Integrative Trauma-Informed Therapy
What Is Integrative Trauma-Informed Therapy?
At The Art of Becoming, psychotherapy is provided through an integrative, trauma-informed approach grounded in established, evidence-based therapeutic modalities and ethical standards of practice.
We work integratively, meaning that treatment is not limited to a single method. Instead, therapy draws from multiple clinically recognized approaches and is adapted intentionally based on each client’s needs, goals, and readiness. Interventions are selected using professional clinical judgment and are applied within a collaborative, consent-based therapeutic relationship.
The Feel · Heal · Become Framework
A state-responsive integrative model
The Feel · Heal · Become framework is an original integrative model developed by The Art of Becoming to guide how different therapeutic approaches are introduced across phases of care. The framework does not replace established therapies; rather, it organizes and integrates them in a way that is responsive to internal state, nervous system capacity, and therapeutic timing.
The Feel · Heal · Become framework recognizes that different therapeutic approaches are appropriate for different internal states. Therapy shifts between stabilization, processing, and integration based on readiness rather than a fixed sequence.
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When stress or trauma responses are active, the nervous system may prioritize protection over insight. In this state, therapy focuses on helping you notice and tolerate experience without becoming overwhelmed.
Focus:
Emotional and nervous system regulation
Awareness without intensity
Increased capacity to stay present
Approaches that may be integrated:
Somatic and bottom-up regulation strategies
Mindfulness-based awareness practices
DBT-informed skills for distress tolerance and emotion regulation
IFS-informed (parts-based) work to understand protective responses
Psychoeducation related to stress and trauma
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When sufficient regulation and internal safety are present, therapy may support the processing and integration of distressing or traumatic experiences that continue to affect daily life.
Focus:
Reducing reactivity
Increasing flexibility and choice
Integrating past experience into present awareness
Approaches that may be integrated:
EMDR therapy for reprocessing traumatic or distressing memories
IFS-informed interventions for burdened emotional or protective parts
CBT-informed strategies to examine unhelpful patterns of thought
Somatic processing to support completion of stress responses
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As integration occurs, therapy often shifts toward meaning, identity, and values-based living.
Focus:
Identity and values clarification
Meaning-making and coherence
Applying insight in daily life
Approaches that may be integrated:
ACT-informed work for values-based action
Spiritually Integrated Therapy, when relevant and desired
Mindfulness and reflective practices for self-compassion
Relational and attachment-focused work
Who This Approach May Support
This therapy may be appropriate if you are experiencing:
Trauma-related distress or emotional dysregulation
Anxiety, burnout, or chronic stress
Grief, loss, or major life transitions
Persistent self-criticism, avoidance, or people-pleasing patterns
Suitability is discussed during consultation.