this is your space.

survivors,

I wish you didn’t have to be here. But if you are, you’re not alone.

As a survivor writing this from the other side of the internet, know that I see you.

You might be visiting this page hours after something happened,
or years later when memories, questions, or healthcare decisions are resurfacing.
Wherever you are in your experience, your reactions and your needs are valid.

Take Back Trust for Survivors was created to offer a place for both moments.

This page walks through immediate options, what medical care might look like,
and some of the questions survivors often have as they navigate
their health, their healing, and their bodies after sexual trauma.

Here, you’ll find clear, trauma-informed guidance and practical information
to help you move forward at your own pace.

Your care matters. And so do you.

  • I am not what happened to me, I am what I choose to become.

    Carl Jung

  • What happened to you is part of your story, but it is not you. You are the one who kept going.

  • You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them.

    Maya Angelou

  • Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.

    Kahlil Gibran

If you’ve just experienced sexual assault…

If this just happened, take a breath.

You don’t have to figure everything out right now.
Moments like this can feel overwhelming, confusing, or unreal.
It’s okay if your thoughts are scattered or if you’re not sure what you want to do next.

Some people want to seek medical care right away.
Others need time to process what happened before deciding their next step. Both responses are valid.

There is no single “correct” path after an assault.
What matters most is your comfort, your safety, and your control.

Trauma-Informed Healthcare, Explained

Trauma-informed care isn’t a special kind of medicine. It’s a way of approaching healthcare that recognizes
how past trauma can shape a person’s body, emotions, reactions, and sense of safety.

For many survivors, medical settings can feel vulnerable.
Exams, procedures, or even the environment of a clinic can sometimes
bring up stress, anxiety, or memories connected to past experiences.
Trauma-informed care acknowledges that these responses are real
and that healthcare should adapt to support you.

At its core, trauma-informed care centers your safety, choice, and control.
Providers practicing this approach aim to communicate clearly,
explain what they are doing before they do it, respect your boundaries, and give you
the ability to pause, ask questions, or stop an exam if something feels overwhelming.

You deserve healthcare that works with your body and your experience, not against it.

Healing on Your Terms

Healing is not linear. It’s not a checklist, a finish line, or a single moment where you suddenly feel “better.”

It’s the space between surviving and rebuilding.
The quiet days when you feel steady, and the harder ones when memories, emotions, or questions return.

Some days you may feel strong and grounded. Other days might feel heavier or more uncertain.
Both are part of the process.

You don’t move backward when you struggle. You’re still healing.
You don’t fail when you need rest. You’re still healing.
You don’t need to be “over it.” You just need to keep choosing yourself, one day at a time.

Healing can bring up many questions about your body, your emotions, and your relationships.
The questions below explore some of the experiences many survivors encounter along the way.

Trying to Make Sense of It All

After something traumatic, many survivors find themselves questioning their reactions, their memories,
or the way their body responded in the moment.

You might wonder why you froze. Why certain things trigger strong reactions now.
Why some days feel manageable while others feel overwhelming.

These questions are incredibly common.

Trauma doesn’t always make sense right away.
Your mind and body may still be trying to understand what happened and how to move forward.
The confusion, the self-questioning, and the emotional ups and downs are part of how many people process trauma.

There is nothing strange or broken about needing time to make sense of it all.

You’re not alone in these questions, and you’re not alone in the process of understanding your experience.

We’ve also built a whole section of Take Back Trust called Your Questions, Answered, where you can explore nearly every corner of reproductive healthcare in one place. You’ll find practical, plain-language answers about birth control options, abortion access, fertility and family planning, and reproductive rights for teens, parents, and LGBTQ+ people.

If you’re navigating a new diagnosis, wondering about changes to insurance coverage, or just trying to keep up with what’s legal (and where), this page pulls it all together. It’s a space designed for curiosity — not judgment.

You can browse questions like “Can I still get pregnant if I’m on testosterone?”, “Is it too late to get the HPV vaccine?”, or “How could abortion bans affect IVF?” — alongside guides on crisis pregnancy centers and how to advocate for yourself in an exam room.

So if you’re ready to keep learning, I’d encourage you to explore and play around. Whatever your situation, you’ll find something that helps you feel more informed, confident, and in control of your care.

You are more than what happened to you.