Drama Therapy for Trauma & PTSD
How embodied, creative approaches reach trauma that words alone cannot, and what the research shows.
How embodied, creative approaches reach trauma that words alone cannot, and what the research shows.
"The body keeps the score. If the memory of trauma is encoded in the viscera, in heartbreaking and gut-wrenching emotions… we need to find a way to revisit the experience that doesn't require words."
, The Body Keeps the Score, 2014
Trauma does not live primarily in language. Research by van der Kolk, Levine, and Ogden has established that traumatic memory is encoded in the body: in sensations, muscle tension, startle responses, and dissociative states that verbal narration cannot fully access or resolve. This is why many trauma survivors find that talking about what happened, while sometimes helpful, does not actually resolve the physiological and emotional charge that trauma carries.
Drama therapy works differently. By engaging the body, movement, voice, and symbolic enactment, it can access the somatic and non-verbal dimensions of trauma. Through aesthetic distance (exploring traumatic experience through metaphor, character, and story rather than direct first-person recounting), clients can approach overwhelming material at a safe psychological remove.
Drama therapy has one of its strongest evidence bases in trauma treatment. Key research findings include:
Key researchers in this area include David Read Johnson, Nisha Sajnani, and Adam Blatner. The edited volume Trauma-Informed Drama Therapy (Sajnani & Johnson, 2014) provides the most thorough synthesis of theory and evidence in this area.
Developed by David Read Johnson specifically for trauma populations, DvT uses free-flowing improvisation in the "playspace" between therapist and client. Rather than constructing narratives, DvT works in a state of continuous transformation. Shapes, characters, and scenarios emerge and dissolve fluidly. This non-narrative approach bypasses the verbal-narrative processing that trauma disrupts, working instead at the level of embodied spontaneity and play.
DvT has been used successfully in individual and group formats with combat veterans, survivors of sexual abuse, and people with complex trauma. It is one of the most studied drama therapy modalities.
Developed by Pam Dunne, Narradrama combines narrative therapy principles with drama therapy methods. Clients externalize trauma by putting it outside through story and dramatic embodiment, explore alternative storylines, and develop more resourceful narratives about their experience and identity. The narrative frame provides protective distance while the dramatic embodiment engages the body and emotion directly.
Classical psychodrama has been adapted for trauma populations with important modifications: slowing the pace, increasing use of doubling and mirroring, careful titration of surplus reality (working with what-could-have-been rather than direct re-enactment), and heightened attention to grounding and closure. Trauma-informed psychodrama uses the classical elements of scene setting, protagonist, director, and auxiliaries while prioritizing safety and titration throughout.
Object work, puppets, masks, and object theatre allow trauma to be held and explored symbolically, in objects rather than directly in the body. This maximizes aesthetic distance and is particularly valuable for survivors for whom direct embodiment feels unsafe, or for children and adolescents for whom projective play is developmentally natural.
In Playback Theatre, community members' personal stories are heard and immediately enacted by a performing ensemble. It has been used extensively with communities experiencing collective trauma: refugee populations, communities affected by violence, disaster survivors. The witnessed-and-enacted format combines personal narrative with collective witnessing, supporting meaning-making and social reconnection.
Any drama therapist working with trauma should adhere to trauma-informed care principles throughout their practice. These include:
Drama therapy also employs specific practices to maintain safety: careful attention to the window of tolerance (working within the zone of optimal arousal rather than triggering hyper- or hypo-arousal), titrating the intensity of dramatic work, and ensuring adequate grounding, warm-up, and de-roling in every session.
A typical drama therapy session with a trauma survivor follows a structured arc:
Sessions are calibrated to leave the client resourced, not destabilized. The arc is always toward containment and grounding, not toward cathartic release that leaves the client overwhelmed.
Illustrative effect sizes from published meta-analyses. Drama therapy (DvT specifically) holds its own against the gold-standard verbal treatments, and reaches clients who've stalled on them.
Cohen's d · higher is a larger effect · 0.8+ is considered large · figures rounded for illustration
The shape doesn't flex. Grounding opens the session, integration closes it, the work in the middle is calibrated to leave you resourced, not flooded.
Body awareness, orienting to the room, checking window of tolerance before any material is approached.
Gentle movement, voice, or play at a safe distance, no direct trauma material yet.
Object, story, role, or improvised play, titrated to stay inside the client's window of tolerance.
Explicit ritual of stepping out of any character or object work, returning to everyday self.
Brief reflection, resourcing, leaving the session grounded and oriented to the rest of the day.
All three work. The question isn't which is "best," but which doorway the nervous system in front of you can actually walk through.
| EmbodiedDrama therapy | NeuroprocessingEMDR | Top-downTrauma-focused CBT | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Works through | Body, role, metaphor, play, access without verbal retelling. | Bilateral stimulation during recall to reprocess the memory. | Verbal narrative + cognitive restructuring of trauma meaning. |
| Best for | Pre-verbal trauma, dissociation, kids, clients stuck on words. | Discrete traumatic memories, single-incident PTSD. | Clients who can tolerate and narrate the traumatic memory. |
| Session feel | Active, movement, objects, roles, sometimes group. | Seated, eyes tracking or tapping, focused recall. | Seated, structured, homework between sessions. |
| Typical length | 12 to 24 sessions, often group-based, flexible. | 6 to 12 sessions for single-incident; longer for complex. | 8 to 16 sessions, highly structured protocol. |
| Works alongside? | Yes, complements all three, often adjunctive. | Yes, often sequenced with stabilization work. | Yes, common primary treatment, adjunct-friendly. |
When seeking drama therapy for trauma, look specifically for a Registered Drama Therapist (RDT) with experience in trauma populations. Useful questions to ask include:
Or read about drama therapy techniques including DvT and Narradrama.
Yes. Drama therapy, particularly Developmental Transformations (DvT), has demonstrated significant reductions in PTSD symptom severity in research studies, including with combat veterans at the National Center for PTSD. Its embodied, metaphorical approach allows trauma processing without requiring direct re-narration of traumatic events, which is itself re-traumatising for many people.
Trauma is stored in the body, not just in verbal memory. Drama therapy's embodied approach uses movement, roleplay, and symbolic enactment to reach trauma that talk therapy cannot access. Aesthetic distance (exploring experience through metaphor and character) allows clients to approach overwhelming material at a safe psychological remove.
The primary methods are Developmental Transformations (DvT), developed specifically at the VA for combat veterans; Narradrama, which uses story and narrative to reframe traumatic experience; Playback Theatre for witnessed storytelling; and trauma-informed psychodrama. All use aesthetic distance and embodied processing rather than direct verbal re-narration.
Yes. Research shows drama therapy is effective both as a standalone treatment and alongside trauma-focused CBT, EMDR, and somatic approaches. Many trauma specialists use drama therapy to complement verbal therapies, accessing the embodied and non-verbal dimensions of trauma that other approaches may not reach.
Drama therapy with trauma survivors is always conducted by trained Registered Drama Therapists (RDTs) using trauma-informed principles: safety, trustworthiness, choice, collaboration, and empowerment. Aesthetic distance and careful pacing protect clients from re-traumatization. The therapist monitors arousal levels and works within the client's window of tolerance at all times.
Online-Therapy.com is a structured online therapy platform with worksheets, journals, video sessions, and licensed therapists. A useful bridge if you need to start online while searching for a specialty drama therapist.
Anxiety · Depression · Veterans · Grief
Bannister, Cattanach, Sajnani & Johnson, Lubin & Johnson, Winn, see the trauma section of the bibliography for the full reading list, plus the documentary No Unwounded Soldiers.