L.A.-based Trauma Therapy for California Residents

somatic Therapy for healing Trauma in Northeast Los Angeles & online

Trauma is not a sign that something is wrong with you. It is a natural response to experiences that overwhelmed your capacity to cope, especially when safety, connection, or choice were limited.

For a long time, trauma was understood only as the result of extreme or singular events such as violence, assault, or war, often framed as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). We now understand that trauma can also come from ongoing experiences, chronic stress, relational harm, and systemic oppression.

Our bodies and minds respond to these conditions in many of the same ways they respond to acute danger, not because we are broken, but because we are adaptive.

Trauma therapy at Kindman & Co. is grounded in this understanding. We approach healing with care, curiosity, and respect for the ways your nervous system learned to protect you. Rather than pushing for change or revisiting experiences before you’re ready, we work collaboratively to build safety, understanding, and choice. Over time, this supports you to have greater ease, connection, and a renewed sense of possibility in your life.

See if trauma therapy is a fit

A free 20-minute call to talk about what’s going on and whether working together makes sense. No pressure to commit.

fallen robot after experiencing a trauma

complex & relational trauma

In many therapy practices, trauma is considered exclusively in relation to experiencing or witnessing one or more life-threatening, traumatic events. While this is a very real and serious concern for some people, many of us experience traumatic responses to situations that may appear to have been smaller scale, were more personal, often hidden, and may have occurred on an ongoing, long-term basis. We sometimes refer to the acute, life-threatening traumatic incidents as “Big T Trauma,” which often leads to a PTSD diagnosis, whereas “Little T Trauma,” describes the effect of these cumulative moments of ongoing, personal distress that can equally create a lasting trauma response. Many people don’t even see or validate these forms of complex and relational trauma, but for those experiencing it, the trauma is all too real.

Some examples of complex trauma include:

  • There’s no traumatic moment to point to, but you find yourself experiencing the physical and emotional symptoms of trauma response (racing thoughts, headache, accelerated heart rate, sense of feeling highly stressed or overwhelmed, hypervigilance, re-experiencing upsetting events, anxiety, depression.) If you think about the moments when this happens, you may be able to uncover what triggered it, but you still don’t understand why.

  • You have difficulty developing and maintaining healthy relationships. You may avoid close friendships and romantic partnerships completely, or you may find yourself partnering with people who do not respect or validate your boundaries or needs. You truly want to find healthy and supportive relationships, but it feels impossible.

  • Your childhood was happy enough, your parents didn’t do anything wrong, but you still feel like something was missing. You love your parents, but part of you is holding on to resentment that you can’t even explain to yourself. You may find yourself overcompensating with your own children or distancing yourself from close relationships with them.

  • You’re not like everyone else. Your whole life, even the most well-meaning people, have said this to you. At first, it felt good to be different, but after a lifetime, hearing how different you are because you’re creative, think outside the box, or don’t conform to their normal…well, it doesn’t feel good anymore. 

  • You’re a thriving member of the LGBTQIA+ community. You have found love and friendship and joy in your community, but the world does not always recognize or accept you. Ongoing, covert discrimination may be invisible to your friends or loved ones who have never had to deal with it, but as much as you try, it impacts your life. You find yourself with higher levels of stress, you’re struggling with depression, your anxiety is out of control. 

  • You are a BIPOC individual living in a world and society that is frequently oppressive and unsafe towards you—having had to navigate encounters of racial bias, systemic racism, and/or individual racism and discrimination. Racial trauma or race based traumatic stress injuries can also occur through vicarious trauma, like in media exposure to police killings, or inherited intergenerational trauma that has been passed down in families from historical experiences of racism, like chattel slavery.

  • The person in the mirror doesn’t seem to match how you feel and who you believe you are. Even worse, the person other people see doesn’t seem to match either of these self-perceived images. Who does that mean you are?

woman crossing crosswalk, Kindman & Co Los Angeles, LMFT Therapist

trauma therapy

You may not identify any of these examples as trauma, but we do. Like any other profession, our field is always growing and changing. Even if you don’t recognize your specific complex trauma experience above, therapy can help you understand how feelings of isolation, loneliness, shame, anxiety, or depression are often a result of the self-defensive, neurobiological response to unrecognized and unprocessed trauma. During therapy for trauma, we are here to honor and validate the emotions and experiences of complex and relational trauma. We don’t look at a trauma response and other big emotions as something that’s broken and needs to be fixed. Instead, we interpret your distress as a message that your mind and body are sending you and help you build tools to help you better tolerate distress. We work together to understand what they’re trying to teach you about your experience, needs, values, and identity, and create opportunities for healing. You are a resilient and remarkable person, and the more you understand and accept your own value, the more you can advocate for and protect your needs.

therapy sessions for trauma

During therapy for trauma, we will be learning together what the impact of trauma is on your life and how you can regain a greater sense of control. Over the course of your therapy sessions, we will help you:

  • Observe moment-to-moment experiences to gain awareness of how trauma is stored in your body and understand your unique threat response

  • Track your triggers and thought and behavior patterns, so you can identify these situations as they arise and start to regain control over the experiences

  • Begin to release fears from previous traumatic experiences in a supportive therapeutic relationship and safe physical space

  • Develop skills to manage physical and emotional symptoms of trauma (and start to rewire the neurons in your brain!) to build more trust in your nervous system response and your ability to tolerate moments of distress or big feelings

  • Practice boundary setting to create a more secure emotional environment where you can feel safer and more at ease

  • Cultivate intimacy in your relationships, so you can build a support system and community where you feel confident to explore and grow as an individual

If this sounds like you, please book a complimentary information session to get paired with a therapist to help you process and heal from trauma. We’re here to help you find relief, reconnect with your vitality, and live the full and joyful life you deserve.

Book info session for healing trauma

Trauma therapy at Kindman & Co. supports clients in Highland Park and Northeast L.A. Learn more about individual therapy, support for people navigating crisis and transitions, and our group therapy options.