A traumatic experience is an event that threatens someone’s life, safety or well being.
Trauma can include a direct encounter with a dangerous or threatening event, or it can involve witnessing the endangerment or suffering of another living being.
A key condition that makes these events traumatic is that they can overwhelm a person’s capacity to cope, and elicit intense feelings such as fear, terror, helplessness, hopelessness, and despair.
Traumatic events include:
- emotional, physical, and sexual abuse
- neglect
- and despair
- physical assaults
- witnessing family, school or community violence
- war
- racism
- bullying
- acts of terrorism
- fires
- serious accidents
- serious injuries
- intrusive or painful medical procedures
- loss of loved ones
- abandonment
- separation
Buffington, K., Dierkhising, C. B., Marsh, S. C. (2010). Ten things every juvenile court judge should know about trauma and delinquency. Juvenile and Family Court Journal, 61(3), 14.