Grounding techniques bring attention back to the present moment when traumatic brain injury pulls you into past fears or future worries.
Why Grounding Works for Traumatic Brain Injury
When traumatic brain injury is acute, the nervous system is in threat mode — focused on past or future rather than present reality. Grounding interrupts this by anchoring to sensory present-moment experience.
The 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding for Traumatic Brain Injury
Name: 5 things you see, 4 you can touch, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste. This engages all senses in present-moment reality, directly counteracting traumatic brain injury's time-travel.
Physical Grounding for Traumatic Brain Injury
- Temperature: Ice cube in hand, cold water on face — strong sensory input overrides traumatic brain injury
- Movement: Rhythmic bilateral movement (walking, tapping) regulates the nervous system
- Pressure: Weighted blanket, firm grip on a chair — activates parasympathetic system
Cognitive Grounding for Traumatic Brain Injury
- Name the date, time, location
- Count backwards from 100 by 7s
- Name all items of a specific category
These engage prefrontal cortex, which reduces amygdala reactivity driving traumatic brain injury.