Therapy for harm sustained inside religious environments, communities, leaders, or teachings.

Religious Trauma Therapy

The harm done inside religious systems is real harm. It does not become less real because the people involved meant well, because the system gave you community, or because what you carry from it sits alongside things you still value. Religious trauma is clinical trauma, and the religious context does not soften the wound. This page is for people who are leaving, deconstructing, or carrying the long aftermath of religiously inflected harm.

Norman Klaunig, MA, LPC, NCC | Texas LPC #89856 | Member, ASERVIC Spiritual and Religious Values Committee and IANDS Academic and Research Committee | Trained in transpersonal counseling

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At a glance

  • Specialization: Religious trauma, spiritual abuse, high-control group recovery, faith transitions, and the grief that comes with leaving or changing a faith

  • Relevant training and orientation: Spiritually integrated and transpersonal counseling; trauma-informed therapy; EMDR-trained; member of the ASERVIC Spiritual and Religious Values Committee and IANDS Academic and Research Committee

  • My position: I work equally well with clients leaving a faith, changing a faith, deconstructing within a faith, or remaining inside a faith while addressing harm. I do not push you toward or away from any belief.

  • Therapist: Norman Klaunig, MA, LPC, NCC

  • License: Texas LPC #89856

  • Office: 1528 W Contour Dr, Suite 102, San Antonio, TX 78212

  • Service area: Online statewide in Texas; in person in San Antonio

  • Languages: English, German

  • Insurance accepted: BCBS, Curative, United Healthcare, and Medicare (traditional Medicare and Medicare Advantage plans from BCBS and United Healthcare)

  • Related work: Trauma Therapy, Grief Counseling, Spiritually Integrated Therapy

What religious trauma is


Religious trauma refers to lasting harm sustained within religious environments, communities, leaders, or teachings. It can include spiritual abuse, coercive control, fear-based theology, suppression of identity, sexual or physical harm carried out under religious authority, and the slower harm of being shaped by a system whose costs only become visible later. It often coexists with grief for community, identity, certainty, or relationships lost in the process of leaving or changing one's faith. It is real trauma; the religious context does not soften the wound, and treatment follows the same clinical principles as other relational trauma.

This is not a critique of religion or spirituality. Many of my clients value parts of their religious history and want to keep them. Religious trauma describes a specific subset of religious experience — the harm part — and what to do with it.

What religious trauma can look like


Religious trauma takes many shapes. Some of the patterns I see most often:


The grief inside religious trauma

One of the most important parts of this work is making room for the grief. Even when leaving was clearly the right thing, there is usually loss inside it: community, ritual, certainty, identity, relationships with family or friends still inside the old framework. People who have not been through it often miss this entirely. They expect relief, not mourning.

What you are grieving may not all be the harm. Some of what you are grieving may be what was real and good in the tradition you left — and the fact that the harm and the good came from the same place. That is allowed. It is part of the work.



How religious trauma therapy works

The clinical principles are the same as for other relational trauma: stabilization, regulation, processing, and integration. The content is religiously informed; the framework is psychological.

We start with safety and pacing. You decide what you are ready to touch. We work with the body and the nervous system as much as with the story — religious trauma lives in the body, often in ways the cognitive work alone does not reach. EMDR, parts work, somatic and breath work, and existential and meaning-focused approaches all have a place here.

We are also careful with language. Religious trauma survivors are often hyper-attuned to language that feels like another tradition imposing itself. I do not use the language of a tradition as a treatment frame. I follow your language — the words you use, the parts of your religious history you want to keep, the parts you have set down, and the questions you are still asking. The work belongs to you.

This is distinct from religious counseling, pastoral counseling, Christian counseling, or any tradition-specific care. Those have their place and can be valuable. Religious trauma therapy, as I practice it, is psychotherapy. It is offered alongside — not in place of — whatever spiritual or religious resources you have, and it is not contingent on any particular belief, agnosticism, or atheism.


What this work can change

Religious trauma therapy does not erase your history with religion, and it does not require you to land in any particular place. It can change:

  • The grip of fear-based theology on a nervous system that no longer believes the theology

  • The chronic shame and scrupulosity that were trained in

  • The sense that you cannot trust your own thinking

  • The relational reflexes that formed inside a high-control context

  • The grief of leaving, when it has been carried alone

  • The cost of suppressing a part of yourself, once the suppression ends

  • The capacity to live, work, and love without the framework that used to do that organizing work for you

Get in touch

When you are ready

There is no rush. Working with religious trauma requires a particular kind of readiness, and only you know when that has arrived. When it has, the free 15-minute consultation is a low-pressure place to begin.

Schedule a Consultation or Session

Click the button above to choose a day and time for a free, confidential consultation or schedule a session.

FAQs

Frequently asked questions

For fees, insurance, telehealth setup, and in-person availability, see the FAQs.

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