I truly believe that no coach wakes up thinking, “Yep, let’s mess with someone else’s mental health today.” We don’t intentionally set out to retraumatise our clients.
But here’s the truth: just because you don’t mean to retraumatise someone doesn’t mean you can’t accidentally do it. This is why trauma-informed coaching is so important.
Trauma itself isn’t about the external event. It’s about what happens inside the body. When your nervous system fires up to keep you safe and that energy doesn’t get discharged, it stays stored. That charge is just waiting to be activated the next time your body senses you might be unsafe.
Example: Imagine a car accident. You’re frozen in the seat, your body shaking. Someone pulls you out and reassures you, “You’re safe.” They help you breathe, but your body hasn’t yet completed the flood of adrenaline and cortisol. The loop is unfinished. That energy sits inside you, ready to activate again.
This is what retraumatisation can look like: a nervous system response getting re-triggered because safety wasn’t fully established.
As coaches, it’s not our job to pull apart a client’s past trauma story. In fact, even psychologists don’t use “recall therapy” in this way anymore because it can be dangerous. Trauma specialists are trained for that.
Our job is different:
When we do this, we support their healing without retraumatising them.
Why am I talking about this? Because this isn’t just theory for me. I’ve felt the fear of retraumatising my own clients, and I’ve personally experienced what it’s like to be retraumatised in a space that didn’t prioritise safety.
I won’t go into the exact story, but here are some simple ways that experience could have been avoided and looking back at this, these pieces can be really simple if held correctly.
Safety isn’t created by saying, “This is a safe space.”
It’s co-created through preframes, agreements, and rapport. Clients need to know:
Potential retraumatisation: Body says “I’m unsafe.” Mind says “Push through.” The loop continues.
At one women’s retreat I attended, a male guest facilitator appeared without warning, despite the group including women with sexual trauma histories.
Potential retraumatisation: Nervous systems go on high alert, focusing on survival instead of presence.
Being asked to share your trauma in front of a group without consent can pull someone straight back into the memory.
Potential retraumatisation: Adrenaline and cortisol flood the system, re-opening the trauma loop.
As a facilitator, notice the patterns in the room:
Potential retraumatisation: Reinforcing old patterns and deepening self-abandonment.
Duality point: Don’t make them do the complete opposite, build the safety, the space and look at the human in front of you.
Safety Leads to Breakthroughs
It’s not about forcing breakthroughs. It’s about creating safety. When safety is the priority, breakthroughs happen naturally.
👉 Safety → Breakthroughs
👉 Breakthroughs without safety → potential retraumatisation
This is why trauma-informed coaching matters. Lived experience alone isn’t enough. Certifications, qualifications, and deep training give you the tools to work with clients responsibly.
At the end of the day, safety comes before breakthroughs. This is exactly why Shadow Lab: Depth without Damage exists. It’s a space where you can learn to create depth with your clients while keeping safety at the centre.
I’ll be there as a support coach alongside you, helping you feel confident that you’re guiding transformation without retraumatisation.
The live event is Saturday 20th that is one time event so join us here: Shadow Lab