Childhood trauma is one of the harder realities of parenting to sit with, partly because it can be difficult to recognize and even harder to know how to address. Children do not process distressing experiences the way adults do their brains are still developing, their emotional vocabulary is limited, and their understanding of what happened to them is often fragmented. The result is that trauma tends to go inward rather than come out directly in words.
What counts as trauma for a child?
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network defines a traumatic event as one that is frightening, dangerous, or violent and that poses a threat to a child’s life or physical safety. That definition also extends to witnessing a traumatic event happen to someone a child loves because for young children especially, their sense of safety is deeply tied to the perceived safety of the adults around them.
Common sources of childhood trauma include physical or emotional abuse, family or community violence, the death of a loved one, serious illness, accidents, racism, family separation, and exposure to human trafficking. These events can, in the words of researchers, literally rewire a child’s developing brain which is why understanding the signs matters so much.
PTSD symptoms
Children who have lived through a traumatic experience can develop post traumatic stress disorder, and toddlers are not exempt. The American Psychiatric Association recognizes PTSD as a condition that can follow direct or witnessed exposure to traumatic events, and its presentation in young children often looks different from the adult version.
In toddlers and young children, PTSD can show up as dissociation during moments of stress, a heightened startle response, avoidance of people or places connected to the trauma, and difficulty breathing steadily when upset. The National Child Traumatic Stress Network also notes that some children become hypersensitive to sensory input reacting strongly or unusually to certain smells, sounds, or textures as a result of nervous system dysregulation following trauma.
Treatment options for childhood PTSD include trauma focused cognitive behavioral therapy, child parent psychotherapy, play therapy, art or music therapy, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, and in some cases medication. The right approach depends on the nature of the trauma and the individual child, but what matters most across all of them is a stable, supportive home environment.
Difficulty expressing emotions
One of the quieter but more significant effects of early trauma is the impact it has on a child’s ability to communicate what they are feeling. Children’s brains are already in an active stage of development, which makes emotional articulation genuinely difficult under normal circumstances. For a child carrying unprocessed trauma, that difficulty is amplified considerably.
Research published in a review of trauma exposed infants and toddlers found that children who experienced traumatic events face a greater risk of problems with self regulation, memory, and emotional consistency challenges that can persist into adulthood if left unaddressed. Trauma keeps a child’s nervous system in a prolonged state of fight or flight, flooding the body with cortisol and making calm, clear emotional expression far harder to access. Some studies have also found that children with unresolved trauma show reduced brain mass in areas tied to important cognitive functions.
Nightmares and disrupted sleep
During rapid eye movement sleep, the brain works to process and organize memories and emotions from waking life. When those memories involve something traumatic, the brain can struggle to integrate the experience, and the result is often nightmares or night terrors.
Parents cannot do much to intervene in the nightmares themselves, but they can shape the environment around sleep to feel safer and more predictable. Establishing a consistent bedtime routine, allowing a child to choose their own nightlight, offering reassurance that a caregiver is nearby, and not rushing through bedtime on difficult nights can all help a child feel enough security to rest. Predictability itself is a form of comfort for a child whose sense of safety has been disrupted.
Separation anxiety
Young children are biologically wired to seek safety and comfort from their primary caregivers. After a traumatic event, that instinct can intensify significantly, making separation from a trusted adult feel genuinely threatening rather than merely uncomfortable.
Separation anxiety in this context can look like persistent crying or tantrums at drop-off, reluctance to attend school or activities, difficulty sleeping alone, unusual clinginess throughout the day, and physical complaints stomachaches or headaches that appear without a medical explanation. It can also involve a child expressing fears that something bad will happen to their parent while they are apart.
The underlying dynamic, as the Atlanta Wellness Collective notes, is that the child’s nervous system does not yet feel safe enough to lower its guard. Separation removes what feels like their most reliable source of protection.
Emotional distress and behavioral changes
Research published in a 2025 update on developmental trauma disorder found that trauma orients a child’s brain activity around stress reactivity, effectively trapping them in a cycle of hyperarousal. This can manifest as anger, impulsivity, shame, low confidence, difficulty recognizing their own emotions, or a reduced capacity for empathy.
These behaviors are not defiance or poor character they are the nervous system doing what it was designed to do in the presence of perceived danger. A consistent, calm, and emotionally available adult presence is one of the most evidence supported ways to help soothe those stress responses over time, though it requires patience and repetition.
How parents can help
Regardless of the specific trauma, children on the path to healing generally need the same core things from the adults in their lives. Providing physical and emotional safety, listening without interrupting, validating feelings without minimizing them, answering questions honestly, and connecting through play are all meaningful forms of support. Limiting a child’s exposure to distressing content and keeping detailed notes on behavioral changes can also help when working with a medical or mental health professional.
Most critically, parents should recognize when professional help is needed. If a child’s symptoms are not improving or are intensifying, a pediatrician or licensed child therapist can provide guidance and connect families to the appropriate level of care. Reaching out early is never the wrong call.

