
Pushing through it might seem like it's working until it doesn't. Our team of psychodynamic therapists in Midtown Manhattan helps adults understand and get beneath what's been driving their patterns, not just manage surface-level symptoms.
“I know why I react this way. I just can’t seem to stop it.” That’s one of the most common things we hear. I understand why I get defensive. I understand why I pull back in relationships. I understand why certain things hit harder than they should. And still, the pattern keeps repeating.
What’s happening underneath is often older than the presenting problem. Something from an earlier chapter got organized in a particular way, and that organization is still running, even now, even in situations where it no longer fits. Insight alone doesn’t dissolve it. It’s not a thinking problem.
That’s what brings most people here. Not always a visible crisis, but something has reached a point where it can’t be ignored. The recognition that whatever has been tried so far hasn’t gotten underneath it. Therapy that goes to depth is a different kind of work, and it’s the kind we do.


Trauma shows up differently for everyone. It may look like:
Our approach is psychodynamic at its core, which means we work over time, and we work with what’s actually underneath. The goal is to understand how what happened to you got organized inside your experience, what it changed about how you move through relationships and the world, and how to begin loosening its hold.
Early sessions are less about diving into difficult material and more about building enough of a foundation to do real work. We pay attention to patterns. We slow things down. We ask what’s actually going on beneath what gets presented. That process is where real change begins.
What We Offer

Before Trauma Therapy
After Trauma Therapy

We are a group practice of psychodynamic therapists in Midtown Manhattan. A lot of what people bring in traces back to earlier experiences that are still organizing things now: the relationship patterns that repeat, the anxiety without a clear cause, the sense of being at a remove from your own experience.
We focus on helping people understand what’s actually driving their experience. Most of the people who come to us have already tried some version of managing their way through it. They’re ready for something that goes underneath. If you are, too, we’re ready to do that work with you.


For many of the adults we work with in Manhattan, trauma doesn’t announce itself with obvious symptoms. It surfaces in patterns: the hypervigilance that passes for alertness, the relational distance that looks like independence, the perfectionism that began as a way to stay safe.
Trauma symptoms rarely look like what people expect. The psychological and physical manifestations are often subtle. PTSD symptoms such as intrusive memories, difficulty concentrating, and an exaggerated startle response are well-documented, but many people experiencing the effects of trauma don’t recognize their reactions as trauma-related at all. Physical symptoms, including chronic tension, disrupted sleep, and fatigue without a clear medical cause, are also common presentations. What appears to be a personality trait or a persistent mood pattern is often the nervous system doing what it learned to do in response to overwhelming experience.
Same dynamic, different person. It shows up across different relationships, different circumstances, and different stages of life. Trauma, especially early relational trauma, organizes the nervous system around certain expectations of other people. Those expectations persist until the underlying experience gets direct attention.
A comment lands wrong, and suddenly there’s a wave of shame or anger that feels out of proportion to what happened. Someone goes quiet, and anxiety spikes. A minor conflict triggers withdrawal that lasts for days. The intensity belongs to the original experience, not to what’s in front of you now.
Chronic tension that doesn’t resolve. Sleep that’s light or interrupted. A constant low-level readiness that doesn’t turn off. A startle response calibrated to a different environment than the one you’re actually in. The body carries trauma in ways that aren’t always legible as psychological. Working with what the body is holding is part of the work.
In sessions with high-functioning Manhattan professionals, this is one of the most common gaps: the external life looks ordered, accomplished, even enviable. The internal experience is something quite different. A persistent sense of being on borrowed time. A feeling of performing rather than living. That gap has a history, and it responds to the kind of work we do.
Healing from trauma happens gradually, in relationships, and rarely in a straight line. The ability to process traumatic memories in a sustained way, within the safety of a therapeutic relationship, is what allows the nervous system to begin to reorganize. People who come to us seeking to develop coping strategies and build resilience find that the work offers more than symptom management. Healthier coping, healing, and growth emerge not from forcing the material but from building enough capacity to stay with it. The healing process is one of accumulation, not breakthrough.
Our primary orientation is psychodynamic. Everything else we offer is integrated into that foundation rather than offered as a separate track.
Trauma doesn’t just change what happened. It changes how you read what is happening now. It shapes the patterns in relationships, the stories told about yourself, and the ways closeness or conflict gets navigated. Psychodynamic therapy works with those patterns over time, attending to what lies beneath and how earlier experiences continue to organize current behavior. The relational quality of the work is central: what emerges between you and your therapist becomes part of the material.
Our approaches include:
Trauma can fracture experience. Parts of the self get split off or pushed out of conscious awareness, often in response to circumstances that were too overwhelming to fully integrate. What gets left behind continues to exert influence, often in ways that feel mysterious or out of proportion. Dreams, recurring imagery, and strong emotional reactions to particular situations can all carry the trace of what hasn’t been integrated.
Integrated into psychodynamic work, Jungian approaches support:
Some trauma lives below the level of language. The body keeps responding to it, the nervous system keeps reacting, but the material doesn’t become accessible through talking alone because it’s held in parts of the brain that language doesn’t directly reach. This creates a particular frustration: someone has done years of thoughtful verbal work and still feels stuck in their body, still reacts in the same ways.
Integrated into psychodynamic work, Brainspotting supports:
Perfectionism lives in the body as well as the mind. Chronic muscle tension, a jaw that tightens before a presentation, shallow breathing when waiting for feedback, a nervous system that does not fully power down: these are the physical signatures of a pattern that has been running at high alert for a long time. Somatic work helps people notice and work with these physical signals rather than automatically overriding them.
What this looks like in sessions:

Understanding what's underneath is how it finally starts to shift.
Many people searching for trauma therapy in Manhattan come in having researched specific evidence-based treatment approaches. The most commonly searched modalities include EMDR therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, and exposure-based protocols. We want to be honest about what we offer and what we don’t.
EMDR therapy uses bilateral stimulation through guided eye movements to help the brain process traumatic memories that feel stuck. People are drawn to it because it promises to reach what talk therapy alone hasn’t, particularly for trauma the body is still reacting to, regardless of how much the mind has processed. We don’t offer EMDR at Midtown NYC Therapists.
How it helps:
Cognitive behavioral therapy for trauma, including cognitive processing therapy and exposure therapy protocols, appeals to people who want a structured, skills-based approach. These are evidence-based treatment approaches with a strong research base for PTSD. They offer clear structure and measurable progress. We don’t offer CBT-based trauma protocols at Midtown NYC Therapists.
How it helps:
Many people search specifically for PTSD therapy in Manhattan, looking for structured, protocol-based treatment. These approaches are effective and widely available. At Midtown NYC Therapists, we work with PTSD but not through structured protocols.
How it helps:
Complex trauma, meaning trauma that is chronic, relational, or developmental rather than a single incident, requires a different clinical orientation. People carrying complex trauma often present with emotional numbness, chronic pain, and a sense that their life experiences have organized them in ways that standard trauma treatment doesn’t fully address.
How it helps:
C-PTSD therapy addresses complex post-traumatic stress disorder, which develops in response to prolonged or repeated trauma rather than a single incident. People with C-PTSD often find that standard PTSD treatment frameworks don’t quite fit their experience.
Our C-PTSD work focuses on:
Childhood trauma shapes the nervous system during the periods when it is most formative. When difficult or overwhelming life experiences happen early, they get organized into how a person reads relationships, safety, and their own worth. That organization can persist across decades.
How it helps:


Trauma-informed therapy is an orientation to care that shapes how we practice across every approach we use. Safety, pacing, transparency, and the quality of the therapeutic relationship are built into how sessions unfold, not added as features.
Trauma-informed therapy means that creating a safe space is not incidental to the work but central to how it unfolds. A safe and supportive environment is not primarily about the physical room. It is about the relational environment: pacing the work to what the person can tolerate, not pushing toward difficult material before the foundation is ready, and actively practising slowing down rather than just permitting it.
Creating safe and supportive conditions means:
Somatic therapy addresses trauma through body awareness and nervous system regulation rather than primarily through language and narrative. When trauma is held in the body, body awareness becomes one of the most direct routes into what’s been organized there. Body process work, meaning direct attention to physiological responses as they arise during sessions, allows the nervous system to begin to reorganize in ways that verbal processing alone doesn’t fully support.
Our body-based approaches include:
Trauma takes many forms, and different populations carry it differently. The following covers specific groups and trauma types that come up frequently in conversations about care.
Our practice works with adults. We do not offer trauma therapy for children or adolescents. Helping individuals in younger age groups process trauma requires specialized training in developmental psychology and age-appropriate modalities that are distinct from the depth-oriented adult work we do.
What we work with extensively:
Intergenerational trauma and collective trauma are among the forms of trauma that psychodynamic and Jungian approaches are particularly suited to address. What a parent could not process often gets transmitted to the next generation through the quality of attachment, the emotional atmosphere of the home, and patterns of relating internalized before language exists to name them.
Our approaches to intergenerational and collective trauma include:
Vicarious trauma refers to the cumulative impact of repeated exposure to other people’s traumatic experiences. It is one of the forms of trauma we work with frequently in Manhattan, particularly among professionals in helping roles: clinicians, healthcare workers, first responders, and legal professionals.
Signs of vicarious trauma include:
Spiritual trauma, including harm experienced within religious communities or through the use of spiritual frameworks to justify abuse or control, is one of the forms of trauma that often goes unnamed for years. It can disrupt not only religious belief but the broader sense of meaning-making.
People carrying spiritual trauma often describe:


A lot of people come to the first session unsure how much to say, whether they have to go directly into the hardest material, and whether they’ll know the right way to do this. There is no right way. The first session is primarily about getting oriented together.
What the first session typically looks like:
A trauma therapist is a licensed clinician with specific training in how traumatic experience affects the nervous system, relationships, and sense of self.
Our approach is psychodynamic. We focus on how experience continues to shape the present, rather than primarily targeting symptoms. The therapeutic relationship itself is part of the treatment. If you’re a healthcare professional, you can read more about how we work with therapy for healthcare professionals specifically.
Trauma doesn’t always look the way people expect. It doesn’t require a single catastrophic event.
Stress tends to lift when the stressor resolves. Trauma responses persist and follow the logic of the original experience, not the logic of the current situation.
Yes. Brainspotting and somatic therapy, both available through our practice, work directly with trauma held in the body.
Trauma work can lead to meaningful change over time. People who stay with the process often begin to experience real shifts: patterns become more legible, reactions become less consuming, and the past begins to feel like part of the story rather than something still running the present. The pace varies, and the arc is not linear. But the capacity to heal from trauma, to process traumatic memories in a sustained relational context, to develop coping strategies and build resilience, is real.
For professionals, this work often connects with the patterns that show up as burnout therapy, where the same underlying dynamics tend to drive both.
Trauma therapy is generally a longer-term process. Meaningful change typically unfolds over months. That said, people often notice real shifts earlier than expected.
We don’t work to a fixed timeline. The work determines its own arc.
Trauma can be passed across generations through relational patterns shaped by collective experiences of violence, displacement, or systemic harm. Understanding how family and cultural history organize current experience is often central to the work.
Our practice works with adults. We do not offer therapy for children or adolescents. What we do work with extensively is the adult carrying the effects of childhood trauma. If you experienced difficult or traumatic experiences growing up and are now an adult, that is exactly the kind of work we do.
Somatic therapy and brainspotting, both integrated into our psychodynamic work, address trauma held in the body directly. For more on how we work with the physical dimension of difficult experience, see our page on stress therapy in New York City.
Yes. Our therapists work with clients throughout New York State via telehealth. Online sessions follow the same clinical approach as in-person work.
Many clients also come to us for related concerns, including self-esteem therapy in Manhattan, which often traces back to the same underlying history.
The First Step Is a Conversation.
A free consultation is how we begin. We’ll talk about what you’ve been carrying, share how we work, and figure out together whether this is the right next step. No pressure. No commitment. Just an honest conversation about whether we can be useful to you.