HealthMarch 20, 2026

Understanding Trauma Bonds: Real Meaning and Common Confusion

Key Vocabulary

intermittent/ˌɪn.təˈmɪt.ənt/
happening at irregular times; not continuous
"There were intermittent kind moments in the relationship."
reinforcement/ˌriː.ɪnˈfɔːrsmənt/
a reward or response that increases a behavior
"Praise can act as reinforcement."
survivor/sərˈvaɪvər/
a person who has lived through a difficult or dangerous event
"Many survivors find support groups."
dependent/dɪˈpɛndənt/
relying on someone else for emotional or practical support
"Feeling dependent can make it hard to leave."

Listening

Understanding Trauma Bonds: Real Meaning and Common Confusion

Trauma bonding describes a powerful, unhealthy attachment that a person develops to someone who harms them. It forms when there is a clear power imbalance and the harm is mixed with kindness, praise, or apology. These cycles of cruelty and care create a confusing emotional pattern. Researchers first described this process in studies of abusive relationships and found intermittent reward and punishment are key factors.

While many people use the phrase to describe two survivors who become close, that is a different experience called bonding over shared trauma. Signs of a trauma bond include feeling dependent on the abuser, returning after leaving, and intense loyalty despite danger. If you suspect a trauma bond, safety planning and professional support are recommended; long-term recovery often needs therapy and social support.

Although healing can take time, many survivors recover when they build new routines, learn about healthy boundaries, and limit contact with the abuser. Support groups and trauma-informed therapies can help people understand patterns and regain control over their choices.

167 words

Quiz

1. What does trauma bonding describe?
2. What is the different experience called when two survivors become close?
3. What is recommended if you suspect a trauma bond?

Reading Practice

Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.

Discussion

1

Do you think talking about hard events helps people get closer? How?

2

Have you ever felt very loyal to someone even when others warned you? What did you do?

3

What do you think is most helpful: a support group, a counselor, or family? Why?

4

Would you want to learn more about healthy boundaries? Why or why not?

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