BENEDICTION COUNSELING
  • Home
  • Specialties
    • Grief
    • Trauma
    • Highly Sensitive People
    • Depression
    • Anxiety
  • Group Therapy
  • DBT Therapy
    • DBT Groups
    • DBT Videos
  • About
    • Meet the Team >
      • Allison Harvey
      • Kelsey McCamon
      • Tess Weigand
      • Kelly Farah
      • Brooke Van Natta
      • Alyssa Lopez
      • Rachel Seiger
      • Katelyn Miranda
      • Sam Wilde
      • Jessamyn Shanks
      • Brian Duda
      • Sam Carson
    • Fees and Insurance
    • Online Booking
    • Inclusion
    • FAQ
  • Training Program
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • Resources

Healing Moral Injury: Therapy as a Space for Repair, Not Judgment

1/27/2026

0 Comments

 
One of the most important insights from moral injury research is that healing requires repair, not erasure. Clinical articles emphasize that recovery does not mean forgetting what happened or pretending it didn’t matter. Instead, therapy offers a space to examine moral pain with honesty, compassion, and context. This includes exploring guilt and shame, challenging unrealistic responsibility, and acknowledging the constraints under which decisions were made.

Evidence-informed approaches show that cognitive therapy can help individuals gently re-evaluate harsh moral conclusions about themselves, while also respecting the seriousness of their values. Other models emphasize relational repair—restoring trust in oneself and reconnecting with others in meaningful ways. Across approaches, researchers agree that moral injury heals best in environments that resist judgment and encourage moral complexity.

At its core, working with moral injury is about helping people reclaim their humanity. When therapy validates both the pain and the values beneath it, individuals can move toward self-forgiveness, renewed purpose, and a more compassionate relationship with themselves. Moral injury reminds us that deep pain often reflects deep care—and that healing is possible without abandoning what matters most.

​References:
  • Griffin, B. J., et al. (2019). Moral Injury: An Integrative Review.
    A comprehensive overview of what moral injury is, how it develops, and how it differs from PTSD.
  • Litz, B. T., & Walker, G. (2025). Moral Injury: Conceptual, Assessment, and Treatment Issues.
    A clear summary of current definitions, assessment tools, and emerging approaches to healing moral injury.
  • Pan, A., & Dai, Y. (2022). Moral Injury from a Psychological Perspective.
    An accessible review of the emotional and cognitive processes involved in moral injury.
  • Topçu, F. (2025). Moral Injury, Resilience, and Valued Living.
    An empirical study exploring how resilience and living according to one’s values can support recovery from moral injury.
  • Ehlers, A., et al. (2022). Cognitive Therapy for Moral Injury in PTSD.
    A clinical article describing how therapy can address guilt, shame, and moral distress in trauma recovery.
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    Archives

    February 2026
    January 2026
    December 2025
    November 2025
    October 2025
    September 2025
    August 2025
    July 2025
    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    December 2023
    October 2023
    August 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023

    Categories

    All
    Abundance
    AI
    Allison Harvey
    Anxiety
    Austen Grafa
    Bereavement
    Book Review
    Change
    Christian Swan
    Complicated Grief
    Connection
    Crisis Survival
    DBT
    Depression
    Distress Tolerance
    Domestic Violence
    Emotional Regulation
    Emotion Regulation
    Gratitude
    Grief
    Grief Companionship
    Grief Counseling
    Grief Process
    Grief Therapy
    Grounding
    Healing
    Highly Sensitive People
    Hyperarousal
    Hypoarousal
    Identity
    IFS
    Integration
    Journal Prompt
    Katelyn Miranda
    LGBTQ+
    Loneliness
    Mental Health
    Mindfulness
    Minority Stress
    Moral Injury
    Motherhood
    Mourning
    Narrative Therapy
    Nervous System
    Opposite Action
    Parenting
    PMDD
    Polyvagal Theory
    Post Traumatic Growth
    PTSD
    Radical Acceptance
    Relationships
    Relationship Skills
    Resilience
    Rest
    Sam Wilde
    Secondary Trauma
    Self Care
    Self-Care
    Self Compassion
    Self-Compassion
    Social Anxiety
    Somatic Awareness
    Somatic Experiencing
    Somatic Therapy
    Spirituality
    Storytelling
    Stress
    Trauma
    Trauma Counseling
    Trauma Recovery
    Trauma Survivor
    Trauma Therapy
    Values
    Values Based Therapy
    Values-Based Therapy
    Vicarious Trauma
    Window Of Tolerance

    RSS Feed

Benediction Counseling  6355 Ward Road, Suite 304, Arvada, CO 80004  720-372-4017
Copyright 2025 | All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Good Faith Estimate
Proudly powered by Weebly
  • Home
  • Specialties
    • Grief
    • Trauma
    • Highly Sensitive People
    • Depression
    • Anxiety
  • Group Therapy
  • DBT Therapy
    • DBT Groups
    • DBT Videos
  • About
    • Meet the Team >
      • Allison Harvey
      • Kelsey McCamon
      • Tess Weigand
      • Kelly Farah
      • Brooke Van Natta
      • Alyssa Lopez
      • Rachel Seiger
      • Katelyn Miranda
      • Sam Wilde
      • Jessamyn Shanks
      • Brian Duda
      • Sam Carson
    • Fees and Insurance
    • Online Booking
    • Inclusion
    • FAQ
  • Training Program
  • Contact Us
  • Blog
  • Resources