What is Deep Brain Reorienting?

Understanding Trauma and Attachment Trauma

Trauma can leave a profound imprint, not just on your mind but also on your body. Whether it stems from a sudden event, like an accident or loss, or a series of painful experiences, trauma often lingers long after the moment has passed. Many people find themselves reliving the event in their bodies—through tension, a racing heart, or feeling emotionally stuck—without understanding why it is so hard to move forward.

Attachment trauma, in particular, arises when the bonds that are meant to feel safe, reassuring, nurturing, or secure become sources of hurt and deep emotional pain. This can happen through experiences of invalidation, unpredictability, neglect, rejection, betrayal, or emotional unavailability. These wounds often shape how we see ourselves and relate to others, leaving us feeling alone, disconnected, or unseen.

At its core, trauma is not just about what happened to you; it is about how your brain and body responded to it. Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) offers a unique approach to addressing these deeply rooted responses, helping you heal from within.

What is Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR)?

Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) is a transformative, trauma-focused therapy that works with the brain and body to heal the effects of shock, attachment wounds, and post-traumatic stress. Grounded in neuroscience, DBR helps access the body’s natural capacity to process trauma by working with its earliest, often unconscious, responses to distressing events.

Unlike other approaches that focus primarily on thoughts or emotions, DBR starts where trauma begins—in the brainstem, the part of the brain responsible for your most immediate and instinctive reactions to threat.

How does Deep Brain Reorienting work?

DBR is a step-by-step process that carefully guides you through the body’s natural healing pathway. Unlike EMDR, you don’t need to spend time in the traumatic experience, we focus on the earliest moment your brain registered something wrong and use this to gain the orienting tension. The rest of the session is a natural release of shock and emotion which if at anytime become overwhelming can be reduced with the practitioners support or by returning to the orienting tension (the anchor against overwhelm).

3 Stages of DBR:

Orienting Tension

  • Trauma leaves its first imprint in the body as a physical response—like tension in the neck, forehead, or base of the skull. DBR begins by helping you identify these early sensations, which serve as anchors to prevent overwhelm during processing.

Shock and Affect

  • After orienting tension comes the body’s shock response, stored deep in the midbrain. This is the moment before fear, grief, or anger emerge—the preverbal reaction to a horrifying or painful experience. DBR allows this stored energy to surface and dissipate naturally, creating space for healing.

Reorienting

  • When processing has run to completion clients are encouraged to notice a change in how they see the Self or their experience of Self. Any shift even very small is important. Time is taken to deepen into this so the deep brain is supported to reorganise.

How Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR) helps Attachment Trauma and PTSD?

Attachment trauma often leaves you feeling unseen, rejected, or alone. DBR addresses these wounds by targeting the midbrain’s connection system, which governs how you respond to relationships. By working with the body’s initial responses to feelings of abandonment or disconnection, DBR helps restore a sense of safety and trust in connection.

For those living with PTSD, DBR offers relief by addressing the hyperarousal and intrusive symptoms that make everyday life feel overwhelming. It calms the brain’s alarm system, reducing flashbacks, nightmares, and the physical tension often associated with trauma.

The Neuroscience behind Deep Brain Reorienting (DBR)

DBR is rooted in a deep understanding of how the brain processes trauma:

  • The Superior Colliculus (SC): This structure in the midbrain acts as the brain’s first responder, integrating sensory inputs and triggering rapid, instinctive responses. Trauma often creates heightened activation in the SC, which DBR helps to regulate.

  • The Periaqueductal Gray (PAG): The PAG manages emotional and defensive responses, like fight, flight, or freeze. It also plays a role in attachment, processing both the pain of disconnection and the safety of nurturing touch.

  • The Locus Coeruleus (LC): This structure drives the body’s alarm system by releasing noradrenaline. DBR helps to desensitise the LC’s overactive alarm signals, reducing hypervigilance and the physical toll of trauma.

By focusing on these brainstem systems, DBR allows you to access the roots of trauma and heal the body-mind connection.

A Path to Healing

Healing from trauma does not mean forgetting the past or erasing it; it means reclaiming your sense of safety, connection, and calm. Deep Brain Reorienting honours the wisdom of your body and its innate ability to heal, helping you process what once felt unmanageable.

If you are ready to explore this gentle yet powerful approach to healing, I would be honoured to guide you on this journey. Please feel free to book a free phone consulation to explore whether DBR could be a useful therapy for you.