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Showing posts with the label healing after trauma

💜 Healing and Getting Organized as a Single Parent in Uncertain Times

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  💜 Healing and Getting Organized as a Single Parent in Uncertain Times By Veronica “Roni” Davis Founder, Softer Life Beyond Trauma, LLC Life can feel heavy when you’re a single parent trying to heal while holding everything together. Between managing your household, supporting your children, and rebuilding your own sense of peace, it can feel like there’s no space left for you. But what if you could create a softer way to move through life changes, one that allows healing, order, and balance to exist together? That’s the heart behind Softer Life Beyond Trauma, LLC : helping single parents simplify, heal, and find peace in uncertain times. ðŸŒŋ Why Healing and Organization Go Hand in Hand When we experience big transitions: divorce, relocation, loss, or starting over, our emotional clutter often mirrors our physical clutter. Clearing space in your home or schedule isn’t just about neatness; it’s about creating room for healing. A softer life begins when: You release what no ...

ðŸŒą Day 2 Blog Post - SofterLifeBeyondTrauma.com

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  ðŸŒą Day 2 Blog Post - SofterLifeBeyondTrauma.com Title: “What It Means to Be Trauma-Informed in a Rural Community” Author: Veronica “Roni” Davis, HealthyLifeCoach702 In rural areas, trauma isn’t just something that happens, it’s something that often goes unseen . Children grow up in silence. Mothers parent through exhaustion. Fathers work through pain with no one to talk to. Grandparents raise grandkids on fixed incomes while holding back tears from losses they never got to grieve. That’s why being trauma-informed is not a trend, it’s a lifeline . ðŸ§Đ What Trauma-Informed Really Means Being trauma-informed means we shift our thinking from “What’s wrong with them?” to “What happened to them?” It’s about recognizing: Behavioral outbursts may be survival responses Emotional numbness may be protection, not apathy Resistance may be fear, not rebellion Our rural communities are rich with culture and resilience, but also carry layers of unspoken generational trauma ...