Behavior After Trauma Triggers

Season #2

In this episode of Teaching Autism and Special Education with Nikki, we’re exploring what can happen when trauma triggers show up in the classroom and why some student reactions can seem much bigger than the moment itself. We unpack what trauma triggers actually are, how the nervous system responds to perceived threat, and why behaviors like shouting, running away, shutting down, refusing, or panicking are often automatic survival responses rather than intentional defiance. Sometimes the behavior we see is not truly about the present moment at all, but about something the student’s nervous system associates with past stress, fear, or overwhelm.

We also dive into the overlap between trauma responses and autism, including how sensory sensitivities, repeated correction, social uncertainty, and experiences of exclusion or bullying can increase nervous system vulnerability. I talk about what trauma triggers can look like in school settings, why logic and lectures often fail during escalation, and how fight, flight, freeze, and fawn responses can show up differently in different students. This episode takes a grounded, trauma informed and neuro affirming approach without over pathologizing behavior or assuming all distress is trauma related.

This episode is packed with practical strategies to help educators respond in ways that increase safety instead of escalating threat. We discuss calm tone, reducing proximity, using simple reassuring language, spotting behavioral patterns, increasing predictability, and delaying teaching conversations until regulation returns. Instead of asking, “Why are they reacting like this?” this episode encourages us to ask, “What might this moment be reminding their nervous system of?” Because when we respond to safety first, behavior often starts to make much more sense.