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Catherine Knibbs- #Online Harms
15 min readJan 4, 2020

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Do most ‘biohackers’ have Trauma? (Pre-birth, infant, child or adolescent) I’m going to stick my neck on the line and say most do; yes, completely. Many just don’t call it that, recognise it as that or perhaps even want to acknowledge the issue as “trauma”, it sounds too dramatic doesn’t it? Does psychotherapy as a profession understand functional health/epigenetic impacts of trauma in depth and why they need to? Why do these approaches need fusing?

DNA circle with Brain Image in the centre

Is this first statement punchy and controversial; yes, and what credentials do I have to assert this? A number of them, but this is more about the subject matter than my ego, need to be liked or popular or measured by letters after my name. This is about a conversation that needs to happen in a sphere of body Health and Mental health overlap as they are inextricably entwined and as yet I am not seeing the two worlds talking or actioning enough to make a significant difference to the wellbeing of people, in my opinion and experience to date, although some practitioners are moving in this direction, This needs to be the next big paradigm shift for the well-being of all and so a coherent ‘whole’istic approach results in a…

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Catherine Knibbs- #Online Harms
Catherine Knibbs- #Online Harms

Written by Catherine Knibbs- #Online Harms

Online Harms Consultant, Cybertrauma Clinician, PhD’er, Author, Theorist, Polymath, Functional Health, Epigenetic Trauma Psychotherapist (Child/Adult)

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