UncategorizedRecognizing Trauma Bonds in Clinical Practice (For Psychotherapists)
Illustration representing trauma bonds and relational attachment dynamics.

Recognizing Trauma Bonds in Clinical Practice (For Psychotherapists)

Many survivors return to abusive partners, leaving novice therapists confused. This is not failure—it’s the power of trauma bonding.

What Is a Trauma Bond?

Trauma bonds form when cycles of abuse and affection mimic addiction. Survivors become hooked on the intermittent rewards of love-bombing, even as they suffer harm.

Clinical Work

Teach supervisees to frame trauma bonding like addiction recovery:
• Relapse is common.
• Shame makes it worse.
• Compassion and relapse-prevention tools are key.

Encourage psychoeducation and grief work, helping clients mourn the person the abuser pretended to be.

👉 At Soteldo Psychotherapy Clinic, we train psychotherapists to recognize trauma bonds and guide survivors through breaking free.