Trauma Therapy After Loss: Grief, Growth, and Resilience
Loss splits time. There is the day before, and the day after. When I sit with people in the day after, I listen for the story behind the shock: the shape of the relationship, the details of the last conversation, the unanswered questions, the physical jolt in the chest that keeps returning at odd hours. Grief is not a problem to fix. Still, when loss carries trauma inside it, the nervous system can be so overwhelmed that grief gets tangled, symptoms stack up, and daily life shrinks around the hurt. Trauma therapy, carefully applied, makes room for both the love that remains and the pain that arrived too fast.
The difference between grief and trauma, and why it matters
Most grief hurts in waves but moves, slowly, in a tolerable way. You cry, remember, function a bit, then cry again. The loss is real and final, yet your world gradually reorganizes around it. Traumatic grief feels different. The image of the moment keeps intruding. You startle at small sounds. Sleep shatters. The mind argues with itself in loops: If only I had called sooner. Maybe it was my fault. You know the person is gone, but your body does not believe it. This mismatch between knowing and feeling shows up in very specific ways, like forgetting entire sections of the day of the loss, or avoiding the route that passes the hospital, or panicking when the phone rings at night.
Therapists pay attention to this distinction because it guides treatment. Pure grief needs room, witnessing, and support. Trauma symptoms need targeted interventions that help the brain file what happened so the memory can be recalled without hijacking the present. Get this wrong and we risk either over-medicalizing grief or under-treating trauma. The aim is to hold both truths: you are grieving a real bond, and your nervous system is also reacting to threat, shock, or horror.
What your body does with overwhelming loss
Under acute stress, the sympathetic nervous system pours adrenaline and cortisol through the bloodstream. Blood reroutes to large muscles, vision narrows, digestion slows, and the thinking part of the brain loses some bandwidth. If the loss involved medical crises, police notification, or graphic scenes, this stress response might have surged and crashed several times in a short window. The brain encodes the scene in fragments: sound without context, smell without a timeline, a vivid image without the beginning or the end. Later, these fragments can fire like sparks.
Over weeks and months, unprocessed fragments can form a pattern: intrusive images, avoidance of reminders, hypervigilance, mood changes, a sense of detachment. Trauma therapy does not erase memory. It helps bond the fragments to a fuller narrative, so the memory can integrate into your story without ambushing you at the grocery store.
Stages of grief are not a checklist
People often apologize for grieving in the wrong order. They say they should be in acceptance by now, as if grief were a multiple choice exam. Stages were initially described to help make meaning of terminal illness, not to police the timeline of mourners. In my practice, the pattern is rarely linear. A parent might enjoy a moment of laughter at a photo slideshow, then feel guilty, then feel angry at the hospital, all between 2 p.m. And 4 p.m. On a Tuesday. The task is not to graduate through stages, but to expand your capacity to feel what you feel and return to what matters next.
When grief becomes prolonged or complicated
Most acute grief softens in intensity in the first 3 to 6 months, then changes shape during the first year as anniversaries and seasons roll by. If, after about a year, life remains largely frozen, or yearning and distress dominate most days with little reprieve, we consider prolonged grief disorder. This is not a failure. It is a sign that the bond with the person, the nature of the death, or the surrounding stressors have overloaded normal adaptation. Symptoms can include persistent disbelief, intense longing, identity disruption, emotional numbness, avoidance of reminders, and difficulty engaging with life. Trauma therapy can be adapted here, often in combination with grief-focused treatments, to restore movement while honoring the depth of the relationship.
What trauma therapy actually looks like after loss
The field has strong tools, but none are one-size-fits-all. Good trauma therapy starts with a detailed assessment and a clear plan that you help shape. A typical arc includes building stability, processing the traumatic aspects of the loss, and then widening life again.
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First, stabilization. We reduce the most disruptive symptoms so your days feel safer. That can mean sleep support, gentle routines, breathing and grounding skills, and identifying two or three people you can text when a surge hits. For some, short-term medication helps. For many, consistent structure and compassionate limits do most of the work.
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Second, processing. Methods like EMDR, trauma-focused CBT, or narrative therapy help re-thread the memory of the loss into a coherent story. This does not require you to relive every detail. It asks you to face just enough of the hardest parts, with support, so your brain can finish what it could not finish then.
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Third, integration. We update the future. That might involve returning to activities, creating rituals, deepening community ties, or renegotiating roles at home. The goal is not to move on. It is to move forward with continuing bonds that feel settled rather than raw.
Within that arc, the details matter. Here is how specific modalities often show up.
EMDR. Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing uses bilateral stimulation, usually eye movements or taps, to help the brain reprocess traumatic memories. After loss, EMDR targets the worst images, sounds, or bodily sensations rather than the relationship as a whole. We work with one image at a time. People often report a shift from sharp, high-contrast pain to a more distant, less charged memory. Importantly, we also install resources, like a felt sense of the person’s love or a memory of strength, so the session ends contained.
Trauma-focused CBT. This approach identifies stuck beliefs, like If I stop hurting, it means I did not love them enough, or I should have foreseen everything. We test these beliefs against facts, your values, and the larger context. We also grade exposure to avoided places or activities, with support, so your world does not keep shrinking.
Somatic approaches. When the body holds the story, talk has limits. Somatic experiencing, breathwork, and carefully titrated movement help discharge the freeze that often follows loss. I have seen a trembling hand settle after five minutes of paced breathing paired with gentle foot pressure. Small shifts add up.
Prolonged grief therapy. For those with prolonged grief, structured sessions focus on telling the story of the death, restoring goals and roles, and addressing avoidance. We weave continuing bonds throughout, such as speaking to the person in guided exercises, or incorporating their values into present-day decisions.
What to expect in the first three sessions
The first meeting is for mapping. We learn the who, what, when, and how, but also the why that lives in your chest. Expect questions about sleep, appetite, concentration, your substance use, support network, medical history, and any prior losses or traumas. If there was a police or medical component, we will track the sequence of events. If legal or insurance processes are ongoing, we plan accordingly, since repeated retellings can retrigger symptoms.
The second meeting often centers on stabilization. We set up a grounding plan that fits your life. I might teach a two-part breath, or a five-sense orienting technique you can use at the kitchen table. We will also draw a very short timeline of the day of the loss. Creating a sketch rather than a full narrative gives your brain edges without flooding you.
By the third meeting, we choose the first target for processing if you are ready. Not the biggest mountain, usually. An image or moment that spikes distress but feels workable. We establish a stop signal and build in breaks. Clients sometimes fear being pushed. A skilled therapist watches your body language, monitors your nervous system, and keeps control firmly in your hands.
Anxiety, OCD, and trauma after bereavement
Anxiety therapy frequently runs alongside trauma therapy, because grief opens old fault lines. People begin to catastrophize, avoid errands, or wake with racing hearts. Standard anxiety interventions work here, with adjustments. Thought logs can catch all-or-nothing beliefs. Behavioral activation helps when you stall at home, not because you do not care, but because everything seems pointless.
Sometimes obsessive compulsive symptoms surge after a loss. I have worked with people who begin checking the stove fifteen times, or who develop intrusive images of harm coming to surviving loved ones. They feel compelled to neutralize these thoughts with rituals. OCD therapy, especially exposure and response prevention, can be layered into grief work. We do not expose you to reminders of the person to toughen you up. We help you face the sensations and doubts that feed the ritual cycle, so grief is not held hostage by compulsions.
When neurodiversity is part of the picture
Loss intersects with neurodiversity in specific ways that clinicians need to account for. If a client is on the spectrum, or suspects they might be, social expectations around grieving can create extra pressure. Some people mask heavily in public, then collapse alone. Sensory overload at funerals or memorials can be unbearable. Autistic clients often appreciate concrete plans for rituals, clear language, and permission to grieve in ways that are not performative. If autistic traits are suspected but undiagnosed, a referral for autism testing can clarify strengths and support needs, especially if school or work accommodations would help during the first year after loss.
ADHD often complicates early grief. Executive function takes a hit for most mourners, but those with ADHD can find routine tasks almost impossible. Missed appointments, unpaid bills, and lost items pile up. Stimulant medication may or may not be wise in the acute phase, depending on appetite, sleep, and cardiovascular status. ADHD Testing is useful when symptoms long preceded the loss but were never assessed, or when past coping strategies fail under grief load. That information shapes how we scaffold therapy: shorter sessions, written summaries, reminders, and external structure reduce shame and prevent secondary crises.
Children, teens, and families
Kids grieve in bursts. A child may ask a blunt question about cremation, then run to play tag. Teens often oscillate between protectiveness and withdrawal. Families do better when adults speak plainly and invite questions repeatedly. In therapy, we match the child’s developmental stage. Younger children benefit from play-based processing and predictable rituals. Teens often want parts of EMDR or CBT adapted to fit their language. Schools can partner, but permission and privacy matter. Watch for signs that a child has switched from sadness to trauma: nightmares, new aggression, regressive behaviors, or sudden school refusal.
Culture, faith, and the craft of ritual
Rituals create containers for pain. They also mark continuities that loss cannot touch. For some, communal prayer, sitting shiva, or the wake sets a rhythm that holds the family. For others, faith feels complicated. Good therapy approaches belief with respect and curiosity. I ask clients to teach me their practices, then help them adapt what serves right now. A client once brought a bowl of stones to session, each stone representing a quality of the person who died. We named them one by one and placed them in a jar they kept at home. Small, concrete rituals often outlast good intentions.
A realistic view of resilience
Resilience is not stoicism. It is the set of behaviors and relationships that help you absorb impact without losing your inner compass. Sleep becomes a resilience practice. So does eating enough protein and carbohydrates, especially in the first month when appetite is poor. Honest conversations with one or two steady people do more than a dozen well-meaning texts. Movement matters. Ten minutes of walking can lower baseline arousal. None of this is heroic. It is humbly biological and reliably effective.
When to seek extra support
- Intrusive images or nightmares dominate most days after the first month, and grounding skills give little relief.
- You avoid large parts of your life because of reminders, including people, places, or routines you used to value.
- You feel persistent guilt or responsibility for the death, unsoftened by facts or supportive feedback.
- Panic, compulsive rituals, heavy drinking, or other numbing strategies keep expanding despite your efforts to cut back.
- Thoughts of suicide appear, or you find yourself rehearsing plans rather than fleeting wishes to be done with pain.
If any of these fit, do not wait for things to get worse. Trauma therapy does not take away your bond with the person who died. It gives you back access to the parts of life that love would want for you.
Grounding skills you can try this week
- Orient to the room. Name five colors and three textures you can see or touch. Let your eyes move slowly across the space as if you are reading a painting.
- Pursed lip breathing. Inhale gently through the nose for 4, exhale through lightly pursed lips for 6 to 8. Repeat for two minutes to nudge the nervous system toward calm.
- Cold water reset. Rinse your face with cool water for 15 seconds, twice. It can interrupt spirals and lower heart rate.
- Containment on paper. Draw two boxes. In one, jot urgent tasks. In the other, write the name of the memory that keeps intruding. Close the notebook. You are not ignoring the memory, you are choosing when to meet it.
- Drop anchor. Press your feet into the floor, soften your shoulders, and silently say, Here. Now. Safe enough. Repeat three times while noticing one sound nearby.
These are not cures. They are footholds while you climb.
How assessment strengthens treatment
A well-conducted intake reduces blind spots. Along with the grief narrative, I screen for depression, PTSD, panic symptoms, and compulsions. I ask about prior losses and about violence or medical trauma, which can amplify current reactions. Sleep is always on the agenda, as is nutrition and movement. For some clients, brief use of a sleep aid improves therapy readiness. For others, untreated apnea worsens mood and concentration, so a referral for medical evaluation is practical care, not mission creep. If neurodiversity is suspected, autism testing or ADHD Testing brings data that protects against mislabeling grief responses as character flaws.

We also map your existing supports. People often think they need a dozen helpers. In practice, two reliable contacts you can call at 10 p.m. Matter more than a large but distant circle. We plan for legal or administrative tasks too. Settling estates or dealing with insurance can act like chronic stressors that stall recovery. Breaking those tasks into small, scheduled steps prevents a backlog that later erupts as crisis.
Two brief vignettes
A 47-year-old father lost his brother suddenly to a cardiac event. Within weeks he had nightly images of the paramedics working, followed by compulsive replays of what he could have done. Sleep dropped to 3 to 4 hours. He avoided the garage where the ambulance had parked. We spent two sessions on stabilization, including paced breathing and sleep hygiene with a time-limited medication from his physician. With EMDR, we targeted the moment he saw the paramedics stop compressions. By the fifth reprocessing set, his distress dropped from 9 to 4. He reported the image now felt farther away, like looking through a window rather than being in the room. In parallel, we did brief exposure to the garage corridor. By week six he was sleeping 6 to 7 hours and using the garage again. Grief remained, tears came easily, but daily life widened.
A 29-year-old woman lost her mother after a long cancer course. There was no single traumatic moment, but she developed intense checking rituals around the stove and door locks, fearing something bad would happen to her dad. She spent 90 minutes nightly checking. We named OCD clearly, framed it as the brain’s attempt to control the uncontrollable, and began exposure and response prevention. She practiced leaving https://jasperevjs048.theglensecret.com/understanding-ocd-therapy-evidence-based-approaches-1 the house after a single check while tolerating the surge of doubt. The first week, anxiety spiked to 8 out of 10, but fell to 3 by week three. She kept a small notebook of memories she wanted to preserve and set one hour weekly to write them down. Rituals dropped to 15 minutes by week five. Her grief found a more natural rhythm once compulsions loosened.
Common traps and how to avoid them
Smart, caring people talk themselves into isolation. They worry about burdening friends. They judge their grief against perceived norms. Social media can magnify this, compressing grief into public displays that might not match your private needs. Another trap is overexposure. Some mourners force themselves to look at photos daily, or to revisit the scene, thinking it will speed up healing. Without containment and pacing, this can retraumatize. The opposite trap is total avoidance, which shrinks life. Good therapy threads the needle. We dose exposure, build in safety valves, and return to anchors that help you digest rather than drown.
Working with healthcare systems and practical constraints
Access matters. Not everyone can attend weekly therapy for months. If resources are limited, consider a brief, targeted course of 6 to 10 sessions focused on the most impairing symptom, then a pause, then a check-in series. If transportation is hard, telehealth works well for many trauma modalities. EMDR adapts with on-screen bilateral stimulation tools or self-tapping. If language is a barrier, ask for a clinician fluent in your language or for a professional interpreter. Many community clinics have grief groups, which are not substitutes for trauma therapy but can supplement it, especially for the loneliness that expands after the initial flood of support recedes.

Insurance often pays for therapy when there is a diagnosable condition, such as PTSD, adjustment disorder, major depression, prolonged grief disorder, or OCD. Documentation is not a moral judgment on your grief. It is a way to open doors. Ask your clinician to explain what they are coding and why.
How love lives on in the work
A misconception about trauma therapy is that it might blunt or erase connection to the person who died. The opposite is true in well-timed work. As distress decreases, you can remember more parts of the relationship, even the quirky, small moments that trauma had crowded out. A client once told me, When the sirens finally got quiet in my head, I could hear her laugh again. That is the measure I look for. Not symptom zeros on a form, but the return of a laugh, the first free breath in weeks, the text to a friend that starts with You would not believe what happened at the coffee shop, and does not end in apology.
Finding and choosing a therapist
Search for clinicians with experience in grief and trauma, not just one or the other. Ask specifically about EMDR, trauma-focused CBT, prolonged grief therapy, or somatic approaches. In your consultation, notice whether the therapist tracks your pacing, reflects the meaning you place on the relationship, and offers a plan that includes stabilization before processing. If anxiety therapy or OCD therapy will be part of your care, ask how they integrate those methods without crowding out grief work. If neurodiversity is relevant, look for someone comfortable discussing autism testing or ADHD Testing and willing to accommodate communication and sensory needs.
A good fit feels steady. You do not need a perfect therapist. You need a reliable partner who respects your bond with the person you lost and has tools to help your nervous system catch up to your heart.
The long arc
Anniversaries arrive like weather fronts. Some you can see on the calendar. Others arrive with the smell of rain or the sound of an old song. Resilience grows when you expect these changes and plan accordingly. Book lighter days. Ask a friend to meet for a walk. Write a note to the person, then place it somewhere meaningful. Therapy offers a space to rehearse these plans and to keep refining them. The aim is not to prevent feeling. It is to move through feeling with enough support that you can keep living a life your loved one would recognize.
Loss will remake you. Trauma therapy, at its best, helps that remaking be guided rather than random, connected rather than cut off, and honest enough to hold both the pain of absence and the surprising places where joy still roots and grows.
Phone: 309-230-7011
Website: https://www.drericaaten.com/
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Dr. Erica Aten, Psychologist provides online therapy and autism/ADHD evaluations for adults in Oregon and Washington.
The practice focuses on neurodivergent adults, especially late-diagnosed and self-diagnosed women, nonbinary, and femme-presenting clients who want affirming care.
Services listed on the site include anxiety therapy, trauma therapy, OCD therapy, LGBTQ+ affirming therapy, autism and ADHD support, and evaluations.
Because the practice works virtually, clients can access care from home without adding commute time or an in-person waiting room to the process.
The site also lists evidence-based approaches such as ERP, inference-based cognitive behavioral therapy, cognitive processing therapy, and prolonged exposure therapy.
Dr. Erica Aten describes the work as supportive, neurodivergent-affirming, and focused on helping clients unmask, build self-trust, and live more authentically.
The official site presents Portland, Oregon and Washington State as the public service-area anchors for this online practice.
To ask about fit or scheduling, call 309-230-7011, email [email protected], or visit https://www.drericaaten.com/.
For public listing reference and map context, see https://www.google.com/maps/place/Dr.+Erica+Aten,+Psychologist/@47.2174931,-120.8825225,7z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x85dd18267af833d1:0xc46dc79a2debb4e5!8m2!3d47.2174931!4d-120.8825225!16s%2Fg%2F11x_c1z_h0.
Popular Questions About Dr. Erica Aten, Psychologist
What services does Dr. Erica Aten offer?
The official site lists anxiety therapy, trauma therapy, OCD therapy, LGBTQ+ affirming therapy, autism and ADHD support, autism testing, ADHD testing, clinical supervision for mental health professionals, and business development consultations.Is this an in-person or online practice?
The site describes the practice as online and virtual, including online therapy and evaluations for Oregon and Washington residents.Who does the practice work with?
The website says Dr. Erica Aten works with neurodivergent adults, especially late-diagnosed and self-diagnosed women, nonbinary, and femme-presenting clients, along with high-achievers, perfectionists, and burned-out people pleasers.What states are listed on the site?
The contact page and location pages say services are offered to residents of Oregon and Washington.What treatment approaches are mentioned?
The site lists ERP Therapy, Inference-Based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Cognitive Processing Therapy, and Prolonged Exposure Therapy among the main modalities.Does the practice offer autism or ADHD evaluations?
Yes. The website includes dedicated autism testing and ADHD testing pages and describes those evaluations as online for Oregon and Washington residents.Is there a public office address listed?
I could not verify a public street address from the official site. The business appears to operate as an online practice, and the public listing pages describe a service area rather than a walk-in office address.How can I contact Dr. Erica Aten, Psychologist?
Call tel:+13092307011, email mailto:[email protected], visit https://www.drericaaten.com/, or follow https://www.instagram.com/drericaaten/.Landmarks Near Portland, OR Service Area
This is a virtual practice, so these Portland references work best as service-area landmarks rather than walk-in directions.Washington Park — One of Portland’s best-known park destinations and home to multiple major attractions. If you are near Washington Park or the west hills, online therapy and evaluations are available through https://www.drericaaten.com/.
Portland Japanese Garden — A major Portland landmark within Washington Park and a strong reference point for west-side Portland service-area copy. If this is part of your regular area, the practice serves Oregon residents online.
Powell’s City of Books — Powell’s on West Burnside is one of the city’s most recognizable downtown landmarks. If you are near the Pearl District or Burnside corridor, online appointments remain available without a commute.
Alberta Arts District — Alberta Street is a familiar Northeast Portland destination for shops, galleries, and neighborhood activity. If you live near Alberta or nearby NE neighborhoods, the practice offers online services across Oregon and Washington.
Mississippi Avenue — North Mississippi is a well-known Portland corridor for restaurants, retail, and local events. If you are based around Mississippi, the practice’s virtual format keeps access simple from home or work.
Laurelhurst Park — Laurelhurst Park is one of Portland’s best-known neighborhood parks and an easy reference point for Southeast Portland. If you are near Laurelhurst, the practice’s online model can help reduce travel and sensory demands.
Tom McCall Waterfront Park — This downtown riverfront park is a common Portland landmark for locals and visitors alike. If you are near the waterfront or central city, the site provides direct access to consultation and scheduling details.
Oregon Convention Center — A major venue in the Lloyd District and a practical East Portland reference point. If you use the convention center area as a local landmark, the practice still serves the wider Portland area through virtual care.