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Read our thoughts, updates, and reflections on mental health, therapy, and discovering well-being.

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Mental Health•May 5, 2026

Trauma Therapy in Hyderabad: Racing Thoughts, Racing Body

Our mind is a very complex place. Imagine it is everywhere in your body, in all your senses, throughout your entire body. Whatever happens in the mind also occurs in the body; whatever the body picks up through its sense organs affects the mind as well. In that context, our colloquial ideas about controlling the mind, making it stronger and more unemotional, are designed to fail us. It may make us unreactive to a certain extent, but our thoughts will still race; they will still carry the same themes and insecurities. We can change the external performance of the mind, but our minds still have the same fears. When we go through difficult experiences, our body enters survival mode and experiences adrenaline surges, laboured breathing, or moments of freezing (a state of numb, noisy, motionless quiet). The survival mode evokes such intense emotions that we feel flooded and threatened. Our body then wants to avoid such an experience through any means necessary in our future lives, days and decisions. We may find interviews difficult, conflicts too much to manage, and small amounts of constructive criticism unbearable. Our minds may race, bringing back the same underlying panic, discomfort, and unease. We may experience thought traffic. For trauma survivors, this response can be particularly intense, as the body holds onto past experiences even when the immediate threat has passed. Here is the hard part Racing thoughts and physical restlessness create a vicious cycle that amplifies anxiety and trauma responses: Mental spiral begins: Your mind jumps from one worry, idea, or scenario to another Body responds: Tension builds—clenched jaw, tight shoulders, knotted stomach Physical signals feedback: Your body’s tension signals back to your brain Anxiety amplifies: This physical feedback intensifies mental anxiety or agitation Cycle repeats: The loop continues, making it harder to slow down Your body essentially becomes a mic for your mind’s thoughts, broadcasting every racing thought through physical sensations of tightness, palpitations and breathlessness. The more those physical sensations heighten, the more those thoughts intensify. Here is what we all do wrong The Counterintuitive Truth About Trauma Therapy We start arguing with the mind, we tell ourselves what we are feeling is wrong, we are too sensitive, too weak or try to control all aspects of our life to avoid anxiety. We try to solve anxiety through careful thinking, endless thought loops that lead nowhere. The truth is working with racing thoughts and trauma starts with the body, not the mind. This seems counterintuitive, but it’s true. One of the most effective ways to work with racing thoughts and trauma is to understand how your body responds and find a way to slow it down. When your body has more resources, tools and techniques and feels safer, working with your mind becomes significantly easier. Why body-based trauma therapy works: Your body in somatic therapy is brought face-to-face with the mind and is helped to stay open and curious to your fear. The more time your emotions get in your conscious awareness without the brain interfering with racing thoughts, the easier it is to move through something that scares you. Somatic Trauma Therapy: A Body-Based Approach to Healing At Creative Care, our trauma-informed therapy approaches recognise that: Traditional talk therapy alone may not address trauma stored in the body Body-based therapies help release trapped stress and tension Healing happens when we treat the whole person – mind, body, and nervous system The body holds wisdom and resources for recovery that can be accessed through specialised trauma therapy. Why Choose Trauma Therapy at Creative Care Creative Care offers specialised trauma therapy in Hyderabad that integrates mind-body approaches to healing. Our trauma-informed therapists understand that: .Racing thoughts are often symptoms of unprocessed trauma .Constant tiredness and inability to do anything may also be unprocessed trauma .The body needs support to process what the mind cannot express .Healing is not about toughening up it is about creating space for all that’s cramped up inside to have space. .Recovery happens through compassionate, body-based therapeutic approaches .Whether you’re experiencing depression, complex trauma, anxiety, or the aftermath of difficult life experiences, our trauma therapy services provide a safe space for integrated healing. Remember: your body and mind are partners, not separate entities. When you support your body through trauma therapy, you give your mind the foundation it needs to settle. This integrated, somatic approach to mental health acknowledges what has always been true—that we are whole beings, and healing happens when we treat ourselves as such. Ready to explore body-based trauma therapy? At Creative Care, our trauma-informed therapists in Hyderabad specialise in helping clients heal racing thoughts, anxiety, and trauma through integrated mind-body approaches. Book trauma therapy consultation today to learn how somatic trauma therapy can support your healing journey.

S
Shreya Banerjee
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Mental Health•May 5, 2026

Do You Ever Wonder Why You Feel Like You Should Solve Every Problem That May Arise in the Future?

What Is the Fight Response? Did you ever stop to wonder why you feel like you need to solve every problem that might arise in the future? Do you ever find yourself replaying conversations and creating the perfect response hours later after they occurred? Do you debate every detail in meetings, even when it’s exhausting? Do you ponder all the potential catastrophes that will occur and believe you can prevent them all by just thinking hard enough? Your brain is in panic mode. What Is the Fight Reaction? We tend to think of the “fight” response in terms of yelling, grasping fists, or having a fight. But the body’s need to confront danger appears in forms far less subtle than we imagine. From the colleague who disputes every argument in meetings to relentless problem solved is our bodys effort at warding off moments in which we feel attacked. Our nervous system initiates one of our primary survival responses (fight, flight, freeze, or fawn), when it senses danger, real or perceived. The fight response prepares us for battle by filling our system with stress chemicals such as cortisol and adrenaline. These “battles” in our modern world, however, never involve actual combat. Instead, they appear as behavioral and psychological patterns that stress out our bodies, wear on our relationships, and drain our mental energy. The most significant insight is that our bodies can’t tell the difference between a tiger rushing towards us and an unpleasant email from the boss. Both trigger the same familiar alarm system, preparing us to fight for our lives. In a relationship Have you ever noticed how a disagreement can escalate into a battle you absolutely have to win in a matter of moments? That’s not stubbornness or being difficult. That’s your fight response kicking in. In intense arguments, the fight response masquerades as principled debate or defending principles. But observe more closely at the physical signs: the rapid heartbeat, the tunnel vision, the frantic need to be right. These aren’t emotional responses but they’re survival responses. Signs You’re in Fight Mode When You Argue A person in fight mode during personal conflicts will tend to: Feel the need to have the last word Experience conflicts as win or lose situations (survival or death) End up fighting about inconsequential details instead of dealing with underlying issues Get energized instead of depleted from conflict Have difficulty really listening when other people are talking. This has nothing to do with being a challenging person. It has to do with a nervous system that has learned to view dis-agreement as threat and reacts in this manner. The body is really saying, “I have to win this threat in order to survive(be respected, understood and loved.” This individual is perpetually in survival mode. Constantly being in a state of threat can sometimes be a sign of unresolved complex trauma (not always). Complex Trauma happens when a series of small threats in the environment that have led to a chronic fight, flight or freeze response accumulates.

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Shreya Banerjee
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At Creative Care, we believe that healing is not a one-size-fits-all process. It's a deeply human journey, shaped by relationships, culture, trauma, joy, and the unsaid stories that make us who we are. We offer a radical human approach to mental health, grounded in lived experience, clinical expertise, and the power of cocreation.

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