Leaning into the inner child

We are hoping this blog space is a space to reflect and listen to our inner childs. We hope to reflect on identity, history and trauma, embed them in psychological ideas and concepts to provide rich reflective ground to deepen our connection to ourselves and the world around us. 

Fight, Flight, Freeze
Therapists Write What The Body Remembers

As trauma therapists, we spend much of our professional life tracking the nervous system, noticing the quickening breath, the tightening jaw, the gaze that drifts or sharpens or drops. We learn to name patterns in others long before we recognise them in ourselves. Survival responses are something we teach, understand, and work with every day. But they’re also something we live, intimately and often invisibly.

This blog series is an attempt to turn some of that gaze inward.

Across cultures, generations, and families, we are taught what to fight, what to flee, what to silence, and what to surrender. These lessons become muscle memory long before they become language. As clinicians, we’re not exempt from them. If anything, our histories and identities shape the very lenses through which we understand trauma.

So this series isn’t a teaching space. It’s a remembering space. A place where we write from the body, from culture, from the small rebellions and quiet escapes that shaped us long before we had a therapist’s vocabulary for them.

Here we reflect on our own escapes, fights and surrender.

If you’re a fellow therapist, a client, a caregiver, or simply a human who has
ever wondered, “Why did I react like that?”, we hope these reflections offer
resonance, not rules. Curiosity, not conclusions.

This is the work beneath the work.
These are the patterns beneath the practice.
This is what the body remembers — and we are finally slowing down enough to notice.