Trauma-informed care fundamentally shifts the approach to self-sabotage — recognizing that most self-sabotage has trauma roots that require specific attention.
What Trauma-Informed Care Means for Self-Sabotage
Trauma-informed care for self-sabotage is organized around core principles:
- Safety: Creating physical and emotional safety before exploring self-sabotage
- Trustworthiness: Consistent, predictable care relationships
- Choice: Supporting client control over self-sabotage treatment decisions
- Collaboration: Partnership rather than hierarchy in self-sabotage treatment
- Empowerment: Building strengths alongside addressing self-sabotage
Why Trauma-Informed Self-Sabotage Treatment Is Different
Standard self-sabotage treatment often focuses on symptom reduction. Trauma-informed care asks: what happened that created these self-sabotage symptoms? Addressing roots produces more lasting change.
Finding Trauma-Informed Self-Sabotage Care
Ask prospective therapists: 'What is your training in trauma-informed care?' and 'How do you integrate trauma awareness into self-sabotage treatment?'