returning to baseline.

This might look like a racing heart while sitting still, feeling frozen or unable to act when you’re stressed, or an overwhelming sense of exhaustion even after rest. Your body is stuck in a protective mode, which can make everyday life feel harder than it should.

5. Your Brain Trains Itself to Expect the Worst

One of trauma’s most lasting impacts is how it rewires your brain’s expectations. After experiencing harm, your brain learns to see the world as dangerous, even in situations where you’re safe.

This might mean avoiding people or places that remind you of the trauma, feeling anxious in situations that used to feel easy, or always imagining worst-case scenarios. Over time, this can shrink your world, making it harder to connect with others or feel at ease.

How Storytelling Can Help You Take Back Control

Trauma leaves traces—not just in your thoughts but in your body, emotions, and sense of self. Healing often begins when you start to reconnect with those fragmented parts of yourself and make sense of your experiences.

Storytelling is one way to bridge the gap. Whether you choose to write, talk, or reflect in a safe space, sharing your story can help you create meaning from what happened. This process helps calm the brain’s alarm system, reduces physical tension, and brings clarity to scattered thoughts.

By putting your experience into words, you begin to reclaim your sense of control. The story of trauma may still be part of your life, but it no longer has to define it. You can begin to reshape how you move forward, one step at a time.

Healing doesn’t happen all at once. But every small effort—every reflection, every word—moves you closer to feeling more grounded, more whole, and more in charge of your life.

Erin Berenz, PhD

Erin Berenz, PhD

Erin Berenz, PhD, is cofounder and Chief Product Officer of Rebound, the first self-guided, evidence-based trauma recovery app. As a former NIH-funded Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, Dr. Berenz is a recognized expert in trauma recovery and its integration into addiction treatment. She has led the development of trauma-informed programs within community health and digital health settings. Drawing on her extensive clinical research and program development experience, Dr. Berenz’s work emphasizes trauma-informed approaches that empower providers and survivors alike, fostering safety, compassion, and long-term healing.

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