Trauma Therapy for Teens & Young Adults in Colorado & Florida

For When Your Nervous System Has Been Stuck in Survival Mode.


Somatic & Brain-Based Trauma Therapy for Asian American Teens & Young Adults

A Wound to Your Safety

Trauma is the Latin word for “wound” and that’s exactly what trauma is.

Trauma isn’t just the big events that shake up or break down your world.
It’s also the small wounds that happen repeatedly over time.

Trauma is a wound to your sense of safety, your identity, your sense of self, your relationships, your wellbeing, and the way your nervous system moves through the world.

It’s Your Body’s Alarm System Stuck On

Trauma causes body’s alarm system to stay stuck on survival mode, which look like:

  • Feeling unsafe even when nothing is happening

  • Constantly scanning our surroundings for danger

  • Never being able to relax

  • Tension all over your body

  • Flashbacks or memories that feel too real

  • A brain that won’t turn off

  • Lashing out

  • Shutting down or withdrawing from the world

  • Feeling numb — like nothing is funny, nothing is sad, nothing makes you feel mad, just nothing

  • Anxiety

  • Depression

  • Disconnection from who you are

  • Losing trust in people or feeling alone even when you’re not

For teens, trauma can also look like “being dramatic,” “being disrespectful,” “not trying hard enough,” or “having an attitude.” What often gets labeled as a behavior problem is actually a nervous system that’s overwhelmed.

Asian American girl feeling overwhelmed by school work and family responsibilities asking for help

My Approach

Trauma lives in our brains and our bodies.

Three pairs of hands holding a red wooden heart above a brown surface representing trauma healing through attachment repair.

When we experience trauma, It’s not just our brains that get impacted, but also our nervous system that runs throughout our entire body. That’s why when we’re treating trauma, we have to tend to both the mind and the body.

Trauma therapy can look like:

  • Learning skills to help regulate your nervous system in the moment

  • Using neurosomatic techniques (Brainspotting, EMDR, and neurofeedback principles) to help process through what is stuck in the body and in the brain

  • Synthesizing trauma stories so they stop running the show

  • Defuse from and deprogram beliefs that have been created as a result of your traumas and restore agency and trust in yourself

If any of this feels familiar, we can work through it together.

Areas of Specialty

Stuff they say you’re not supposed to talk about
— but we will