Trauma & Emotional Dysregulation: Why Emotions Feel Out of Control

Trauma can alter how the brain responds to stress, keeping the nervous system on high alert and making it difficult to manage and respond to strong feelings.[1] You might feel constantly emotional, highly on edge, and unable to calm down. For instance, maybe a small criticism brings you to tears, or you completely shut down during an argument and find it hard to return to calm after it’s over. 

Trauma and emotional dysregulation often go hand-in-hand. Your brain might think you’re constantly in danger, so your stress response stays turned on, making emotions heightened. This trauma response is often the way your nervous system has learned to protect you, but once the threat has passed, it can do more harm than good.  

Emotional regulation difficulties after trauma can feel frustrating and confusing, so this page is meant to help you understand:

  • What emotional dysregulation means. 
  • How trauma makes emotions harder to manage.
  • Some common emotional dysregulation symptoms.
  • What helps during emotional overwhelm and how trauma therapy can help.
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Table of Contents

What Is Emotional Dysregulation?

Emotional dysregulation is a difficulty or inability to manage and control emotions and emotional reactions. It’s not that you experience different or more emotions than other people, but that these emotions usually: 

  • Come on more quickly.
  • Feel more intense.
  • Take longer to settle. 
  • Seem disproportionate to the situation. 

For example, your partner may cancel a date night because of an emergency. But instead of recognizing the situation as a once-off, you might find yourself crying all night, thinking they don’t love you.

Emotional regulation difficulties can also involve:

  • Becoming overwhelmed by anger, fear, sadness, or shame.
  • Reacting impulsively during stressful moments.
  • Finding it hard to identify what you feel or need.
  • Remaining distressed for hours after an upsetting event.
  • Feeling numb or disconnected instead of visibly emotional.
  • Avoiding situations that could bring out uncomfortable feelings.
  • Depending on other people to help you feel calm or secure.

Emotional regulation doesn’t mean you don’t experience emotions or that you’re calm all the time. It means that you’re able to identify, understand, and respond to your emotions without becoming completely overwhelmed by them.[2] But trauma has a way of disrupting emotional regulation. 

How Trauma Can Disrupt Emotional Regulation

Trauma can keep the body’s stress system on high alert. The part of the brain responsible for detecting danger (the amygdala) becomes overactive and starts treating normal events as threats.[3] This overactive amygdala can make you feel jumpy and on edge, and even small things could make your heart race. 

Even after the trauma is over, the brain may be more likely to interpret uncertainty as danger. So you might interpret a neutral facial expression as anger or a sudden change of plans as rejection. 

Emotional Dysregulation Symptoms After Trauma

Trauma and emotional dysregulation symptoms can look different from person to person. You might express your distress outwardly, while someone else might hide it or shut down. Here are some common emotional dysregulation symptoms:

Emotions That Escalate Quickly

Your emotions might feel overwhelming and escalate from zero to one hundred in seconds. For instance, you might feel sudden: 

  • Anger.
  • Panic.
  • Sadness. 

Or maybe you have crying spells that feel difficult to stop or extreme shame after making a mistake. 

Often, emotional overwhelm can also make small disappointments feel devastating. And you might find these escalating emotions confusing because part of you knows that the situation doesn’t fully explain why the emotion feels so intense. 

Difficulty Returning to a Calm State

Even after the situation has ended or after a problem has been resolved, your body might continue to act as though something is wrong. You may: 

  • Replay a conversation.
  • Imagine possible consequences.
  • Remain physically tense for the rest of the day.

You might also need repeated reassurance that someone else isn’t angry, leaving, or disappointed in you. And while the reassurance can briefly reduce distress, the fear often quickly returns. 

Emotional Shutdown or Disconnection

Emotional dysregulation symptoms don’t always show up outwardly. Sometimes they appear as an absence of emotion. So during a stressful event, you might:

  • Go blank or become unable to respond.
  • Feel detached from your body.
  • Lose track of part of a conversation.
  • Withdraw from other people.
  • Feel emotionally numb.
  • Find it hard to explain what is wrong.

This might have happened when fighting or escaping wasn’t possible during a traumatic experience. So you might have disconnected or shut down as a protective trauma response. 

Impulsive Attempts to Escape Distress

When emotions feel unbearable, immediate relief can feel more important than long-term consequences. As a result, to escape discomfort, you might act impulsively. Maybe you: 

  • Send an angry message.
  • Abruptly end a relationship.
  • Drive recklessly.
  • Make a major decision while highly activated. 

These behaviors may briefly reduce emotional overwhelm but often lead to regret, shame, damaged relationships, or additional stress afterward.[4]

What Helps During Emotional Overwhelm?

Coping skills for trauma and emotional dysregulation can help, but they can’t erase complex trauma or take the place of trauma therapy. However, some of the following strategies can help you create enough space between an emotion and your response, giving you time to manage the emotional overwhelm. 

Name What’s Happening

Try to identify the emotion as specifically as possible. For example, instead of saying, “I feel bad,” identify whether that “bad” feeling is more specifically: 

  • Frightened.
  • Rejected.
  • Embarrassed.
  • Angry.
  • Helpless.
  • Ashamed. 

Naming the emotion may help you understand what your nervous system believes is happening.

Orient Yourself to the Present

Look around and notice where you are. Remind yourself of the date, where you’re at, and how the current situation differs from the past. You can also use the 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique to help. This is when you name:

  • Five objects you see.
  • Four things you can touch.
  • Three sounds you hear.
  • Two things you can smell.
  • One thing you can taste.  

Research shows that grounding and orienting to the present can reduce the stress response and lower anxiety.[5]

Calm the Body Before Solving the Problem

It’s difficult to think clearly when the nervous system is highly activated. So, before continuing a disagreement or making a decision, try calming your fight-or-flight response. Practice some slow, deep breathing, take a five-minute walk, stretch, or press your feet firmly into the floor. 

Applying an ice pack or cold cloth to your neck or face can also trigger the vagus nerve, which controls the “rest and digest” system and can calm distress.[6] The goal isn’t to force the emotion away, but to help your body become regulated enough to respond with intention.

Replace Judgment With Curiosity

Rather than asking, “Why am I acting like this?” try asking, “What does my nervous system think it’s protecting me from?” Curiosity doesn’t excuse behavior, but it can help you understand what’s going on underneath it and choose a healthier response.

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Trauma Therapy for Emotional Regulation Difficulties

Trauma therapy doesn’t always involve you having to describe painful experiences in detail. For many people, treatment first involves building safety, trust, and skills for managing distress. 

There is no one-size-fits-all approach to treating trauma and emotional dysregulation. Instead, you and your therapist will collaborate to find an approach that works best for managing your emotions for trauma recovery. That might include:

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Emotional regulation is one of the core skills in dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). Developed for treating borderline personality disorder (BPD), research has shown that DBT is effective in helping people recognize emotions and tolerate distress without acting impulsively.[7]

 This approach helps with emotional regulation difficulties by giving you actionable tools to identify, manage, and reduce the intensity of emotions. It can be especially useful when intense emotions lead to:[8] 

  • Conflict.
  • Self-destructive behavior.
  • Rapidly changing relationships.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) explores the connections between our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. After trauma, you might automatically assume that a mistake will lead to rejection or that conflict means a relationship is ending. 

CBT helps you:[9] 

  • Examine those negative thoughts.
  • Identify patterns that increase distress.
  • Develop a more balanced way of thinking and responding. 

In CBT, this approach is often called “cognitive restructuring.”[9] 

Essentially, with CBT, you will question whether your current beliefs are factual and accurate. In doing so, you ask yourself what evidence supports your thoughts and how they could be explained by other possibilities. 

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) helps to reprocess trauma and reduce the intensity of traumatic memories by using bilateral stimulation, such as tapping or eye movements. Research supports EMDR as a treatment for childhood trauma effects and complex trauma.[10] 

Somatic and Mindfulness-Based Approaches

Intense emotions can also be experienced through physical sensations as well as thoughts. Somatic approaches can help you notice when your body is getting activated, like when you feel your: 

  • Chest getting tighter.
  • Muscles tensing.
  • Hands starting to shake. 

Mindfulness-based methods can then help you observe the thoughts, emotions, and sensations without immediately reacting to them. Over time, recognizing your body’s early warning signs may give you more opportunities to use coping skills.

Internal Family Systems Therapy

Internal Family Systems (IFS) views the mind as containing different protective parts. One part may become angry to prevent vulnerability, while another may shut down to avoid emotional pain.

Parts-based work can help you approach these responses with curiosity rather than shame.[11] Instead of trying to get rid of a protective reaction, therapy explores why it developed and whether it still needs to work so hard.

Emotional Support That Works Around You

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Get Support for Trauma and Emotional Dysregulation With Mission Connection

At Mission Connection, we understand that emotional reactions are often connected to a trauma response, relationships, beliefs in yourself, or protective patterns developed over years. Our team of licensed mental health professionals goes beyond traditional treatment and provides life-changing care for those dealing with childhood trauma effects, complex trauma, emotional regulation difficulties, and other mental health conditions.

We offer several options for effective outpatient treatment, including in-person programs at our locations in California, Virginia, and Washington, virtual telehealth, and a hybrid program that combines in-person and virtual care.

We support trauma recovery and nervous system dysregulation with personalized, whole-person care. Using evidence-based approaches like CBT, IFS, and EMDR, alongside mindfulness and somatic approaches, we’ll help you identify your patterns and manage emotions in a healthier, more sustainable way. 

Mission Connection accepts most major insurance providers, so that your recovery is not hindered due to financial issues.

Your emotions aren’t proof that you are “broken” or beyond help. Reach out to us online or call us at 866-833-1822 to learn how to build greater stability, self-understanding, and confidence in your ability to manage strong emotions.

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Trauma and Emotional Dysregulation FAQ

For many people, having emotions that feel too intense or uncontrollable is frustrating and confusing. Below, we’ll address some of the commonly asked questions about trauma and emotional dysregulation.

How do you know if you have emotional dysregulation?

You might have emotional dysregulation if your emotions often feel too intense, difficult to control, slow to settle, or disproportionate to the situation. Common signs of nervous system dysregulation include impulsive reactions, shutting down during conflict, needing repeated reassurance, or regretting what you did or said once the emotion passes.

You can help manage emotional regulation difficulties through therapy and by practicing emotion regulation skills, such as mindfulness and somatic awareness. Approaches such as DBT, CBT, trauma-focused therapy, or EMDR may help, depending on the cause of your symptoms.

There are no clinical tests that can diagnose emotional dysregulation, but there are questionnaires you can take to help determine if you may be dealing with emotional regulation difficulties. For the most accurate understanding of your symptoms, meeting with a mental health professional can give you better insight into your emotional dysregulation and what may be underneath it.

No, emotional dysregulation isn’t the same as borderline personality disorder (BPD). While it can occur with BPD, emotional dysregulation is also associated with trauma, anxiety, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), mood disorders, and other conditions. 

At Mission Connection, our team helps with trauma and emotional dysregulation by creating a personalized treatment plan that takes into account your symptoms, history, needs, strengths, and goals. Using a combination of approaches, like DBT skills, CBT, and trauma-focused therapy, we aim to address emotional dysregulation and the experiences or beliefs that may be contributing to it.