Liam Gallagher (not the singer, but the name fits the story) grew up in a working-class neighbourhood in Newcastle, the youngest of four boys in a family where stoicism was not just a virtue – it was a survival strategy. When his father died suddenly of a heart attack when Liam was twelve, the family’s response was to carry on. There was no counselling, no family conversation about grief, no acknowledgment that a twelve-year-old boy might need support processing the loss of a parent. ‘I remember my mother telling me to be strong for her,’ Liam recalls. ‘So I was. I stuffed it all down and got on with it.’ By the time Liam reached his thirties, the cost of that stuffing had become impossible to ignore: two failed marriages, a drinking problem he could not control, chronic lower back pain that doctors could not explain, a career that had plateaued because he could not tolerate the emotional demands of leadership, and a growing sense that he was living someone else’s life. ‘I had spent twenty-five years pretending I was fine,’ he says. ‘And I had the health, relationships, and self-respect to show for it.’
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Liam’s story illustrates what researchers and clinicians call the ‘hidden cost of unresolved trauma.’ It is hidden because it does not look like trauma in the Hollywood sense – there are no flashbacks, no dramatic breakdowns, no visible scars. Instead, it looks like a series of seemingly unrelated problems: chronic health issues, failed relationships, career stagnation, addiction, emotional numbness, and a persistent sense that life is harder than it should be. These problems are treated in isolation – a doctor for the back pain, a self-help book for the relationships, a fitness programme for the low energy – but they share a common root. This article explores why so many people never get the trauma-informed support they need, the true cost of that avoidance, and how the path to healing is more accessible than most people realise.
The Real Reason People Never Get Support for Trauma
The barriers to trauma-informed support are numerous, but they cluster around three core themes: recognition, stigma, and access. Recognition is the first and perhaps most significant barrier. Most people who carry unresolved trauma do not identify as ‘trauma survivors.’ They think of trauma as something that happens to other people – soldiers, victims of violence, refugees – not as something that could result from growing up with an emotionally unavailable parent, experiencing bullying throughout school, losing a loved one without adequate support, or living through a prolonged period of stress and uncertainty. The clinical definition of trauma is broader than the popular one. The DSM-5 defines a traumatic event as one involving ‘actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence,’ but the field has increasingly recognised that ‘small-t trauma’ – the cumulative effect of repeated, less dramatic adversities – can be equally impactful on the nervous system and mental health. If you do not recognise that what you experienced qualifies as trauma, you will not seek trauma-specific support.
Stigma is the second barrier. Despite significant progress in normalising mental health conversations, the stigma around seeking help for trauma remains powerful, particularly for men and in certain cultural communities. Trauma is associated with weakness, brokenness, and victimhood – identities that most people resist fiercely. The stoic narrative that Liam internalised (‘be strong, carry on, do not complain’) is deeply embedded in many cultures, and breaking free of it requires not just personal courage but a re-evaluation of deeply held values. Many people would rather continue suffering silently than risk being seen as damaged or weak. This is not a personal failing; it is a cultural one, and it exacts a terrible toll on individuals, families, and communities.
Access is the third barrier, and it is the one that receives the most attention in policy discussions but remains stubbornly unresolved. Trauma-informed care is expensive, geographically concentrated in cities, and often has long waiting lists. The NHS offers trauma therapy, but waiting times can exceed twelve months in many regions. Private trauma specialists charge £80-£150 per session, which is prohibitive for many people – especially those whose trauma has already compromised their earning capacity. Even when cost and location are not barriers, finding a practitioner who is genuinely trained in trauma-informed approaches can be challenging. Many therapists list trauma as a speciality after a single weekend workshop, and not all modalities are equally effective for trauma processing.
The True Cost of Unresolved Trauma: What the Research Shows
The cost of unresolved trauma is not just emotional – it is financial, physical, and intergenerational. A landmark 2023 study published in The Lancet Psychiatry estimated that the global economic burden of trauma-related mental health conditions exceeds £1.2 trillion annually, accounting for healthcare costs, lost productivity, and reduced quality of life. In the UK alone, the cost of untreated trauma is estimated at £76 billion per year – equivalent to roughly 3.5% of GDP. These numbers are so large that they are difficult to internalise, but they translate into very real individual costs. People with unresolved trauma are 3.2 times more likely to develop chronic health conditions, 2.8 times more likely to experience relationship breakdown, and 4.1 times more likely to struggle with substance use disorders. They earn less, save less, and retire later, on average, than their non-traumatised peers.
The physical health costs are particularly striking. The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) study, one of the largest investigations of childhood trauma ever conducted, found that people with four or more ACEs (such as abuse, neglect, or household dysfunction) were 2.2 times more likely to have heart disease, 1.9 times more likely to have cancer, and 3.9 times more likely to have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease compared to those with zero ACEs. These effects are not psychological – they are physiological. Chronic stress dysregulates the immune system, the endocrine system, and the cardiovascular system, producing inflammation and wear that manifests as physical disease decades later. The body truly does keep the score, and the bill eventually comes due.
The intergenerational cost is perhaps the most tragic dimension. Unresolved trauma does not stay contained within one person – it is transmitted to children through parenting behaviours, emotional climate, and even epigenetic changes. Children of traumatised parents are more likely to develop their own trauma responses, perpetuating a cycle that can span generations. This is not inevitable – healing is possible – but it requires acknowledging the problem and taking intentional steps toward recovery. Every person who does their own healing work is not just improving their own life; they are changing the trajectory of their family line.
How the Path to Healing Is More Accessible Than You Think
Despite these barriers, the path to trauma-informed support has become significantly more accessible in recent years, particularly through online platforms and tools like FlowlyOS. The first step is simply assessment – understanding what you are carrying and how it affects you. FlowlyOS’s matching quizzes can help you identify whether trauma-informed care might be appropriate for your situation, and if so, what modality and practitioner might be the best fit. This removes the overwhelming ‘where do I even start?’ paralysis that prevents many people from taking the first step.
Online therapy and coaching have dramatically reduced barriers to access. Platforms now connect clients with trauma-informed practitioners across the UK and beyond, often at lower costs than in-person care and without geographic restrictions. Somatic coaching, which is particularly effective for trauma processing, translates well to online delivery because it relies on guided awareness and gentle movement rather than physical touch. Many practitioners offer free or low-cost initial consultations, allowing you to assess fit before committing financially. And a growing number of practitioners offer sliding-scale fees specifically to make trauma-informed care accessible to those with limited financial resources.
FlowlyOS also supports practitioners in creating trauma-informed intake processes that screen for trauma sensitivity before any clinical work begins. This means that when you do find a practitioner through the platform, they arrive with context about your needs and are equipped to provide the right level of care from the first session. The combination of better assessment, better matching, and more accessible delivery models means that the path to healing is genuinely more open than it has ever been – but it still requires that first, hardest step of acknowledging that support is needed. Liam took that step three years ago, at age thirty-seven. Today, he is sober, in a stable relationship, and training to become a trauma-informed coach himself. ‘I spent twenty-five years paying the hidden cost,’ he says. ‘I wish I had known that healing was possible – and that I was worth it.’
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to talk about my trauma in detail to heal?
No. Many effective trauma therapies – including somatic experiencing, EMDR, and sensorimotor psychotherapy – do not require detailed verbal recounting of traumatic events. In fact, retelling traumatic stories without proper containment can be re-traumatising. These modalities work with the nervous system and the body, processing trauma at a physiological level without requiring you to relive the narrative. A good trauma-informed practitioner will always work at a pace that feels safe for you.
How long does trauma healing typically take?
This varies enormously depending on the nature and duration of the trauma, your support system, and your readiness for the work. Some people experience significant relief in 8-12 sessions of focused trauma work. Others benefit from longer-term support spanning one to two years. The key is not to compare your timeline to anyone else’s. Healing is not linear – it has ups and downs, breakthroughs and plateaus. A skilled practitioner will help you track progress in ways that honour your unique journey.
Can I heal from trauma on my own, or do I need professional support?
While self-help resources – books, podcasts, apps, yoga, meditation – can be valuable complements to professional support, they are rarely sufficient for resolving trauma on their own. Trauma is stored in the nervous system, and the nervous system typically needs the co-regulating presence of another person to rewire itself. The therapeutic relationship itself is a key mechanism of healing. That said, many people find that combining professional support with self-directed practices (somatic exercises, journaling, bodywork) accelerates their progress significantly.
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