Faith-informed, private-pay mental health care in Hardin and Mayfield, Kentucky
We're New Pathways!
We offer individual counseling, medication management, autism testing, and EMDR intensives for clients across the region.
Trauma can divide life into “before” and “after.”
A serious car accident. The sudden loss of a loved one. A medical emergency. A workplace injury. A natural disaster. Witnessing violence. Receiving devastating news.
Mental health professionals often refer to these experiences as critical incidents—events that overwhelm a person’s normal ability to cope.
While many people eventually recover with support and time, others find themselves stuck in survival mode long after the event has passed. Memories replay unexpectedly. Sleep becomes difficult. Anxiety increases. Everyday situations begin to feel unsafe.
If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. New Pathways counseling was founded on my family navigating a traumatic car accident. When we were left with little guidance, PTSD symptoms, and a life that seemed impossible to navigate I knew at that moment Western Kentucky needed more resources. I knew we weren’t the only ones.
At New Pathways Counseling, we help children, teens, adults, and families process traumatic experiences using evidence-based approaches such as Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, helping individuals move from survival toward healing.
A critical incident is any event that creates significant emotional distress and exceeds a person’s ability to cope effectively in the moment.
Examples include:
Not everyone responds to trauma in the same way. Two people may experience the same event and have very different reactions. Previous experiences, support systems, age, and individual resilience all play a role. This can make reintroduction into everyday life incredibly challenging. Not having a handbook for what to do next can leave people feeling lost and internally struggling.
In the days and weeks following a traumatic event, it is common to experience:
These reactions are often normal responses to abnormal experiences. However, when symptoms persist or worsen, trauma-focused therapy can be incredibly beneficial. Similar to when you break your leg and you go get a cast, the right trauma support can be a needed “cast” for our brain.
Many people assume healing simply takes time.
While time can help, trauma is different from ordinary stress.
When a traumatic event occurs, the brain’s alarm system becomes highly activated. In some cases, the brain struggles to fully process what happened. The memory becomes stored with the original emotions, physical sensations, and beliefs attached to it.
This is why a person may logically know they are safe today but still feel intense fear, panic, shame, or helplessness when reminded of the event.
The brain is not malfunctioning.
It is trying to protect you.
The goal of trauma therapy is to help the brain finish processing what it was unable to process during the crisis.
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a highly researched trauma treatment designed to help the brain process distressing memories in a healthier way.
Rather than repeatedly talking through traumatic experiences, EMDR helps individuals access and reprocess memories while engaging in bilateral stimulation, such as guided eye movements or tapping.
As processing occurs, many people notice:
EMDR is widely used to treat trauma, PTSD, anxiety, grief, attachment wounds, and adverse childhood experiences.
Many clients report that traumatic memories feel overwhelming before treatment.
EMDR helps decrease the emotional charge connected to those memories so they no longer feel as disruptive.
Instead of remaining stuck in a survival response, the brain can begin organizing and integrating the experience more effectively.
Trauma often leaves the body feeling constantly on alert.
As traumatic memories are processed, many individuals experience greater calm, improved sleep, and reduced hypervigilance.
Healing does not mean forgetting what happened.
Healing means remembering the event without feeling controlled by it.
Written by
Addison Futrell
Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor
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Compassionate counseling for children, teens, adults, and families in western Kentucky.