You’re driving home. The car beside you taps its horn. You flinch — not the polite startle of someone who heard a noise, but a full-body lurch with your shoulders up around your ears. Your hands are tight on the wheel and your stomach has dropped out, and rationally, you know there is no danger. You are fine. Your mind is fine.
Your body, though. Your body just did something else.
There’s a sentence Bessel van der Kolk repeats throughout The Body Keeps the Score, and once you hear it the experience above stops being mysterious: trauma is not the event — it’s the imprint the event leaves on the nervous system. The car horn didn’t startle you. The car horn matched a pattern your body learned a long time ago and never quite let go of. Here’s what that actually means, why it happens to almost everybody to some degree, and what helps when the body keeps remembering things the mind already moved past.
What this covers
- Why your body remembers what your mind moves past
- The four ways your body responds to threat
- How trauma shows up when you’re not looking
- Why “I talked about it” isn’t always enough
- What actually helps the body let go
- Why we should be teaching this earlier
- When to talk to a professional
- Frequently asked questions

Why your body remembers what your mind moves past
When something frightening happens, two systems are running at once. Your conscious mind is trying to make sense of the situation: where you are, what’s happening, what to do. Underneath that, an older, faster system is already moving. Your heart rate spikes. Your peripheral vision narrows. Blood routes away from your gut and toward your large muscles. You don’t decide any of this. By the time your thinking brain catches up, your body has already taken its position.
That fast system isn’t trying to hurt you. It’s trying to keep you alive. The problem is that it learns. Three things happen at once when the body files something away as dangerous:
The body files cues, not stories
A horn. A smell. A specific tone of voice. The nervous system stores the sensory shorthand of what came right before the threat — not the verbal memory you’d later tell a therapist.
Reaction beats reasoning
Brain-imaging research consistently shows that in trauma survivors, the amygdala — the brain’s threat alarm — fires faster and the prefrontal cortex (the reasoning part) goes quieter. The body has acted before you’ve thought.
Your nervous system has no clock
Conscious memory fades. Implicit, body-based memory doesn’t on its own. Without the right kind of work to release it, a pattern set thirty years ago can run today exactly the way it ran the first time.
This isn’t weakness. It isn’t even unusual. The National Comorbidity Survey Replication found that more than half of U.S. adults — about 60% of men and 51% of women — will experience at least one traumatic event in their lives. Most won’t develop full PTSD. Most will, however, carry pieces of it in the body in ways they may never connect back to the original event.
The four ways your body responds to threat
Walter Cannon described the fight-or-flight response in 1932. Researchers later added freeze (well-documented in animal models as tonic immobility), and clinician Pete Walker described the fawn response in his 2013 work on complex trauma. Together they map most of how a human body actually reacts when a threat arrives — and which one a person defaults to is shaped heavily by what was available, and what was safe, when they were small.
Push back, push through
Anger that flares fast. Jaw and shoulder tension. Snapping at people you love. The body trying to make the threat back off.
Move, busy, escape
Restlessness. Compulsive scrolling, working, exercising. An urgent need to leave the room when a conversation gets hard.
Go still, go far away
Dissociation. The “deer in headlights” stillness. Hours that disappear. The body protecting you by going somewhere else inside.
Please, soothe, comply
Saying yes when you mean no. Reading the room before you read yourself. People-pleasing as a survival reflex, especially common after relational trauma.
If you’ve spent your adult life feeling like an “anxious person” or a “people-pleaser” or someone who “just shuts down,” it’s worth sitting with the possibility that what you’re describing isn’t a personality. It’s a survival shape your nervous system locked into when something didn’t feel safe — and the work of softening it is real, learnable work.
How trauma shows up when you’re not looking
Most people don’t walk into a therapist’s office saying “I think I have unprocessed trauma.” They walk in saying their stomach hurts every Sunday night. Or that they can’t sleep through the week. Or that they don’t know why they cried when their kid slammed the front door. Trauma rarely announces itself. Here’s what it tends to look like when it doesn’t.
After a sudden, scary event
A car accident. A fall. An assault. A medical emergency. The mind often “moves on” within weeks — back to work, back to schedule. The body holds longer. People describe a flinch at car horns, white-knuckled driving, a startle response so loud it embarrasses them, sleep that breaks at 3 a.m. for no reason. None of this is a sign of weakness. It’s the nervous system replaying its protective drill, just in case.
After childhood neglect or emotional unavailability
This one is harder to name because nothing dramatic ever happened. The 1998 ACE Study, surveying more than 9,500 adults at Kaiser Permanente, established that childhood adversity — including emotional neglect — predicts adult chronic disease, depression, and risky health behaviors at rates that no other variable comes close to. In the body, this can look like a low-grade hum of “I’m too much” or “I’m not enough,” difficulty trusting that someone will stay, or a tendency to over-explain. The wound is real even when the story sounds small.
After sexual abuse or assault
Sexual trauma stores particularly deep, in part because the body’s safety system gets paired with the very experience that’s supposed to be safest. A 2021 review in Frontiers in Neuroscience documents measurable endocrine and immune changes in adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Survivors describe clenched fists or jaws during intimacy without knowing why. They describe disconnection from their body during sex, or compulsive sexual behavior, or both at different times. They describe chronic pelvic pain, gut symptoms, headaches that never quite have an explanation. Research from the same field shows 58% of school-aged child sexual abuse victims report at least one somatic symptom — long before any of them have words for what happened.
After ongoing, layered hardship
There’s a category of trauma that doesn’t have one event. A long marriage that slowly eroded you. A childhood with an unpredictable parent. A workplace that ran on fear. The ICD-11 formally recognized this in 2022 as Complex PTSD — trauma that’s repeated, prolonged, and from which escape was difficult or impossible. The body adapts to ongoing threat by staying half-on. People describe never quite resting, scanning rooms when they enter, knowing where every exit is, and feeling guilty for being tired all the time.

Why “I talked about it” isn’t always enough
There’s a quiet frustration that brings a lot of people back into therapy years after they thought they were done. They’ve talked through what happened. They’ve named it. They have insight, language, even self-compassion about it. And they still flinch at car horns. Still go cold when their partner raises their voice. Still freeze when a particular smell catches them at the grocery store.
There’s a clinical reason for that. Talking primarily engages the parts of the brain that handle language and meaning-making. Those are higher-order, slower, conscious systems. Trauma is filed deeper — in implicit, body-based memory networks — which is exactly why it can fire without involving thought at all. You can know your story cold and still have a nervous system that hasn’t been told the danger is over.
Some of the most insightful clients I’ve worked with had a clear, articulate understanding of their trauma — and a body that hadn’t gotten the memo. The work isn’t to repeat the story. The work is to give the nervous system a different ending.
Lisa Foley, LCSW — Clinical Supervisor, Resolutions Therapy
Editorial review, May 2026
This is the part of the conversation that’s still missing in a lot of mental health care. Insight matters. Naming things matters. But for many people, those steps are the beginning of trauma work, not the end. The body needs its own kind of resolution.
What actually helps the body let go
There’s no single right answer here, and anyone telling you there is one should be approached carefully. Different bodies respond to different work. What the strongest evidence-supported approaches share is that they don’t only ask you to talk — they ask the body to participate in the resolution.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing)
A first-line PTSD treatment recommended by the WHO and APA. Uses bilateral stimulation while the client briefly holds a memory in mind, allowing the brain to reprocess it without requiring detailed verbal retelling. Read our full EMDR walkthrough.
Somatic Experiencing & body-based work
Developed by Peter Levine, focused on tracking sensation in the body and releasing the activation the nervous system never finished discharging. Often paired with other modalities.
Trauma-focused CBT & CPT
Structured talk therapies adapted specifically for trauma — strong evidence base, especially for single-incident PTSD and adolescent survivors.
Polyvagal-informed practice
A clinical framework — the underlying neurophysiology is still scientifically debated — that helps people learn the felt difference between activation, shutdown, and safety so they can move between states with intention.
For some people, medication coordinated with a psychiatrist supports the work. For others, the right body-aware therapist and steady weekly sessions are enough. Most people benefit from a clinician who blends modalities — talk where talk helps, and body-based work where the talk runs out of room. That blending is the standard of care at most evidence-based practices, including ours.
Why we should be teaching this earlier
Most adults in trauma therapy are doing repair work. They’re going back to learn what they should have been told at thirteen — that big feelings happen in the body before they happen in the mind, that flinching at someone’s tone of voice is information about your nervous system not a flaw in your character, that “I’m fine” is sometimes true and sometimes the most reflexive thing the body knows how to say.
Children especially, and teenagers, deserve to know this. A child who has been hurt rarely has the language to describe what happened — but they often have stomachaches, sudden anger, sleep that breaks at the same hour every night, a flinch at a particular adult, or developmentally unusual sexual behavior. Those are not bad behavior. They are the body’s first attempt at testimony. Adults who know what to look for can intervene long before the child has the words to ask.
A framing worth keeping
Just because you’re not in the situation anymore, and just because you’ve talked it through with a professional, doesn’t always mean it has left your nervous system. Healing isn’t a single event. It’s the slow, repeated work of teaching the body that the danger is finally over.
Body-literacy isn’t a clinical skill. It’s a basic adult competency we’re decades behind on teaching. The earlier someone learns it, the less repair they have to do later.

When to talk to a professional
There’s no waiting period for this work. You don’t need to have a “big enough” event to qualify. If your body is reacting to something your mind knows is over — flinches, sleeplessness, dissociation, chronic tension, intimacy that hurts in ways no medical exam explains — that’s already enough information to talk to someone trained in trauma.
A therapist or psychiatrist who works with trauma can help you map what your nervous system is doing, what kind of work it actually responds to, and whether modalities like EMDR or somatic-aware therapy are a fit. The first step isn’t deciding what kind of treatment you need. It’s letting someone trained look at the picture with you.
Frequently asked questions

References
- Felitti VJ, Anda RF, Nordenberg D, et al. Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults: The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 1998;14(4):245-258. PubMed
- Kessler RC, Berglund P, Demler O, et al. The National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R). JAMA, 2003. NCBI
- National Institute of Mental Health. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Statistics. nimh.nih.gov
- Schalinski I, et al. Psychobiological Consequences of Childhood Sexual Abuse: Current Knowledge and Clinical Implications. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 2021. PMC
- van der Kolk B. The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Penguin Books, 2014.
- Walker P. Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving. Azure Coyote Publishing, 2013.
- Cannon WB. Wisdom of the Body. W.W. Norton, 1932 (foundational fight-or-flight research).
- World Health Organization. ICD-11: Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (6B41). 2022. icd.who.int
- EMDR International Association. EMDR Therapy Research Overview. emdria.org
- Grossman P, et al. Critical evaluation of polyvagal theory. 2024 (39-author scientific critique).
