<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?><!-- generator=Zoho Sites --><rss version="2.0" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><channel><atom:link href="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/tag/emotional-healing/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title>Phasing Out of Trauma - Blog #Emotional Healing</title><description>Phasing Out of Trauma - Blog #Emotional Healing</description><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/tag/emotional-healing</link><lastBuildDate>Fri, 10 Apr 2026 21:19:11 -0700</lastBuildDate><generator>http://zoho.com/sites/</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Weaving Grace's 1 Phase Closer to Full Healing]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/weaving-grace-s-1-phase-closer-to-full-healing</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/Closing Phase 1.png"/>At the close of Phase 1, something sacred happens—women begin to tell their stories. In safe, compassionate community, silence breaks, voices rise, and healing begins. What was once hidden starts to transform into truth, connection, and the first steps toward lasting freedom.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_9vbGBfubRbqJSLk0SVYe1w" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_XRI4uP5rT82-Sk5TU0qFjg" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_iaFppXBfTNqiLhd2PN_ahA" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_zrSBh2S9QBesuLxGYz74_g" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true">Holding Space for Their Amazing Gains!</h2></div>
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                theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/Closing%20Phase%201.png" size="fit" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_lJuIDg3tTyurDRV5pZnRfg" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p style="text-align:left;"></p><div style="text-align:left;"><p>There is a sacred moment that happens at the end of Phase 1—one that cannot be rushed, forced, or manufactured. It is the moment when a woman begins to tell the truth of her story out loud. Here at Phasing Out of Trauma, we never expect to hear the polished version. We always encourage woman to go beyond the minimized version. And because we've all held our own experiences, it's always safe to move past version shaped by what others could handle, and into what really happened.&nbsp;</p><p><br/></p><p>At the end of our Phase 1 Study journey, we hold space for each other to hear their stories. And when it happens, we enter the sacred space of empowerment. Because the trauma these women have held silenced their voices. It fragmented their experiences. It convinced them that what happened to them either too much to hold or not enough to matter. Because trauma tangles our memories, buries our voice, and teaches us to survive by staying quiet. But healing begins here in Phase 1 when God enters the story intentionally, and together with Him the pieces of our whole start to come back together—when what was once hidden is gently, courageously brought into the light.</p><p><br/></p><p>At the end of Phase 1 in Phasing Out of Trauma, we invite women to begin telling their story in a way that feels safe, honoring, and paced. Not everything. Not all at once. Just what is ready. And what I have witnessed in these moments just last week was been nothing short of holy.</p><p><br/></p><p>One incredible woman stood before us and shared her story with a clarity, structure, and depth that felt like listening to a <span>TED Talk</span>. There was power in her voice—not because her story was easy to hear, but because she had begun to see it differently. She made connections between moments in her life that once felt isolated and confusing. She could trace the thread—how early wounds had woven themselves through later experiences—and for the first time, she wasn’t just reliving it… she was understanding it. And in that understanding, there was empowerment. You could feel it.</p><p><br/></p><p>Another woman showed us a different kind of courage.</p><p><br/></p><p>She named, in real time, how hard it was to even be there. How difficult it felt to admit where she was. How even in a room filled with safety, compassion, and vulnerability, there was still a voice inside her that feared judgment. That wanted to stay hidden. And yet—by saying that out loud—she broke through it.</p><p><br/></p><p>Her honesty became the doorway.</p><p><br/></p><p>What followed was raw. Sacred. Unfiltered. She shared parts of her story that had been held tightly for so long, and as she offered these pieces of her story to her fellowship group, I could feel the room hold her—not with shock, not with pity, but with understanding. With reverence. That is what happens when a story is received with care. It transforms not only the one who tells it, but the space around her.</p><p><br/></p><p>And then there was another woman, who spoke with a coherence we had never heard from her before. Not because her story had suddenly become simple, but because something within her had softened. She gave herself space. She gave herself grace. She extended mercy inward in a way she hadn’t been able to before. And as she spoke, you could hear it—the difference. The gentleness. The ownership. The beginning of integration.</p><p>These are the moments that remind me: healing is not about fixing a person.</p><p><br/></p><p>Healing is about restoring our voice.</p><p><br/></p><p>Because when a woman tells her story in a safe, compassionate environment, something profound happens in her brain and body. What was once fragmented begins to organize. What was once overwhelming becomes nameable. What was once carried alone is now witnessed. And in that witnessing, the story begins to lose its power to isolate—and instead becomes a pathway to connection, meaning, and healing.</p><p><br/></p><p>We are not meant to carry our stories in silence.</p><p><br/></p><p>We are meant to tell them. Not with an intention to relive the pain—but to reclaim the narrative stolen by others who abused power and authority in our lives. Before we closed our time together, I offered the women a small glimpse of what comes next. A preview of how their stories might begin to read at the end of Phase 2—after they’ve had time to heal their impressions of God, to come to know Him for who He truly is, and to begin seeing their lives through a different lens. A lens not shaped by trauma alone, but by truth. By presence. By a God who sees.</p><p><br/></p><p>Because the story does not end in Phase 1. It begins there. And as it unfolds, what was once a story of survival slowly becomes a story of redemption.</p><p>I am deeply overwhelmed—in the best way—to be invited into these spaces. To sit in the presence of women who are choosing, day by day, to face what they’ve carried and to begin again. It is an honor I don’t take lightly.</p><p><br/></p><p>And if you are reading this while holding your own story—still untold, still heavy, still uncertain—I want you to know this:</p><p><br/></p><p><span style="font-weight:bold;">You do not have to carry it alone.</span></p><p><br/></p><p>When you are ready, there is a place for your story too. And it would be an honor to walk with you.</p></div><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2026 20:41:05 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[When Toxic Thoughts Take Root]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/when-toxic-thoughts-take-root</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/Armor of God.png"/>This guided meditation invites women to put on the Armor of God and confront the toxic thoughts that often follow trauma. Each piece of armor reminds us of the truth of who we are in Christ and helps us replace shame, fear, and doubt with faith, peace, and hope on our healing journey.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_K1EepykwTc-UW0N8IFAHtw" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_i42WkVvPTxKMbw__jR3SaQ" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_2ks9YMnTTgOaZT2CHFWvCg" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_vzSZAUCZTumTbFHoV-eSEQ" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span>Letting God Transform the Lie</span></h2></div>
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                theme:dark"><figure role="none" class="zpimage-data-ref"><span class="zpimage-anchor" role="link" tabindex="0" aria-label="Open Lightbox" style="cursor:pointer;"><picture><img class="zpimage zpimage-style-none zpimage-space-none " src="/Armor%20of%20God.png" size="fit" data-lightbox="true"/></picture></span></figure></div>
</div><div data-element-id="elm_wwl43alsQhmnneVhZkRVFA" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-left zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p>There are moments in life when a thought settles into the mind and refuses to leave. It may begin quietly, perhaps after a painful conversation, a betrayal, a loss, or a memory that surfaces when you least expect it. A woman may find herself lying awake at night replaying something someone once said to her—<em>You’re not enough. You should have known better. You ruined everything.</em> Over time those thoughts can begin to feel like truth, even when they are not. They begin to shape how she sees herself, how she walks into a room, how she receives love, and even how she approaches God. What began as a moment of pain can slowly become a script that repeats in the background of everyday life.</p><p><br/></p><p>Many women encounter these toxic thoughts in very ordinary moments. A mother may hear them when she feels she has failed her children. A woman rebuilding after divorce may hear them when she wonders whether she will ever be loved again. A survivor of abuse may hear them when shame tries to rewrite her story and convince her that what happened to her defines who she is. Even in workplaces or churches, women can carry the quiet weight of thoughts that whisper that they are invisible, unworthy, or somehow less than others around them. These thoughts can become exhausting companions, showing up in moments of vulnerability and feeding on fear, regret, and shame.</p><p><br/></p><p>One of the most healing practices we have discovered is not trying to fight these thoughts alone, but learning to invite God into them. Instead of pushing the thought away or pretending it is not there, a woman can bring it into prayer and simply say, “Lord, this thought is here again. Will you sit with me in it?” There is something deeply disarming about allowing God to hold the thought with you. When the lie is no longer hidden or carried alone, it begins to lose some of its power. The presence of God changes the space around the thought. What once felt overwhelming begins to soften when it is held in His light.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is where the meditation on the Armor of God becomes meaningful. The armor described in Ephesians is not simply a symbolic list of spiritual tools; it is a way of remembering truths that steady us when our minds are under siege. As a woman slowly reflects on each piece—the belt of truth, the breastplate of righteousness, the shoes of peace, the shield of faith, the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit—she is gently replacing the lie with something stronger. Each piece represents a truth about who God is and who she is in Him. When those truths are embraced, the toxic thought begins to lose its authority. It no longer stands alone in her mind; it is now surrounded by truth.</p><p><br/></p><p>Imagine a woman who carries the lingering belief that she is somehow broken beyond repair because of what she has endured. When she sits with God in that thought, she may begin to remember that righteousness was never something she had to earn—it was given to her. The breastplate of righteousness reminds her that her worth does not depend on perfection. Another woman may carry the belief that she will never find peace again after trauma or betrayal. The shoes of peace remind her that God does not ask her to stand in chaos forever; He prepares a path where peace becomes possible again, step by step. The shield of faith reminds her that even when she cannot yet see the outcome of her healing, God has already been faithful in ways she can remember.</p><p><br/></p><p>Over time, something beautiful begins to happen. The lie that once felt immovable starts to loosen its grip. What once echoed loudly in the mind begins to fade as the truths of God become more familiar and steady. The sword of the Spirit—the Word of God—becomes the moment when a woman is able to gently speak truth back to the lie. Not with anger or force, but with quiet confidence. She begins to recognize that the thought that once controlled her does not belong to her story anymore.</p><p><br/></p><p>Perhaps the most surprising part of this journey is what God does with the thought once it has been surrendered. God does not simply remove the pain and discard it. Instead, He transforms it. What once felt heavy and shameful can become a place of wisdom, compassion, and strength. A thought that once said <em>you are unworthy</em> may return as a new understanding that <em>you are deeply loved despite everything you have carried.</em> A memory that once felt like proof of failure may become a testimony of resilience and grace.</p><p><br/></p><p>In the language of faith, this transformed understanding can become a <strong>rhema</strong>—a personal word from God that speaks directly to the heart. It is not just a general truth anymore; it is something that has been lived through, wrestled with, and redeemed. It becomes a message that a woman can hold onto the next time a toxic thought tries to return. Instead of being caught off guard, she can remember what God has already revealed to her.</p><p><br/></p><p>In the meditation we practice, we imagine that this rhema—this personal truth—is placed on the belt of truth like a small reminder carried into the future. The belt of truth becomes a place where the lessons of healing are held close. Each time a lie returns, she can reach for what God has already spoken and remember that the lie has already been answered.</p><p><br/></p><p>Healing from toxic thoughts rarely happens in a single moment. It is often a slow and patient process of allowing truth to take root where lies once lived. But when God is invited into the process, the battlefield of the mind begins to change. The thoughts that once controlled a woman’s story no longer get the final word. Instead, they become the very places where God reveals something precious—something good and pure that was hidden beneath the pain all along.</p><p><br/></p><p>And the next time a toxic thought comes crashing into her life, she will not face it empty-handed. She will stand in truth, surrounded by grace, holding the quiet assurance that the same God who transformed that thought once before is still walking with her now.</p><p><br/></p><p></p><div><p>Transforming toxic thoughts is something we help women learn to do during every phase of their healing journey with us.</p><p><br/></p><p>We begin confronting these thoughts in <strong>Phase 1</strong>, where women are introduced to the truth that they are not defined by their trauma and that healing is possible. In <strong>Phase 2</strong>, we challenge the belief that God caused their suffering, helping women recognize that trauma is the result of human brokenness—not the will of a loving God. In <strong>Phase 3</strong>, women are invited to reconnect with emotions they may have been taught were too much, too inconvenient, or unacceptable. Instead of suppressing those feelings, we learn to acknowledge them honestly and bring them into safe spaces where they can be processed.</p><p><br/></p><p>This work continues as we <strong>Sit With Our Trauma</strong>, the first stage of healing. During this time, women begin learning to name what happened and recognize how trauma has shaped their thoughts and beliefs. We then move into the second stage of healing, <strong>Processing Our Trauma</strong>, where deeper transformation begins to take place. Here we confront the shame that has shackled many of us for years and prevented us from recognizing our belovedness in Christ. We learn that anger is not a forbidden emotion meant to be suppressed, but an important signal that something unjust has occurred. When guided by wisdom and grounded in truth, anger can help us pursue justice, establish boundaries, and restore what has been wrongfully taken from us.</p><p><br/></p><p>During this phase of healing we also learn to challenge the false beliefs trauma has planted in our minds—beliefs about our worth, our safety, and even about God Himself. We begin to grieve the full weight of what we have lost: not the minimized version of our story that others may have expected us to accept, but the honest and complete reality of our experience.</p><p><br/></p><p>Finally, as we move into the last stage of healing, <strong>Moving Beyond Our Trauma</strong>, our relationship with these thoughts begins to change. By this point, many of the deeply ingrained beliefs have already been confronted and replaced with truth. What remain are the sudden, sharp thoughts that try to stop us in our tracks—the intrusive reminders that attempt to derail our pursuit of health, joy, and the life God intends us to live.</p><p><br/></p><p>By <strong>Phase 17</strong>, women are learning to recognize these thoughts as they arise and take them captive in the moment. Rather than allowing them to dominate our minds or dictate our choices, we are able to pause, identify the lie, and respond with truth.</p><p>This meditation is one way to begin practicing that process.</p><p><br/></p><p>As you put on the <strong>Armor of God</strong>, consider how each piece of the armor speaks directly to the lies and toxic thoughts you have battled throughout your healing journey. The <strong>Belt of Truth</strong> confronts deception. The <strong>Breastplate of Righteousness</strong> protects your identity and worth. The <strong>Shoes of Peace</strong> ground you in stability rather than fear. The <strong>Shield of Faith</strong> deflects accusations and doubts. The <strong>Helmet of Salvation</strong> guards your mind. And the <strong>Sword of the Spirit</strong>, the Word of God, equips you to challenge falsehood with truth.</p><p><br/></p><p>Over time, you may begin to recognize which pieces of this armor you most need to remember you are wearing when those thoughts come crashing in.</p><p><br/></p><p>Healing from trauma is not quick or effortless. It requires honesty, courage, and compassion toward ourselves. It requires speaking our stories—sometimes first to ourselves, and eventually to others who are safe enough to hear them. It involves tears, acknowledging the weight we have carried, and recognizing how deeply those experiences have affected us.</p><p><br/></p><p>Most of all, healing requires <strong>time</strong>.</p><p>Time to cultivate safety.<br/> Time to learn how our bodies and minds respond to trauma.<br/> Time to slowly transform survival responses into healthy responses within safe relationships and environments.</p><p><br/></p><p>And it also requires grace for ourselves in the moments when we are not safe. Trauma responses are not failures—they are evidence that our bodies learned how to survive.</p><p><br/></p><p>You were not weak.<br/> You were surviving.</p><p><br/></p><p>If you do not yet have a safe community of women to walk with you through this healing journey, we invite you to join us. Whether by attending one of our groups or allowing us to help you start a group in your community, we would be honored to walk alongside you.</p><p><br/></p><p>Because your story matters.<br/> Your healing matters.<br/> And you are worth the journey.</p></div><p></p></div><p></p></div>
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</div></div></div></div></div></div> ]]></content:encoded><pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 20:35:08 +0000</pubDate></item><item><title><![CDATA[Responsibility Beyond Trauma: From Survival to a Chosen Life]]></title><link>https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/blogs/post/Responsibility-Beyond-Trauma-From-Survival-to-a-Chosen-Life</link><description><![CDATA[<img align="left" hspace="5" src="https://phasingoutoftrauma.zohosites.com/Phase 15 Teaching Topic Image.png"/>This Phase Topic Teaching explores responsibility beyond survival, examining how agency, accountability, and forgiveness develop as trauma healing unfolds. Drawing from Scripture and trauma experts, it helps translate recovery into daily, embodied living.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="zpcontent-container blogpost-container "><div data-element-id="elm_bJSMXssjTfSH67Mh43BXZw" data-element-type="section" class="zpsection "><style type="text/css"></style><div class="zpcontainer-fluid zpcontainer"><div data-element-id="elm_0NCwHPVaRFeYVRhZq1Okcw" data-element-type="row" class="zprow zprow-container zpalign-items- zpjustify-content- " data-equal-column=""><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_El8CZT8TSPOOHX6GkvL5ZQ" data-element-type="column" class="zpelem-col zpcol-12 zpcol-md-12 zpcol-sm-12 zpalign-self- "><style type="text/css"></style><div data-element-id="elm_AQPTnBIi27HjBxr4ZSnmDQ" data-element-type="image" class="zpelement zpelem-image "><style> @media (min-width: 992px) { [data-element-id="elm_AQPTnBIi27HjBxr4ZSnmDQ"] .zpimage-container figure img { width: 500px ; height: 750.00px ; } } </style><div data-caption-color="" data-size-tablet="" data-size-mobile="" data-align="center" data-tablet-image-separate="false" data-mobile-image-separate="false" class="zpimage-container zpimage-align-center zpimage-tablet-align-center zpimage-mobile-align-center zpimage-size-medium zpimage-tablet-fallback-fit zpimage-mobile-fallback-fit hb-lightbox " data-lightbox-options="
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</div><div data-element-id="elm_BcC9ayJwQIudsEmT-qCtPQ" data-element-type="heading" class="zpelement zpelem-heading "><style></style><h2
 class="zpheading zpheading-align-center zpheading-align-mobile-center zpheading-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><span><span><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>God's Invitation to Welcome Responsibility</strong></span></span></span></h2></div>
<div data-element-id="elm_ZAX6YTPuQQu-hosGdZNy9g" data-element-type="text" class="zpelement zpelem-text "><style></style><div class="zptext zptext-align-center zptext-align-mobile-center zptext-align-tablet-center " data-editor="true"><p></p><div><p style="text-align:justify;">For many women, the word <em>responsibility</em> doesn’t arrive as a neutral concept. It carries memory. It can echo voices that demanded too much before safety was ever established, or moments when blame was cloaked in moral or spiritual language and handed to someone who was already overwhelmed. Responsibility can feel like pressure added to a life that has long been shaped by endurance rather than choice.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>In trauma recovery, responsibility has to be reclaimed carefully—not discarded, and never weaponized. When held rightly, responsibility does not crush the wounded. It restores dignity. It returns agency to women who learned how to survive without it, and it opens the door to something many have not experienced in a long time: the ability to choose their lives with intention rather than simply endure them.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is why the question Jesus asks—<em>“Do you want to be made well?”</em> (John 5:6)—is so significant. It is not an accusation or a demand. It is an invitation into partnership. It honors suffering while also awakening agency. Responsibility, in this sense, is not about blame or earning healing; it is about responding to the possibility of restoration. And when a woman begins to answer that question for herself, responsibility becomes one of the clearest signs that she is no longer living only in survival, but stepping into a life that is being consciously—and courageously—chosen.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility Begins With the Choice to Heal — The First Act of Agency</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>For many women who enter <em>Phasing Out of Trauma</em>, the first meaningful responsibility they take is not moral or relational—it is internal. It is the quiet but courageous decision to show up. To name pain rather than continue burying it. To engage a process instead of enduring in silence. To stop waiting for rescue and begin participating in their own restoration. This choice may not look dramatic from the outside, but it is profound, because trauma so often strips people of agency, teaching passivity, hyper-adaptation, or disappearance as the safest ways to survive.</p><p><br/></p><p>Healing begins when a woman makes a different kind of decision—one that may feel small but carries enormous weight. She decides, sometimes for the first time, <em>I will no longer abandon myself.</em> That decision is the first true act of agency. It is not about fixing everything or knowing what comes next; it is about choosing presence over absence and honesty over numbing.</p><p><br/></p><p><span>This is why that earlier question Jesus asks carries so much weight. It is not about worthiness or pressure, and it is never coercive. God does not force healing on us, nor does He rush our readiness. Instead, He continually invites us—day by day, and often moment by moment—into participation. Taking responsibility for healing means choosing, again and again, to stay engaged in the journey: to return when we feel overwhelmed, to reach for support when we want to withdraw, to practice what restores us even when it feels slow. This kind of responsibility is not about getting it right; it is about remaining present. It is the doorway through which agency keeps returning, one choice at a time, as we continue walking the path of healing with God.</span></p><p><span><br/></span></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>The Trauma You Live With Was Not Your Fault</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div><p style="text-align:justify;">Before responsibility can widen or deepen, one truth must be stated clearly and without qualification: <strong>the trauma you are living with is not your fault</strong>. Trauma does not arise from personal weakness or failure. It emerges from experiences where power was misused, boundaries were violated, protection failed, or harm was allowed to continue. Abuse, neglect, betrayal, violence, and injustice do not happen in isolation, and they do not happen without responsibility belonging somewhere outside the survivor.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Trauma experts have been unequivocal on this point. <strong><span>Bessel van der Kolk</span></strong> reminds us that trauma is not defined by what is “wrong” with a person, but by <em>what happened to them</em> and how their body and nervous system adapted to survive. Survival responses—freezing, appeasing, dissociating, enduring—are not moral failures; they are biological and psychological strategies that kept a person alive. Naming this clearly is not avoidance of responsibility; it is the foundation of healing.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Moral clarity matters because when responsibility is misassigned, harm multiplies. Survivors end up carrying guilt that does not belong to them, while those who caused harm—or benefited from silence—remain unexamined. This distortion does not heal trauma; it compounds it. Scripture itself refuses this confusion, reminding us that God “rescues the weak and the needy” and does not confuse the victim with the offender (Psalm 82:4). Healing requires that truth be told plainly.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">This pattern of misplaced responsibility is explored in <em><span>Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me)</span></em>, where the authors explain how human beings instinctively avoid accountability in order to protect their self-image. Denial, minimization, and rationalization allow harm to remain unaddressed and unresolved. For survivors, understanding this dynamic can be profoundly stabilizing—it clarifies that the weight they have carried was never meant to be theirs alone.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">This is why learning to distinguish <em>what is not yours to carry</em> is as essential as learning what is. Healing requires responsibility to be accurately placed—neither inflated through false guilt nor erased through denial. When responsibility is named truthfully, survivors are freed from self-blame, and the path forward becomes clearer, steadier, and grounded in reality rather than shame.</p><p style="text-align:justify;"><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Taking Responsibility for How We Lived While Surviving</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As safety and capacity grow, many women arrive at a tender and often surprising realization: <strong>survival shaped them</strong>. Not just internally, but practically. Trauma does not only leave memories behind; it leaves patterns. It teaches the body and mind how to get through what felt impossible at the time.</p><p><br/></p><p>For some women, that meant learning to withdraw—to stay small, quiet, or unseen because visibility once felt dangerous. For others, it meant hyper-control: managing everything and everyone because unpredictability was terrifying. Some learned to people-please to preserve connection, to numb emotions to survive overwhelm, or to stay in a constant state of alertness because danger once arrived without warning. These behaviors were not random. They were intelligent, adaptive responses to unsafe environments. They helped women endure what could not be changed.</p><p><br/></p><p>But what once protected can later begin to constrain.</p><p><br/></p><p>As life becomes safer, the same patterns that once kept a woman alive may start to cost her intimacy, peace, or freedom. She may notice that she avoids conflict even when her needs matter, or that she stays guarded in relationships that are no longer threatening. She may realize that anger still flares quickly, or that shutting down has become automatic even when she wants connection. Healing does not require judging these patterns—it allows them to be seen clearly and compassionately.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is where trauma-informed accountability becomes possible. <strong><span>Janina Fisher</span></strong> reminds us that many survival behaviors are <em>protective parts</em> of the self—strategies that developed when there were no better options. Healing invites curiosity rather than condemnation. A woman may gently say, <em>“This made sense then. It kept me safe. And I don’t want to keep living this way now.”</em> That statement alone marks profound growth.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is also where accountability becomes liberating rather than punishing. <strong><span>Dana Coverstone</span></strong> describes accountability as alignment rather than self-attack. Simple accountability does not dramatize failure or demand endless explanation. It names what is true and chooses redirection. It sounds like honesty without humiliation and responsibility without collapse.</p><p><br/></p><p>In trauma recovery, this means understanding <strong>why</strong> a behavior emerged while also acknowledging its <strong>impact</strong>—on oneself and on others. A woman may recognize that withdrawal once protected her, but now keeps her isolated. She may see that control once created safety, but now strains relationships. Accountability allows her to hold both truths at once. It creates space for change without erasing context, and growth without self-hatred. In that space, responsibility becomes not a burden, but a pathway forward—one that honors the past while making room for a different future.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-weight:bold;font-size:22px;">How Responsibility Brings Health and Safety Into Our Relationships</span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As responsibility deepens, it begins to take relational form. Healing is no longer something that happens only within us; it reshapes how we engage with others, how we repair what can be repaired, and how we protect what must be protected. This is where responsibility becomes practical, embodied, and deeply life-giving.</p><p><br/></p><p>In this stage of healing, confession—rightly understood—becomes a tool for creating greater health, not a requirement for exposure. In <em><span>The Art of Confession</span></em>, <strong><span>Paul Wilkes</span></strong> reframes confession as an act of liberation rather than humiliation. Confession, he explains, is not about self-loathing or public self-disclosure; it is about truth that restores integrity and makes forward movement possible. For trauma survivors, this distinction is essential.</p><p><br/></p><p>In supportive, safe relationships, confession can be a powerful way to own harmful actions and demonstrate change. A woman may name how survival patterns—withdrawal, control, reactivity, silence—have impacted others, not to punish herself, but to repair trust. Confession in these spaces sounds like honesty paired with responsibility: <em>This is how I showed up. This is how it affected you. And this is how I am choosing to live differently now.</em> When offered freely and received safely, this kind of confession strengthens connection and signals growth.</p><p><br/></p><p>At the same time, trauma-informed responsibility recognizes that confession is not always meant for every relationship. Many women have histories of being exposed without consent, silenced when they spoke, or harmed further by sharing truth in unsafe spaces. Healing does not require continued vulnerability in relationships that remain dismissive, manipulative, or abusive. In those cases, confession may take a different and equally important form: self-confession.</p><p><br/></p><p>Self-confession allows a woman to name, with clarity and compassion, where she has continued to tolerate harm, override her own needs, or remain in relationships that diminish her well-being. This is not self-blame—it is discernment. Naming these patterns creates the clarity needed to establish boundaries of protection. In this way, responsibility is expressed not through disclosure, but through limits. Through choosing distance instead of exposure. Through saying, <em>I will no longer place myself in harm’s way.</em></p><p><em><br/></em></p><p>Used wisely, confession becomes a marker of maturity rather than vulnerability alone. It helps repair what can be repaired and safeguards what must be protected. It reflects a new kind of responsibility—one that honors growth, values safety, and actively shapes a healthier future. In this way, responsibility does not tether a woman to her past; it equips her to move forward with strength, wisdom, and integrity.</p><p><br/></p></div><p></p><h2>What Trauma Experts Teach About Responsibility</h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>Trauma research consistently confirms what survivors already know in their bodies: <strong>responsibility cannot be demanded before safety exists</strong>. Accountability that arrives too early does not empower—it overwhelms. When the nervous system is still bracing for threat, responsibility feels like danger rather than choice, and expectation feels like pressure rather than invitation. Trauma-informed healing understands that responsibility must be <em>grown</em>, not imposed.</p><p><br/></p><p><strong><span>Bessel van der Kolk</span></strong> has been clear that agency depends on regulation. A nervous system locked in survival mode cannot access meaningful choice. In states of fight, flight, freeze, or collapse, the body is focused on protection, not reflection. From this perspective, responsibility does not begin with behavior correction—it begins with restoring safety in the body. Only when the nervous system settles can a person truly choose, respond, and take ownership in ways that are life-giving rather than self-punishing.</p><p><br/></p><p>Building on this, <strong><span>Janina Fisher</span></strong> emphasizes that healing requires learning to hold oneself accountable <em>without internal attack</em>. Many trauma survivors have highly developed inner critics that confuse responsibility with self-condemnation. Fisher teaches that shame shuts down learning, while curiosity keeps the nervous system open. In healthy healing, responsibility shows up first as awareness—<em>I notice this pattern</em>—then as compassion—<em>I understand why it developed</em>—and eventually as choice—<em>I can respond differently now</em>. Accountability, in this model, is a sign of integration rather than judgment.</p><p><br/></p><p><strong><span>Tim Fletcher</span></strong> adds an important relational dimension to this conversation. Fletcher often speaks about responsibility as one of the clearest indicators that a person is moving out of emotional immaturity and into wholeness. In early trauma recovery, people may externalize responsibility entirely or internalize it excessively. As healing progresses, responsibility becomes more balanced. A person begins to own their emotions, reactions, and choices without taking responsibility for others’ behavior. This shift—owning <em>self</em> while releasing responsibility for <em>others</em>—is a significant marker of emotional health.</p><p><br/></p><p>Similarly, <strong><span>Gabor Maté</span></strong> frames responsibility as inseparable from self-awareness and compassion. Maté teaches that trauma often disconnects people from their authentic needs and boundaries, leading them to override themselves in order to maintain attachment or safety. Healing restores the capacity to take responsibility for one’s inner life—emotions, limits, values—without shame. From this perspective, responsibility expands as a person reconnects with themselves. It becomes less about control and more about alignment with truth.</p><p><br/></p><p>Taken together, these voices offer a consistent message: responsibility is not a prerequisite for healing; it is a <strong>product of healing</strong>. It forms as safety is established, expands as awareness grows, and matures as integration takes place. Trauma-informed responsibility is relationally supported, paced with capacity, and always separated from condemnation. It does not disappear in healing—it becomes one of the clearest signs that healing is actually happening.</p><p><br/></p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility in the Present: The Life Being Chosen Now</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p></p><div style="text-align:justify;"><p>As healing stabilizes, responsibility naturally begins to shift away from the past and toward the present. Earlier in the journey, much of the work centered on understanding what happened, naming harm accurately, and restoring safety. But as capacity grows, a different question starts to rise—not only <em>What happened to me?</em> but <em>How am I living now?</em> This is not a departure from trauma work; it is evidence that healing is taking root.</p><p><br/></p><p>Scripture speaks plainly into this stage when it invites us to “test our own actions.” This is not harsh scrutiny or self-surveillance. It is an invitation to integrity. It reflects a growing ability to look honestly at our lives without collapsing into shame or defensiveness. Responsibility here is no longer about surviving the past; it is about stewarding the present.</p><p><br/></p><p>This is the heart of <strong>Phase 15</strong>: <em>I can take responsibility for my maladaptive behaviors. I seek forgiveness in a way that honors me, honors God, and supports my continued healing.</em> By this stage, women are often able to see how trauma shaped certain patterns—reactivity, avoidance, control, emotional withdrawal, or numbing—and to name them not as character flaws, but as strategies that no longer serve the life they are choosing now.</p><p><br/></p><p>Responsibility in Phase 15 may look like recognizing that anger once protected you, but now damages connection. It may mean acknowledging that people-pleasing helped you stay safe, but now erodes your sense of self. It may involve seeing how shutting down avoided pain, but now blocks intimacy. Taking responsibility does not mean condemning these behaviors; it means owning their impact and choosing differently with the tools and support you now have.</p><p><br/></p><p>Forgiveness at this stage is also reframed. It is not rushed, coerced, or performative. Seeking forgiveness may involve repairing a relationship where it is safe and appropriate—naming harm honestly, taking responsibility without over-explaining, and demonstrating change over time. In other cases, forgiveness may be inward and spiritual: releasing self-condemnation, grieving what those behaviors cost you, and allowing God’s grace to meet you where growth is still unfolding.</p><p><br/></p><p>Just as importantly, Phase 15 honors that forgiveness does not require reconciliation with unsafe people. Responsibility may instead look like setting firmer boundaries, reducing contact, or choosing distance where continued engagement would cause harm. In this way, responsibility honors not only others, but the woman herself—and the healing God is actively cultivating in her.</p><p><br/></p><p>This stage of responsibility is formation, not punishment. Trauma recovery does not remove moral agency; it restores it. Responsibility becomes a sign of freedom—the growing ability to pause instead of react, to choose instead of repeat, and to live in alignment with values rather than survival instincts. As women move through Phase 15, responsibility becomes less about what trauma shaped, and more about who they are becoming as they move beyond it—grounded, discerning, and increasingly free.</p></div><h2><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Responsibility as the Path Into Fullness</strong></span></h2><h2></h2><h2></h2><p>Trauma teaches survival.</p><p>Healing teaches choice.</p><p>And responsibility, rightly held, allows a woman to step into the fullness of who God is restoring her to be.</p><p><br/></p><p style="text-align:justify;">Jesus did not promise mere survival. He promised abundant life. Responsibility is not what chains us to the past — it is what anchors us in the present and opens the future.</p><p><br/></p><h3><span style="font-size:22px;"><strong>Closing Reflection</strong></span></h3><h3></h3><h3></h3><p><em>I am not responsible for what was done to me.</em><br/><em>I am responsible for how I live now.</em></p><p><em>With God’s help, I choose healing.</em><br/><em>I choose integrity.</em><br/><em>I choose life.</em></p></div><p></p></div>
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