Avoidance and its Role in Trauma
- Katherine Mackenzie
- Dec 11, 2024
- 3 min read
Updated: 2 days ago
Avoidance is one of the most common and yet most misunderstood symptom clusters of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
It is often a deeply rooted survival strategy that has been developed early in life to protect against overwhelming or threatening experiences. While it can be effective in the short term for minimizing distress and keeping uncomfortable feelings at an arms length, it often becomes wired into the nervous system as the default coping mechanism.
Over time, this pattern can interfere with healing, preventing the brain and body from fully processing the trauma and reinforcing the sense that the threat is still present and contribute to the persistence of trauma symptoms.
What Is Avoidance?
Avoidance in the context of trauma refers to efforts to prevent thoughts, emotions, bodily sensations, or external reminders associated with a traumatic event.
According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), avoidance is one of the key diagnostic criteria for PTSD and includes:
Avoidance of distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings about or closely associated with the traumatic events.
Avoidance of external reminders (people, places, conversations, activities, objects, or situations) that arouse distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings.
These behaviors can be conscious or unconscious, and while they may bring short-term relief, they ultimately reinforce the belief that trauma-related stimuli are dangerous or unbearable (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
Why Avoidance Develops
Avoidance is often a natural extension of our fight-flight-freeze response. When faced with overwhelming fear or helplessness, the brain and body quickly learn to steer away from anything associated with the trauma. For some individuals, particularly those who already relied on avoidance as a coping mechanism prior to the trauma, this pattern becomes more deeply entrenched.
The International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD) notes that avoidance can begin as a protective strategy in childhood, especially in individuals with complex trauma histories, and can become more rigid and unconscious over time (ISSTD Guidelines, 2011).
Persistent avoidance prevents emotional processing and integration, keeping the traumatic memory "stuck" in an activated state. This can lead to ongoing hyperarousal, emotional dysregulation, and a persistent sense of threat.
Examples of Avoidance Behaviours
Avoidance can take many forms, and not all are obvious.
Examples include:
Avoiding certain places, people, or situations that remind you of the trauma
Refusing to talk or think about what happened
Emotional numbing or shutting down
Distracting through overwork, perfectionism, or caretaking
Using substances or engaging in risky behavior to disconnect
Dissociation or "spacing out" when feelings get too intense
Avoiding therapy or healing practices altogether
How Avoidance Impacts Recovery
Avoidance may seem helpful at first—it gives a sense of control and can reduce distress in the moment. But in the long term, it blocks the natural recovery process. When trauma reminders are consistently avoided, the brain never has the opportunity to learn that these cues are no longer dangerous. This reinforces the body’s fear responses and keeps the trauma stored as if it is still happening.
The ISSTD explains that prolonged avoidance also contributes to emotional isolation, interpersonal difficulties, and a fractured sense of identity. Avoidance can become a self-fulfilling cycle: the more you avoid, the more threatening the world seems, and the less capable you feel of handling it.
Healing Beyond Avoidance
Trauma-informed therapies gently help clients reduce avoidance and build internal capacity to face difficult memories and feelings. Successful trauma treatment helps individuals develop a sense of safety, agency, and embodiment—necessary foundations for engaging with the avoided material.
Learning to identify and interrupt avoidance patterns is a core part of PTSD recovery. This can include:
Naming what you tend to avoid and why
Building tolerance for emotional discomfort in safe, titrated ways
Practicing grounding and regulation skills
Creating a compassionate, nonjudgmental relationship with yourself
In Summary
Avoidance is not a flaw—it’s a protective response that may have once kept you safe. But when avoidance becomes the default mode of living, it traps you in the past. Understanding how avoidance works in the brain and body is the first step to gently dismantling it and reclaiming your present.
With the right support, you can begin to feel emotions safely, reengage with the world, and rewrite the nervous system’s story from one of danger to one of resilience.
References:
American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed.).
International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD). (2011). Guidelines for Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder in Adults, Third Revision.