What is trauma dumping?
Trauma dumping refers to the unloading of traumatic experiences on another person without any warning, checking in, or invitation.
Trauma dumping refers to the unloading of traumatic experiences on another person without any warning, checking in, or invitation. Trauma dumping can look like:
Calling a friend to vent about a breakup
Texting someone spontaneously about a bad day
Interrupting someone's story with another traumatic story
Sharing personal and/or difficult experiences during inappropriate times
Why do people trauma dump?
People trauma dump for many different reasons:
They want to "purge" their mind and nervous system of traumatic experiences or memories
They are seeking validation
They want someone else to hold painful emotions so they do not have to
People may choose to trauma dump on you because:
They recognize people pleasing tendencies
They view you as submissive or agreeable
You have not told them "no" in the past
You have otherwise reinforced or validated their trauma dumping
Why is trauma dumping unhealthy?
Trauma dumping can negatively impact individuals in several ways:
Like venting, trauma dumping can often leave people feeling worse.
Violate personal, social, and professional boundaries.
Oversharing personal experiences.
Negatively impact relationships:
Overwhelms the receiver
Can trigger the receiver
Leaves the receiver feel unheard
Makes it difficult to form and maintain relationships
How to know if you are trauma dumping
There are several ways to know if you are a trauma dumper or not:
Take a moment to self reflect on your role in conversations around trauma
Observe how you and your loved ones communicate
Ask yourself:
Am I allowing this person to share?
Does this person feel comfortable speaking with me about trauma?
How did I know whether the person had the bandwidth to listen?
Should I share this with another person (like a therapist)?
How to know if you are being dumped on
There are several ways to know if you are the "dumpee" or receiver in conversations around trauma:
Take a moment to assess yourself:
Did the person ask to check in?
Are you feeling overwhelmed, flooded, anxious, sad, or tired?
Were you able to share you feelings?
Did you receive validation or empathy?
Do you feel safe sharing traumatic stories with this person?
Is there equity in holding space?
How to stop trauma dumping
Here are some ways stop trauma dumping if you are the sharer:
Identify what your emotional, professional, and/or intellectual boundaries are:
Are they porous?
What can you do to change them?
Process your emotions with a therapist or provider ahead of time
Try journaling and identifying triggers
Ask the individual if they have the bandwidth to hold space for you
Ask for what you need (e.g., an ear, advice, etc.)
Let people share without interruptions
How to stop trauma dumping if you are the receiver
Here are some ways stop trauma dumping if you are the receiver:
Recognize when you may be reinforcing and contributing to the pattern or problem
Identify, set, and maintain appropriate boundaries
Say no without being afraid:
"Hey, I am sorry that happened to you, but I am not in a space to receive this."
"This conversation is triggering to me so I don't think I am the best person to hold space for you."
Speak up when you are being interrupted, ignored, or invalidated