03/06/2026
Sometimes what people call an emotional flashback does not look like a memory at all.
There may be no images, no clear recollection of the past event. Instead, what emerges is a state shift in the nervous system — a sudden drop into shame, fear, collapse, or urgency that seems to arrive without warning.
In trauma work we often see that the body can re-enter a physiological state that originally developed in response to threat. The mind may remain in the present, but the autonomic nervous system begins responding as if the original conditions are happening again.
This is one reason these experiences can feel confusing or disorienting. The intensity of the reaction does not appear to match the present moment, so the mind tries to search for an explanation in the current situation.
But what the nervous system may be responding to is an older survival pattern that has not yet had the opportunity to complete or reorganize.
In somatic approaches to trauma, the work is not to force insight or interpretation, but to help the nervous system differentiate past from present. This often begins with simple orienting: noticing the room, feeling contact with the chair or floor, sensing breath and movement in the body.
As the system gradually recognizes that the threat is no longer present, the intensity of the state can begin to soften.
Nothing is “wrong” with the person in these moments.
The nervous system is doing what it learned to do in order to survive.
Healing often involves creating the conditions where the body can finally experience safety, regulation, and completion that were not available at the time of the original event.