Janina Fisher Ph.D.

Janina Fisher Ph.D. Janina Fisher is an international expert on the treatment of trauma and dissociation, a trainer for It has been a privilege to learn with them and from them.
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I have had the good fortune to have been taught by or worked alongside the giants in the field of psychological trauma: first, Judith Herman, then Bessel van der Kolk, and, most recently, Pat Ogden. And as much as these pioneers taught me, the most powerful and gifted teachers I have are my patients. These survivors have given me a window into the inner experience of the legacy of trauma, taught m

e what always to say and what never to say, helped to validate or disprove what the experts and theorists were claiming. We now understand that trauma’s imprint is both psychological and somatic: long after the events are over, the body continues to respond as if danger were everpresent. My professional mission has been to bring this understanding of trauma to both clients and their therapists as a psychotherapist, consultant, and trainer of clinicians looking for answers to helping their traumatized clients. I believe the key to healing is not just knowing what happened but transforming how the mind, body, and soul still remember it. Janina Fisher, PhD is a licensed Clinical Psychologist and Instructor at the Trauma Center, an outpatient clinic and research center founded by Bessel van der Kolk. Known for her expertise as both a therapist and consultant, she is also past president of the New England Society for the Treatment of Trauma and Dissociation, an EMDR International Association Credit Provider, a faculty member of the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute, and a former Instructor, Harvard Medical School. Dr. Fisher has been an invited speaker at the Cape Cod Institute, Harvard Medical School Conference Series, the EMDR International Association Annual Conference, University of Wisconsin, University of Westminster in London, the Psychotraumatology Institute of Europe, and the Esalen Institute. Dr. Fisher lectures and teaches nationally and internationally on topics related to the integration of research and treatment and how to introduce these newer trauma treatment paradigms in traditional therapeutic approaches.

Reflecting on my years as a therapist, I've come to understand that our clients often teach us as much as we aim to guid...
06/12/2026

Reflecting on my years as a therapist, I've come to understand that our clients often teach us as much as we aim to guide them. Their presence challenges us to remain centered, reflective, and intentional. When we bring our best selves into the therapy room, that groundedness doesn't just benefit our clients – it enriches our personal lives as well.

This dynamic underscores the profound reciprocity inherent in the therapeutic relationship.

06/11/2026

In this episode, I sat down with Deran Young, therapist, researcher, and founder of Black Therapists Rock, to explore how trauma, culture, and lived experience shape the nervous system—and the path to healing.

We spoke about survival mode, the difference between being safe and feeling safe, and how racial, intergenerational, and systemic trauma can live in the body long after danger has passed.

This conversation is a reminder that healing isn't about fixing ourselves or becoming more productive. It's about learning to recognize safety, reconnect with our bodies, and come home to ourselves.

Listen now – https://janinafisher.com/resources/janinas-podcast/

Attachment is deeply connected to survival. When we lose an important connection, the nervous system can respond as thou...
06/05/2026

Attachment is deeply connected to survival. When we lose an important connection, the nervous system can respond as though we are in danger.

Grief is not only emotional – it can live in the body as panic, numbness, collapse, agitation, or longing. For trauma survivors especially, present-day loss may also awaken earlier experiences of abandonment, neglect, or disconnection.

I believe healing begins when we stop judging these responses and start understanding them as adaptive survival strategies. The task is not to “get over” loss, but to help the nervous system experience safety, connection, and compassion again.

If the experience is a single event, and we have adequate support afterward, and we have had little or no prior trauma, ...
06/04/2026

If the experience is a single event, and we have adequate support afterward, and we have had little or no prior trauma, then we will be left shaken, but the events will feel “behind” us now. If traumatic events have been recurrent, and/or we are developmentally vulnerable, and/or we have inadequate support, we can be left with a host of ‘implicit’ memories, intense responses and symptoms that “tell the story” but without words and without the knowledge that we are remembering.

05/26/2026

“The early social environment wires the circuits in the infant brain that shape our ability to regulate and connect.” – Dr Janina Fisher

When those early attachment relationships fail, the brain’s self-soothing system cannot fully develop. What looks like difficulty regulating emotion or tolerating closeness is often the legacy of attachment wounds written into the nervous system.

Join me at Masters Events Oxford 2026 – Early Bird Tickets are still available!

https://mastersevents.com/oxford-2026/

05/22/2026
I’m happy to share that I’ll be speaking at this year’s Transform Trauma Oxford by Masters Events. The conference promis...
05/22/2026

I’m happy to share that I’ll be speaking at this year’s Transform Trauma Oxford by Masters Events. The conference promises to redefine the way knowledge is transferred in the field of trauma and mental health. The theme, Science, Spirit and the Body: The Synthesis of Healing will explore the meeting point of evidence, experience and the ineffable.

I’ll be joined at the conference by Gabor Maté, Bessel van der Kolk, Tara Swart, Dan Siegel, Kristin Neff, Richard Schwartz and many others. Don’t miss the opportunity to connect, share knowledge and gain actionable insights from focused sessions to enhance your practice.

📣 Transform Trauma Oxford | 14-17 September 2026 | University of Oxford, UK and online

Sign up to the conference and:

◾ Learn from over 100 world-renowned academics, researchers and practitioners in trauma and mental health
◾ Join the community of 6000+ attendees: network with pioneers of trauma treatment
◾ Earn up to 40 CE credits and CPD – included in the cost of your ticket!

Virtual tickets are available too: you’ll be able to join sessions live and access 100+ hours of content for 90 days post event via Transform Trauma Oxford’s user-friendly platform.

🔗 Get your Super Early Bird tickets here: www.mastersevents.com/oxford-2026

05/20/2026

Healing Lives in You.

In this episode, I sat down with David Grand, developer of Brainspotting, to explore what happens when therapists trust the nervous system instead of trying to direct it.

We spoke about the origins of Brainspotting, the power of deep attunement, and why healing often happens beyond words or conscious insight.

This conversation is a reminder that trauma healing begins when we slow down, stay curious, and trust the client’s internal process.

Listen now – https://janinafisher.com/resources/janinas-podcast/

Personality disorders are often understood as reflecting who a person is. But in trauma work, many of the patterns that ...
05/14/2026

Personality disorders are often understood as reflecting who a person is.

But in trauma work, many of the patterns that lead to these diagnoses can be better understood as adaptations to overwhelming experience and disrupted attachment. Behaviors that are labeled as manipulative, attention-seeking, or resistant often reflect attempts to manage fear, regulate internal states, or respond to perceived threat.

When we shift the lens from personality to trauma, the clinical task changes. The focus is no longer on interpreting these patterns as characterological, but on understanding their origins and helping the individual develop greater stability, regulation, and internal cooperation.

05/08/2026

Get Out of the Story.

In this episode, I had the pleasure of sitting down with the wonderful Matthias Barker to explore the painful and often misunderstood experience of family estrangement.

We spoke about attachment wounds, developmental trauma, and why healing fractured relationships requires more than resolving a single conflict. Matthias shared how empathy, accountability, and emotional safety can create space for repair—even after years of distance.

This conversation is a gentle reminder that healing begins when we move beyond blame and become curious about the pain underneath.

Listen now – https://janinafisher.com/resources/janinas-podcast/

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