Healing Trauma Through Connection in Butte, MT

Think about a moment when you were going through something difficult.  What happened when you reached out to a trusted person, and they didn’t understand?  Most people will say this experience is frustrating, upsetting, or lonely.  Now think about a moment you were having a difficult time and the person did get it.  How did that feel?  Many people will say they feel calmer, relieved, understood, and seen.  At our Butte, MT office, as a trauma therapist, I specialize in working with people who have experienced trauma stemming from a lack of support and connection.

A mother fosters secure attachment by interacting with her child in a positive and supportive way.

What is Secure Attachment?

The feeling of being seen, accepted, and connected is the experience of secure attachment.  When a crying infant is picked up and fed, satisfying the pain of hunger, the baby feels a secure connection.  When a toddler falls and skins his knee, he might reach out to a nearby caregiver for comfort.  A gentle hug and cleanup of the injury tell the child his feelings matter in that moment.  When a teen texts a parent and says, “I made the team!” and the parent says, “I’m so proud of you,” there is security in the relationship.  These moments are examples that help the growing child become an adult who can emotionally regulate experiences of life.  

A Secure Relationship With a Caregiver Allows Children to Improve Emotional Regulation Throughout Their Lives

I think we can all think of examples from our lives when an adult or caregiver did not provide a secure response.  Sometimes caregivers or adults talked us out of our feelings because the caregiver was uncomfortable with the emotion.  Well-meaning comments like, “Cheer up” or “Don’t be sad” involve asking children to change how they are feeling.  However, it turns out that we learn to regulate our feelings more easily when our emotions are understood.  A secure relationship with a caregiver in childhood improves our ability to emotionally regulate as teens and into adulthood.  

Trauma Experiences and the Role of Connection

There are experiences that can occur in childhood or adulthood that overwhelm our autonomic nervous system.  Trauma is an event that leaves us feeling changed and different from what we were before the event.  Experiences like natural disasters, severe accidents or injuries, loss of loved ones, abuse, or chronic neglect are some examples of traumas. Our autonomic nervous system is wired to keep us connected.  When our nervous system sends cues that we are safe, we are able to be socially engaged with others.  Connection helps us reach out to others for support when we need to emotionally regulate.  However, a traumatic experience can alter the autonomic nervous system to be wired for protection and keep us away from a connection.  When our nervous system detects a threat, we naturally respond with fight, flight, or freeze.  These are protective actions to keep us alive.  

A parent holds their child providing support and connection. Overcome childhood trauma and rekindle family connection with the help of a Trauma Therapist in Butte, MT.

A Loss In Connection Results in Less Secure Relationships

When there is a loss of connection, it’s understandable to see how relationships become less secure.  Trauma is a disrupter of connection, and we need a connection to feel secure.  If we don’t have moments of security to promote attachment, then emotional regulation becomes more difficult.  Helping our autonomic nervous system means repairing connections.  Repairing connection means helping people feel understood, seen, and safe.  

Here are some tips to promote safety, security, and connection in relationships after trauma: 

  • Work to recognize the feeling a person is sharing.

  • Resist the urge to fix things for the person. 

  • Explore opportunities for social connection and engagement such as: playing games, going for a walk, working on a puzzle together, coloring or drawing together, or getting a cup of coffee together.

  • With children, remain present and engaged with the child during play.  Support free play that allows the child to expand their own imagination without interference from caregivers.

  • Support a person learning what promotes feelings of safety (within their environment, within relationships, and within their bodies).

  • Promote feelings of consistency by having predictable routines. 

  • Celebrate and provide positive feedback when the person uses social support for emotional regulation.  

A beautiful family stands together in support of each other representing the healing and connections that can come from Trauma Therapy in Butte, MT.

If You Have Experienced Trauma and Are Ready to Begin the Healing Process, Trauma Therapy in Butte, MT is Here to Support You.


Sarah Bernhardt is serving the Butte community by counseling people of all ages who have experienced trauma, anxiety, depression, attachment-related concerns, and parenting issues. She is trained in EMDR, Child Parent Psychotherapy, Circle of Security-Parenting, Core Sensitives, Polyvagal Theory, and Play Therapy. Sarah is primarily person-centered, and attachment-focused, with elements of cognitive-behavioral therapy and mindfulness.

Make an appointment online

  1. Meet with one of our caring, professional therapists

  2. Begin moving forward on your journey toward healing and self-empowerment!



Additional Online Mental Health Services in Montana

From our Montana counseling clinics, our therapists can help you through a number of issues including anxiety, worry, stress, depression, and more. Our caring team of therapists and professional mental health staff are here for you and your loved ones. Visit us for addiction treatment, group counseling sessions, EMDR and Somatic Experiencing for trauma therapy, body image counseling, opportunities to explore coping patterns, marriage counseling and couples therapy, postpartum depression and anxiety counseling, mindfulness training, workshops, and more tools for client education. In addition to counseling, we also offer psychiatric care. We look forward to talking with you soon!

Designed to Flourish

A lone purple wildflower blooms in the sun representing the resilience of the human spirit. Counseling Services in Butte, MT can help you tap into your inherent potential.

Wildflowers

Where to start? Perhaps it feels easier to start thinking about wildflowers. It’s about this time of year I start to intensely miss the early summer days of bright green and abundant wildflowers. Wildflowers are some of my favorite things. They are designed to flourish. In supportive conditions, they will thrive, blooming bright, and creating beauty by just simply existing. Wildflowers innately contain not just the programming to survive, but the impulse to grow as bright and full as they can. Their growth is not arrogant or selfish, simply a fulfillment of their potential.

Perseverance Through Resilience

Conversely, in dry, hot, obstructive seasons wildflowers lack the conditions needed to reach their potential. It’s not any sort of inherent defect, simply an environmental deficit. They are also resilient, lying in wait under feet of snow all winter and persevering through the summer seasons that are less than ideal. I would suggest, pointing to a developmental neuroscience lens, that in these ways we are the same as wildflowers. Our core self is wired biologically for goodness from the beginning.

Yellow flowers flourish in the sun representing the potential for growth with the help of Counseling Services in Butte, MT.

We Are Programmed For Success

From the get-go we are good. It’s controversial, but we can see evidence for this in our inherent capacity for compassion, connection, clarity, coherence, creativity, confidence, collaboration, and courage. We only need environments that provide us with the conditions in which these core traits can come to fruition. This means, as Hillary McBride frames it, “No one can give it to us, and no one can take it away. We can’t be saved from it, we can’t be so hurt and wounded it is lost forever. It may feel out of reach, but it never disappears forever.” This “it”, our core goodness and impulse to thrive, will not, and cannot leave us, no matter how far from it we may feel.

Our Environment and Experiences Impact Our Ability to Thrive

The conditions needed to thrive as seen in the neuroscience and attachment research are simply safety and attuned relational connection. I write “simply” knowing that they are far too often rare and unavailable to us. And so, in environments lacking safety or attuned relationships or both we develop in different ways. Because like the wildflowers we are resilient, we will survive. However, this survival will often come at a cost and mean developing emotional defensives and even dysregulation in an attempt to protect and support ourselves.

Groups of purple flowers bloom on a mountainside. You too can bloom with the help of Counseling Services in Butte, MT.

We Have the Power to Settle Our Defensives

We can relearn these ways though. Whether it means finding different coping skills or learning to feel and tolerate our feelings in ways that don’t hurt ourselves and others, we have the power to settle our defensives. Because let me repeat again, we cannot lose our core self, it will always be waiting under the defensives. The core self is full of potential waiting to have the space to be known in its goodness.

It is my hope that whether this idea of self feels buried under feet of snow frozen and lost, freshly sprouting, tentative and hopeful, or in full bloom, we might be diligent and persistent in seeking the places that help us to know its truth. The evidence shows that even the inner longing to be able to believe this truth is the very proof that our core self is inside at work and waiting to grow.

Begin Counseling Services in Butte, MT, With Bridger Peaks!

Whether we support you online or in person, we look forward to being part of your journey at our Bozeman, MT trauma counseling clinic. If you still have questions, we would love for you to read our FAQ page as well. Then, to get started, simply:

  1. Make an appointment online

  2. Meet with one of our caring, professional therapists

  3. Begin moving forward on your journey toward healing and self-empowerment!



Additional Online Mental Health Services in Montana

From our Bozeman counseling clinic, our therapists can help you through a number of issues including anxiety, worry, stress, depression, and more. Our caring team of therapists and professional mental health staff are here for you and your loved ones. Visit us for addiction treatment, group counseling sessions, EMDR and Somatic Experiencing for trauma therapy, body image counseling, opportunities to explore coping patterns, marriage counseling and couples therapy, postpartum depression and anxiety counseling, mindfulness training, workshops, and more tools for client education. In addition to counseling, we also offer psychiatric care. We look forward to talking with you soon!