Why Presence, Not Narrative, Liberates Us from Trauma and Identification
Trauma as the Fracture of Being
Trauma is more than a psychological wound; it is a rupture in the fabric of being. Those who carry trauma live in a body whose signals are fragmented, whose senses are unreliable, whose mind loops in survival scripts. Dr. Ruth Lanius has given us a neurological map of this disintegration. Her imaging studies demonstrate how trauma disrupts the coherence of sensory processing, as proprioception, balance, interoception, vision, and touch lose their integration. The survivor does not simply remember pain—they inhabit a nervous system that has lost its orientation to the present.
Trauma is not what happens to you,
but what happens inside you as a result of what happens to you.
Gabor Mate, The Wisdom of Trauma

The Body’s Doorway to Presence
Lanius’s research also reveals possibility. Even when fractured, the nervous system retains the potential for coherence. Embodied therapies—such as EMDR, somatic practices, and sensory-rich activities like surfing—retune the broken symphony of perception. In these moments, presence is not a philosophical ideal but a felt, lived reality: I am here, in this body, in this moment. This experiential immediacy is what phenomenologists refer to as the pre-reflective layer of consciousness—the “lived body” of Merleau-Ponty, which grounds all our knowing before thought takes shape.
The body keeps the score: if the memory of trauma is encoded in the viscera, in heartbreaking and gut-wrenching sensations, in autoimmune disorders and skeletal/muscular problems, then it needs to be addressed in the body.
Bessel van der Kolk, The Body Keeps the Score
The Healing “We”
Dan Siegel extends this horizon into the relational field. His “interpersonal neurobiology” shows that integration is not merely an internal process; it is co-created in relationship. Our minds are braided into one another. Trauma isolates, teaching the self to distrust both inner sensation and outer connection.

Healing comes when presence is shared: in attunement, in safe relational contact, in the simple reciprocity of “I see you, I feel you here.” Siegel’s concept of the “We brain” echoes Husserl’s insight that consciousness is always intentional—not sealed within itself, but directed toward and shaped by the other.
Recovery can take place only within the context of relationships;
it cannot occur in isolation.
Judith Herman, Trauma and Recovery
The Phenomenology of Presence
What unites Lanius and Siegel is an implicit recognition of presence as fundamental. Presence is not merely attention but consciousness aware of itself, prior to mental constructions and identifications. Husserl spoke of returning “to the things themselves,” suspending the interpretive overlays of the mind to encounter experience as it gives itself. Almaas, in the Diamond Approach, echoes this with his insistence that what matters is not the experience but the experience of experience.
In trauma, the self is caught in frozen identifications: “I am unsafe,” “I am broken,” “I am gone.” But presence—felt directly—reveals that these structures are not the ground of being. They are contents of consciousness, not consciousness itself. In Merleau-Ponty’s terms, the body-subject is never entirely lost; its capacity to “be-in-the-world” remains latent. Healing is the reawakening of this capacity, the return to immediacy.
When we meet trauma with presence,
we become the healing environment it never had.
Thomas Hübl
Consciousness Beyond the Self
Here trauma becomes a teacher. It reveals how fragile the structures of the self are, how quickly they collapse under the weight of overwhelming experiences. Yet this fragility opens the possibility of seeing that we are not identical with those structures. Presence liberates precisely because it reveals a ground of consciousness that is unbroken, even when experience is shattered.

Siegel’s “mindsight” and Lanius’s sensory integration converge here: both point to a consciousness deeper than thought, prior to narrative, yet relational and unbounded. This is not just therapy but ontology. To rediscover presence is to rediscover the fundamental truth: consciousness is not the prison of trauma but the field in which trauma arises and can be transformed.
The Larger Arc of Liberation
Mystics across traditions have spoken of this reality in countless ways. Their voices converge on a single recognition: when we rest in presence, the walls of separation soften, and what remains is a ground of unity—immediate, whole, and indivisible.
Lanius and Siegel, in their different ways, are carrying this lineage forward into our scientific age. They offer not only techniques of repair but glimpses of what phenomenology has always insisted: that the immediacy of experience is the only ground of truth. Trauma may obscure it, but presence—embodied, relational, conscious—reveals it again.
Trauma is not a life sentence.
It’s a wound that can be met and integrated,
allowing life to flow again.
Peter Levine, Waking the Tiger
Hope as Ontological Ground
For millions carrying trauma, their work brings hope that is deeper than recovery. It is the recognition that presence is not damaged by trauma. Presence is fundamental. Consciousness itself remains intact, even when perception and identity are fractured.

This is not just hope for symptom relief. It is hope for liberation: the freedom to discover that who we are is not confined to our wounds or our stories. The phenomenology of presence is the way through, the ground on which healing and realization converge.
John Harper is a Diamond Approach® teacher, Enneagram guide, and a student of human development whose work bridges psychology, spirituality, and deep experiential inquiry. He is the author of The Enneagram World of the Child: Nurturing Resilience and Self-Compassion in Early Life and Good Vibrations: Primordial Sounds of Existence, available on Amazon.