05/13/2026
Many trauma survivors aren’t struggling because they’re “resistant” to therapy—they’re struggling because their nervous system is organized around survival.
When trauma creates structural dissociation, different parts of the self carry different roles: one part manages daily functioning, while other parts remain trapped in defensive states like fight, flight, freeze, submit, or attachment-based survival responses.
This infographic captures an important shift in trauma treatment: healing happens not through force or confrontation, but through compassionate integration.
Key clinical insights:
• Trauma can lead to prefrontal cortex shutdown, limiting access to logic, reflection, and traditional cognitive processing during activation
• Survival responses like hypervigilance, dissociation, people-pleasing, or emotional numbing are often adaptive protective strategies, not pathology
• Using “parts language” (“A part of me feels worthless”) creates distance from shame and increases curiosity, self-awareness, and regulation
• Secure internal attachment develops when the adult self learns to relate compassionately to wounded parts, rather than rejecting or fighting them
From a TIST and neuroscience-informed lens, symptoms become meaningful communications from protective systems—not evidence of brokenness. This reframing can profoundly shift the therapeutic relationship and deepen client safety.
At Academy of Therapy Wisdom, we support clinicians in learning trauma-informed, parts-oriented approaches that integrate neurobiology, attachment, and somatic understanding into effective clinical practice.
If this topic resonates with your clinical work, comment "Training" below and we’ll send you a link to Dr. Janina Fisher's free webinar: Healing the Fragmented Selves of Trauma Survivors.