Dissociative identity disorder is often rooted in chronic childhood trauma. Repeated abuse, neglect, and attachment disruptions can fragment a growing mind. Healing is possible.
For many people living with anxiety, depression, trauma, or chronic stress, an emotional support animal feels less like a pet and more like a lifeline. Owners often describe feeling calmer, safer, or ...
Veteran-informed resilience tools presented at two NASPA conferences show how insights from military transition can ...
What a senior golden retriever does to cope with past trauma has left the internet heartbroken. Cathy Hoyt ( @lifewithduke2025) has shared a video of her rescue dog Duke resource guarding a wicket ...
John J. Malm & Associates is proud to announce that the firm has secured a settlement for the policy limits of $300,000 on behalf of an Illinois woman who sustained severe and life-threatening ...
Children living through the latest war in the Middle East or seeing images of the conflict may need help making sense of events that ...
Every family is different, but there are specific common reasons why parents might distance themselves from their grown kids. Some are healthy while others may not be.
Dr. Kimber Olson discusses burnout, the limits of trauma-informed training, and how Juniper & Pine Consulting uses Original Instructions to help tribal leaders redesign dysregulated systems.
Childhood trauma does not inevitably lead to poor outcomes in adulthood, new research from UNSW Sydney has found—and many ...
Parents often want to give their children what they never had. But unresolved trauma can shape parenting in ways we don’t ...
Small changes in language and classroom routines can increase connection and improve learning for young students.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results