🧠 When Therapy Isn’t Enough: A Reflective Journey into Psychosomatics

NAAVoices was not created from certainty, but from lived experience and professional insight. As I migrate earlier work from the original platform, this post has been reviewed and approved for transfer. It remains true to its original context, with only minor clarity edits where needed. Some moments do not require rewriting to remain honest.

Earlier this year, I was told I did not meet the threshold for further trauma support.

That sentence stayed with me.

Not because I expected miracles. Not because I believed therapy would undo what had happened. But because when you are already doing everything you can to hold yourself together, being told you do not qualify for more help lands heavily. It can feel less like a clinical decision and more like being quietly told to carry on alone.

I had completed ten weeks of what was meant to be CBT, but it did not help in the way I needed at that time. Looking back, that makes sense. It is hard to process trauma while still living inside the aftermath of it. It is hard to “work on” what happened when your body still feels on alert, your life still feels unstable, and your mind is still trying to survive.

When that support ended, there was no real next step. No clear path. No space to properly make sense of what trauma had done to me, not only emotionally, but physically too.

That experience became a turning point.

I started studying psychology and neurodiversity in mental health because I needed more than short-term coping strategies. I needed understanding. I needed to know why trauma was not just living in my thoughts, but in my body. I needed language for the exhaustion, the fear, the racing heart, the overwhelm, and the strange way the body can keep sounding the alarm long after other people think the danger has passed.

For me, understanding matters. I need to know the why, not just the what. Without that, symptoms can feel frightening and shapeless. I was not looking for an academic answer for the sake of it. I was trying to understand survival.

This is what keeps coming back to me: sometimes therapy is not enough on its own. Sometimes the problem is not that someone is unwilling to heal. It is that their body has been carrying too much, for too long, with too little understanding around it.

When the Body Starts Speaking

Psychosomatics is one of those words that can immediately put people on edge.

Too often, it gets mistaken for “it’s all in your head.” For many people, that sounds dismissive, belittling, or dangerously close to not being believed.

But that is not what it means.

It means the body and mind are deeply connected. It means long-term stress, fear, trauma, grief, and emotional overload can affect the body in real and powerful ways. It means what happens to us emotionally does not stay neatly contained. It can show up through chest pain, dizziness, palpitations, poor sleep, exhaustion, stomach problems, muscle tension, headaches, pain, and countless other symptoms.

The body does not forget simply because a person is trying to cope.

And the body does not separate trauma into tidy boxes just because healthcare systems often do.

The Gap Between Mental Health and Physical Health

One of the things I have seen most clearly, both personally and professionally, is how often physical health and mental health are still treated as though they belong in separate conversations.

On paper, we speak about holistic care, person-centred practice, and joined-up working. In reality, services are stretched, time is limited, and thresholds are high. That means the wider picture is not always explored, even when it should be.

But people do not fall apart in separate categories.

Stress at home affects the body. Fear affects the body. Caring responsibilities affect the body. Trauma affects the body. Living on edge for too long affects the body. So do exhaustion, grief, financial strain, coercion, and emotional isolation.

When those realities are missed, the person behind the symptoms can be missed too.

And that is where harm can quietly deepen.

What Was Missed in My Own Experience

For a long time, I sought help for symptoms including tachycardia, palpitations, dizziness, chest pain, low blood pressure, and ECG changes. I remain grateful that these symptoms were taken seriously and investigated thoroughly. They should have been.

But what was less explored was the context around them.

At the time, no meaningful link was made between what my body was doing and the prolonged stress and trauma I was living through. With hindsight, greater knowledge, and distance from that environment, I can now see that chronic trauma and ongoing stress were likely significant factors in how those symptoms appeared and persisted.

Many improved once I was no longer living in the same circumstances. Some still return when stress becomes intense. That does not mean the symptoms were ever unreal. It means the body had been responding to more than one kind of threat.

That is the part I wish more people understood.

A nervous system under prolonged strain does not simply switch off because someone is trying their best. Survival leaves traces. Sometimes those traces are emotional. Sometimes they are physical. Often they are both.

This is not about blaming individual clinicians. It is about recognising how powerful one question can be:

What else is happening in this person’s life?

Sometimes that question opens a door that blood tests and scans alone cannot reach.

Why Being Believed Matters

One of the hardest parts of trauma is not only what happened. It is what happens afterwards when your reality is minimised, misunderstood, or only partly seen.

That is why language matters so much.

When someone is told “it’s probably stress” without explanation, it can feel like dismissal. But when someone explains that prolonged stress and trauma can affect the nervous system, sleep, pain, digestion, concentration, blood sugar, heart rate, and overall health, that feels different. That feels grounding. That gives shape to what otherwise feels frightening and invisible.

People often need words not because they want a label for the sake of it, but because language can reduce shame. It can replace self-doubt with understanding. It can help someone realise they are not weak, dramatic, or failing. They are responding to what they have lived through.

Validation is not indulgence. It is part of safe, humane care.

What Clinical Practice Keeps Showing Me

Working in healthcare has only deepened this belief.

It is easy, especially under pressure, to focus on the numbers. Blood pressure. Blood sugar. ECG findings. Medication changes. Risk markers. Those things matter. Of course they do.

But people’s lives matter too.

I have seen how quickly physical health can worsen when someone is carrying unseen emotional strain, trauma, caring burdens, or simple relentless exhaustion. Sometimes what looks like poor control or non-engagement is actually overload. Sometimes what looks like someone “not coping well” is the entirely understandable impact of carrying too much with too little support.

Being listened to properly does not solve everything. But it does something important. It reduces shame. It builds trust. It reminds someone they are more than a set of symptoms to be managed.

That should never be underestimated.

The Point I Keep Coming Back To

Psychosomatic understanding should never be used to minimise physical symptoms. It should be used to widen the lens.

The mind and body are not rivals. They are not separate stories. They are part of the same human experience.

Trauma does not only affect thoughts. It affects sleep, energy, heart rate, pain, concentration, appetite, blood sugar, resilience, and recovery. Chronic stress does not just sit quietly in the background. It changes the way a person lives in their body.

That is why this matters.

Take the symptoms seriously.
Take the context seriously.
Take the person seriously.

Because sometimes the most important part of care is not only identifying what is wrong. It is understanding what has happened, what is being carried, and what has been missed.

And sometimes, being truly heard is the first moment healing feels remotely possible.

Let’s Talk

Have your physical symptoms ever been affected by stress, trauma, or overwhelm?

Have you ever felt that part of your story was missed when help was being offered?

What helps people feel believed, understood, and supported?

What would you change about the way healthcare approaches the connection between mind and body?

Trauma and Recovery

Share this page
  • When There Is No Safety Net Coming

    When There Is No Safety Net Coming

    A personal reflection on trauma, grounding, survival, parenting after abuse, and the reality of healing when there is no safety net coming. A NAAVoices story about resilience, nervous system recovery, self-care, and children surviving trauma.

  • Small Acts, Big Impact, Supporting Cancer Research

    Small Acts, Big Impact, Supporting Cancer Research

    Two of my colleagues are fundraising for Cancer Research, combining their frontline experience in general practice with personal lived experience of cancer. This is a cause close to home — support their efforts or share to help make a difference.

  • Two Days That Made the Damage Impossible to Ignore

    Two Days That Made the Damage Impossible to Ignore

    A trauma-informed reflection on PTSD and C-PTSD, exploring hypervigilance, sleep deprivation, institutional triggers, and why healing cannot begin while threat remains. A lived-experience and professional perspective, two years on.

NAAVoices.com — From Survival to Voice

The Journey Behind
NAAVoices

Registered Nurse · Survivor · Neurodivergent · Founder of NAAVoices.com

If you met me at work, you'd see a primary care nurse getting on with the job.

You'd see the clinic lists, the assessments, the routine pressures of general practice. You might notice that I take safeguarding seriously, that I ask different questions, that I pay attention when something “doesn't quite fit”. What you probably wouldn't see is the path that brought me here — or why I rebuilt my entire life and this website from scratch.

This is that story.

The Question That Sent Me Back to University

I had already earned my BSc (Hons) in Nursing and completed multiple master's modules, as well as gained advanced diplomas in areas of general practice. Alongside this, I bring years of primary care experience, a foundation in acute medicine, and several years of experience working in mental health and child and adolescent services. Yet, despite this breadth of knowledge and dedication, my world came crashing down.

After years of coercive control and abuse, I finally left. What followed was worse than I ever imagined: the abuse continued through services supposedly there to protect, and then the family court, professionals looked the other way, and systems I trusted were used as weapons.

I found myself asking a question I couldn't let go of:

How can a human being choose to inflict such pain and suffering on those around them? How do they remain unchanged, unmoved by the harm they cause? How can deceit come so easily, as though truth were meaningless? How can they live without conscience, acting with cruelty yet finding rest at night?

It wasn't an abstract interest in psychology. I needed to understand psychopaths, coercive control, and deliberate cruelty because I was living with the aftermath of it. I wanted to know what kind of mind can inflict that level of damage and still perform “normality” for professionals.

That question sent me back to university.

I self-funded a Postgraduate Certificate in Neuroscience & Psychology of Mental Health. I did it quietly, alongside my job in primary care. Very few colleagues knew I was studying. This wasn't about promotion or a title. It was about survival and understanding.

No amount of academic theory will ever make intentional cruelty “make sense” in human terms.

But the course did something important. It gave me language, evidence, and a framework for what I had lived through. I learned about trauma, attachment, adverse childhood experiences, personality structure, chronic stress, and how the brain adapts to survive.

I am qualified in mental health, but my day-to-day employed role remains in primary care, with different clinical priorities. The mental-health training sits behind the scenes: it informs how I think, how I listen, and how I build this work, but I am not employed as a specialist mental-health clinician. That distinction matters.

Building on the framework provided by the PGCert in Neuroscience and Psychology of Mental Health, my journey shifted from solely personal survival to a commitment to serve others who are where I once was.

This led to further specialised training, including becoming a Certified Trauma Healing Practitioner, a Certified Narcissist Recovery Practitioner, and a Certified Neurodiversity Coach through CMA- and IPHM-accredited providers.

These qualifications are not mere credentials; they represent my dedication to transforming lived experience and academic knowledge into structured, ethical, and evidence-informed tools that I can share, ensuring this work extends beyond personal narrative to provide tangible, practical support.

ADHD, Masking, and the Shape of “Resilience”

At 34, I was finally diagnosed with ADHD — something I had suspected for years but never prioritised because I was too busy coping. Suddenly, a lot made sense:

  • My ability to hyperfocus through chaos
  • My drive to fix complex problems that aren't technically “mine”
  • My tendency to keep going long after most people would stop — until I crashed

ADHD had quietly shaped my career success and my personal vulnerability. It helped me advocate, absorb information quickly, and think laterally about systems. It also meant I masked distress and over-functioned for far too long, calling it resilience while my nervous system was burning out.

The combination of primary care nursing, postgraduate mental-health training, ADHD, and lived experience of abuse and institutional failure created a particular kind of clarity:

  • I could see the patterns
  • I could name the dynamics
  • I could track how systems were failing — not just for me, but for my children as well

The Day the Music Told the Truth

There was a point where the clinical knowledge, the qualifications, and the “I'm fine” facade all fell apart.

One night, I sat in a chair, listening to “I Am Not OK” on repeat for an hour.

I wasn't writing. I wasn't coping. I was rocking, dissociating, and trying to keep my brain from breaking under the weight of what had happened — and what was still happening through the courts and institutional responses.

Two months later, in September 2024, I was diagnosed with PTSD.

The label didn't shock me. It simply caught up with reality. Hypervigilance, flashbacks, sensory overload, the constant scanning for threat — all of it was textbook trauma layered on top of chronic stress and unresolved safeguarding failures.

At that point, writing stopped being a hobby and became something else entirely:

It wasn't writing — it was survival.

When Your Children Show You the Cost

Some memories don't fade, no matter how much time passes.

Their fear was a mirror. It reflected my own internal state — the same dread, the same hyperawareness, the same sense that danger could reappear at any moment.

These weren't “incidents”; they were symptoms of living in prolonged fear and then being failed by the very systems meant to protect us.

Those moments changed the trajectory of my life. They turned advocacy from something I did around my job into something that sits at the centre of who I am.

The Courtroom Where My Voice Didn't Count

Leaving an abuser should mark the beginning of safety.

Instead, I watched the family court become another arena for control.

I was left with a clear message:

You can be a nurse, a mother, or a credible witness. Yet, you may still be silenced when it threatens the bad reputation.

That level of institutional betrayal changes you.

The Moment Nurse Against Abuse Was Born

The night after court, I wasn't okay. I was struggling to hold it together.

My daughter was upset because she wasn't “the best” at something. I'd explained to her that everyone has different things they're good at, and she looked at me and said:

“You are the best at looking after people.”

When the systems around us wouldn't protect us, that sentence became my guide. If I couldn't make them listen to me, I could at least create a space. There, others would never feel that level of erasure. They would not be without a map in their hands.

During a period of severe mental decline, triggered by further police leaks and ongoing court proceedings, I realised something uncomfortable but undeniable:

If I kept trying to be heard in spaces designed not to listen, I was going to break.

So I did the only thing that made sense to my ADHD brain, my nurse brain, and my traumatised brain all at once:

I built something new.

Nurse Against Abuse did not start as a brand. It started as a survival mechanism.

From Troubled Minds to Empowered Voices

“From Troubled Minds to Empowered Voices” was never intended as a branding effort. It grew out of my own journey. Traumatised and feeling voiceless, unable to find the words I so desperately needed.

Traditional trauma therapies don't always fit everyone living with PTSD; for me, speaking was impossible.

Out of that silence, I developed a technique. It first became a journal for myself. Then, it became a tool for others who also struggled to speak but longed for help.

It began as a personal survival tool. Now, it has evolved into the From Troubled Minds to Empowered Voices Collection.

  • From being overwhelmed and unheard to finally understanding what was happening inside my own brain
  • From surviving day-to-day to building something that might make the path easier for someone else
  • From having no voice to ensuring others never feel their lives matter so little to those who were meant to protect them

I love primary care, my patients and my work family. Though it is a workplace, it has always been the place I turn to when I am struggling. There, I could just be myself. Not a victim, not only a parent of traumatised children, but someone who can give others the care they deserve. My therapy is being able to serve others. It is where I was myself and where I can still be myself.

  • Work became my sanctuary when my home was no longer safe
  • My mental health qualification provides the theoretical foundation for what I share here
  • My lived experience ensures none of this drifts into abstract theory

Together, they underpin everything you see on this site: the blogs, the survivor tools, the professional resources, and the insistence that people deserve to be heard, believed, and properly safeguarded.

Why This Story Is Here

This page exists for one reason: context.

When you read my blogs about West Mercia Police, family court, coercive control, ADHD, PTSD, or child safeguarding, I want you to know the perspective they are written from:

  • A professional with lived experience and the qualifications and knowledge to support
  • A mother whose children have lived through domestic abuse and systemic failure
  • A survivor who has seen what happens when institutions protect themselves instead of the vulnerable

I am not neutral.

I am informed.

And I am still here.

If you are reading this because you are trying to make sense of your own situation — whether as a survivor, a parent, a professional, or all three at once — you need to hear this clearly:

You are not overreacting.

You are not weak.

You are not the problem.

And you no longer have to walk through this without language, without tools, or without a voice.

📚 Publications
Not Broken

Not Broken: Finding the Stars

📦 Amazon UK
From Troubled Minds

From Troubled Minds to Empowered Voices

📦 Amazon UK
Gabby’s Guide

Gabby's Guide to Brainstorming Fun

📦 Amazon UK
Gabby’s Guide

Gabby's Guide — Collection

📦 Amazon UK
No Further Action

No Further Action —

⌛ Coming soon

A note on identity

NAAVoices was originally founded under a pseudonym to protect my identity. With time and healing I have come to realise that reducing stigma does not come from staying hidden — it comes from openness. Domestic abuse, mental health difficulties, and the need for advocacy happen to people from every walk of life. I am Amy Royle, and speaking openly is part of normalising these conversations so that others feel safe to do the same.

Discover more from NAAVoices.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading