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Family court is designed to make decisions about safety, custody, and the best interests of children. In practice, however, it often operates without a full understanding of trauma and how it shapes human behavior. This gap in understanding can have serious consequences for survivors of domestic violence, coercive control, and high conflict relationships, as well as for the children involved.

Trauma is not just an emotional experience, it is a physiological and psychological response to overwhelming stress. When someone has experienced chronic fear, manipulation, or abuse, their nervous system adapts for survival. These adaptations can affect memory, communication, emotional regulation, and even how someone presents under pressure. Without trauma informed awareness, these responses are sometimes misinterpreted in court as instability, dishonesty, or even parental unfitness.

One of the most misunderstood aspects of trauma is memory. Trauma does not always create clear, linear narratives. Instead, memories may be fragmented, inconsistent, or difficult to recall in detail. This is not deception, it is how the brain stores overwhelming experiences. In a courtroom setting that prioritizes precise timelines and consistent testimony, trauma survivors can appear unreliable when they are actually experiencing a normal trauma response.

Communication is also impacted. Survivors of long term abuse may struggle to articulate their experiences calmly or chronologically, especially in high stress legal environments. They may become emotional, shut down, or appear overly cautious. These reactions are often misread as exaggeration or manipulation, when in reality they are signs of a nervous system under strain.

Behavior in court can also be misunderstood. Survivors who have experienced coercive control may appear hesitant, overly deferential, or highly reactive. Some may struggle to make decisions without fear of consequences, while others may present as guarded or detached. These behaviors are often survival strategies developed in response to past harm, not indicators of poor parenting.

Parenting itself can be deeply affected by trauma. Survivors may be highly protective, vigilant, or anxious about their children’s safety. This can sometimes be misinterpreted as overreaction or interference, when it may actually reflect lived experience of risk. At the same time, trauma can also cause exhaustion, emotional overwhelm, or difficulty maintaining consistent routines during periods of stress. None of this automatically reflects parenting capacity, but without context, it is often judged harshly.

When trauma is not properly understood, family court decisions can unintentionally retraumatize survivors and place children in unsafe or unstable situations. Misinterpretation of trauma responses can lead to false assumptions about credibility, parental fitness, or willingness to cooperate. This is especially concerning in cases involving coercive control, where abuse is often psychological, subtle, and ongoing.

Trauma informed reform is essential to addressing these issues. It means training judges, attorneys, evaluators, and court professionals to understand how trauma affects behavior and communication. It also means shifting away from assumptions that prioritize surface level impressions over deeper context. A trauma informed system recognizes that safety cannot be determined without understanding the full history of harm and control.

At Stronger Roots, we believe families deserve a court system that sees trauma clearly and responds with fairness, compassion, and accuracy. Survivors should not have to prove their pain in ways that fit rigid expectations. Instead, systems should be equipped to recognize the realities of abuse and its lasting impact.

If you want to learn more, access resources, or support advocacy for trauma informed family court reform, visit https://strongerroots.org/. Together, we can grow stronger roots and build systems that truly protect families and honor lived experience. 🌱