One of the most common phrases therapists hear from survivors is: “It wasn’t that bad.” Survivors minimize abuse for many reasons: fear of judgment, shame, or simply because they’ve been conditioned to downplay their pain.
Why Minimization Happens
Minimization is often a survival strategy. By convincing themselves “it wasn’t so bad,” survivors managed to stay functional in unbearable circumstances. Now, in the safety of therapy, these beliefs resurface as barriers to healing.
Therapist’s Role
For psychotherapists, the key is gentle validation. Challenge minimization without shaming. Use phrases like: “Even if it wasn’t physical, it still hurt.” Normalize emotional abuse as equally valid trauma.
Healing Step
Survivors must learn that their pain deserves attention, regardless of severity comparisons. Abuse doesn’t need bruises to be real.
👉 At Soteldo Psychotherapy Clinic, we help survivors honor their pain, release shame, and begin deep recovery.


