We need to take care of ourselves when we work with people who have experienced trauma. The effects of those experiences on them can affect us, too. They can cause us to experience vicarious trauma. They can also bring back — or trigger — the effects of trauma that we may have experienced in our own lives.
Head Start managers and staff can explore this brief to enhance their knowledge about the importance of caring for themselves as they care for others. Learn about reactions to others' trauma and how to respond.
We need to take care of ourselves when we work with people who have experienced trauma. The effects of those experiences on them can affect us, too. They can cause us to experience vicarious trauma. They can also bring back—or trigger—the effects of trauma that we may have experienced in our own lives.
Understanding Vicarious Trauma
When we work with families who have experienced trauma, we may be deeply affected by their pain, anxiety, and other strong feelings. The result may be vicarious trauma.
Vicarious trauma is a natural reaction. It is our own emotional reaction to the helplessness, fear, and hopelessness that other people who have experienced trauma often feel. Vicarious trauma can leave us with similar feelings that can weigh us down and make it difficult for us to relax or experience joy.
We can prepare for these natural reactions and learn to handle them by:
- Honoring our gift of compassion
- Accepting the limits of what we can offer
- Recognizing that our supportive relationship may be more healing than we think
- Finding gratitude for the deeply meaningful work we do
- Seeking connection and comfort in our own relationships
Honoring Our Gift of Compassion
Our ability to feel the pain of others allows us to understand the feelings of others. These feelings are our guide in the work we do with families. They may also stir up our own feelings. This ability can take a toll; yet, it is also a gift. It is an important part of who we are and why we do this work. We may find it helpful to reflect on and value our ability to be compassionate. At the same time, it is important to attend to our own feelings with equal compassion.
Accepting the Limits of What We Can Offer
Because we feel deeply with others, it is natural for us to want to fix things and to make everything better, even when we can't. We may hold ourselves responsible for changing things that are not in our control. We may feel guilty about not being able to do so.
We can learn to:
- Notice these thoughts and how they sap the energy we need for this work
- Protect ourselves from guilty feelings that we do not deserve
- Save our energy to focus on doing everything we can do
We can honor this urge to fix things as an expression of our gift of compassion. As we remind ourselves to focus on what we can do, we can let go of what we cannot do. We can use words like, "I will do everything in my power to do what I can to be with you through this." We are likely to keep wishing that we could do more. We may need to work on giving ourselves permission to let go of what is not in our power.
Recognizing That Our Supportive Relationship May Be More Healing Than We Think
If we feel that we need to fix everything and are distressed by the fact that we can't, we may underestimate the importance of what we can do. For children, families, and staff who have had traumatic experiences, our ability to feel with them may be more powerful than we know. We can invite families into safe and trusting relationships that can provide the comfort and hope they need to heal.
We can connect with others' experiences with a simple, heart-to-heart statement that expresses our commitment to our relationship with them. Before we speak, we can consider cultural differences in the kinds of feelings about traumatic experiences that are expressed and how they are expressed. We can simply say, for example, "I will do my best to understand and to stay in this with you, no matter what."
It may not be helpful to say, "I know how you feel." Often, we cannot know what another person's experience is like. Families may not find it helpful to hear, "You must feel so …" We want to be careful not to make assumptions. We want to welcome whatever the person is actually feeling.
Finding Gratitude for the Deeply Meaningful Work We Do
The work we do is hard. When we struggle with our feelings of not being able to make everything better, it can be helpful for us to focus on what we can do. Working with children, families, and staff who have experienced trauma has purpose. Creating safety, building trust, and offering reliability, predictability, and consistency are things we do every day that help families heal. We can remind ourselves that we do hard work and that we have the reward of work that really matters.
Seeking Connection and Comfort in Our Own Relationships
The children, families, and staff we work with find comfort in connecting with us. We, too, need people in our lives whom we can turn to with our full range of feelings. All of us need at least one person who cares about us. We all need one person who can listen to and accept all of our feelings, and who reminds us that we are not alone.
Relationships outside of work may allow us to think, feel, and do things that are not related to the emotions we bear with the families we work with. It can help to be with people who bring us something else to focus on, a fresh perspective, humor, or peace.
Understanding Trauma Triggers
If we have experienced trauma in our own lives, we may still be trying to understand how it has affected us. We may find that we feel the effects of that experience when we work with families who have experienced trauma. We may notice specific things that children, parents, or other staff do or say that make us think about what happened to us.
We may have thoughts and feelings that are similar to the ones we had when we experienced trauma. For example, we may see more danger than there really is when a child loses control, or when a parent is angry. Others' behaviors may make us think about the person who hurt us, or the moment when we were hurt. These are all referred to as "trauma triggers."
We may not always be aware that some of the feelings we have are connected to our own past experiences. If we are not aware of the connection between what just happened now and what happened to us previously, we may feel frightened and confused without understanding why.
Those of us who belong to racial or ethnic groups that have experienced historical trauma, such as slavery or genocide, often continue to experience trauma caused by racism, prejudice, and discrimination. These may include, for example, overt or subtle policies or practices that exclude or harm those of us who are identified with these groups. Other examples include prejudicial statements by people who may be either intentionally hateful or well-meaning and unaware of the hurt they cause.
Each new traumatic experience can be a trigger for prior ones in our own lives. Each one may also remind us of the historical trauma that our people have experienced and that our families have taught us about. Retraumatizing experiences can bring back a sense of danger, powerlessness, and loss of our own control over defining who we really are.
Common examples of trauma triggers can include:
- People or places
- Times of the year or holidays
- Certain kinds of weather
- Songs
- Separations, losses, or new traumatic experiences that bring back the memories of old trauma
- Parenting a child who is the age we were at the time of our traumatic experience
- Racist statements or acts
Common examples of experiences resulting from trauma triggers can include:
- Flashbacks — powerful memories or visions of the traumatic experience, along with the feelings of fear at that moment
- Panic attacks — heart pounding, skin flushing, breaking out into a sweat, breathing hard and fast, and the feeling that something terrible is about to happen
- Dissociation — zoning out, losing track of time, and not being able to stay in and process the present moment
Other common reactions to trauma triggers could include:
- Perceiving more danger than there really is—for example, when a child loses control or when a parent is angry
- Retreating into our thoughts about the trauma, becoming preoccupied with these thoughts, and having trouble staying present or thinking about anything else
- Feeling the urge to blurt out what happened to us
- Feeling like disappearing or rushing away from the immediate situation
- Pulling away from others when there is conflict—real or perceived
- Rejecting the help we need because it is difficult for us to trust it
About Trigger Responses
Trigger responses can seem to sneak up and take control of our thoughts and behavior. Yet, there are often patterns to these reactions. We can learn to recognize how trauma triggers affect us. Here are a few things we can do to settle down reactions like these:
- Become familiar with trauma triggers and trigger responses. This can make them less frightening, whether we're the person experiencing them or observing them.
- Learn to recognize the triggers and predict the thoughts and feelings they set off. This can help create a greater sense of control over them.
- Focus on sources of safety and protection in the present. This can be helpful when re-experiencing traumatic events brings back past feelings of being in danger.
For those of us who experience trauma related to our race or ethnicity, it helps to talk about what we are feeling with people who will truly understand right away and without explanation. It can also help to consider whether we want to use these feelings in constructive ways to right the wrongs we have experienced.
Coping with Trauma Triggers
Recognize the Feelings That Accompany Trauma Triggers
There are many ways to handle our reactions to trauma triggers. We can start by learning to recognize the feelings we have that can occur with trauma triggers. For example, these feelings might include suddenly experiencing intense fear or anxiety; shutting down and going silent; or wanting to get away from the situation. We may discover that we have had feelings like these when we were triggered. In those moments, we may not have been aware of the connection between those feelings and what happened to us in the past.
Prepare for Triggers by Identifying When They Are Most Likely to Happen
We can identify and anticipate events and interactions that may be triggers. We can prepare ourselves for them and feel more in control. This can help us feel more confident that we will not be caught off guard. We can learn about the things that trigger us and our reactions to them.
As we do, we may find that these memories, thoughts, and feelings no longer seem to sneak up on us and take control of our behavior. When we can see those thoughts and feelings coming, we can make a decision about what we want to do with them. An important part of healing is this sense of mastery—of reclaiming control over what we think, feel, and do.
Make a Plan for Self-care for When Triggers Occur
One way to be prepared is to be ready to take a break and ask for help when we experience a trauma trigger. We can plan in advance what we will say if we find we need to pause a conversation with another staff member or a family. For example, we might say, "This conversation is really important to me, but I need to attend to another very important matter right now. I'll be back as soon as I can."
We may find that simply finding a quiet, private spot where we can take some deep breaths and shift our thoughts back to the present is enough to settle ourselves. We may also want to plan in advance with a supervisor to have someone available who can back us up at times like these. If we need more than a quiet moment, we can try other coping strategies that we already know work for us. Examples may include getting in touch with a friend or loved one, taking a short walk outside, and looking for the positive elements in the situation.
Staff and supervisors can support each other to take the time each may need to settle themselves after being triggered by trauma.
Seek Out Additional Supports
We may find that flashbacks, panic attacks, re-experiences of the trauma, and other effects of what happened to us are making it difficult for us to be with families, or to live our lives in the way we want. If this happens, we can look for a mental health professional who can help us heal. We can remember that the healing road to recovery will have bumps along the way. Setbacks do not mean that we cannot heal or that we have failed. They are part of the healing process.
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Resource Type: Publication
National Centers: Parent, Family and Community Engagement
Audience: Family Service Workers
Last Updated: April 2, 2024