Our Approach
At TRT Center of Georgia, we look beyond symptoms to address the root causes of mental health challenges. Our etiotropic approach means we seek to understand and treat what’s creating your difficulties, not just manage the effects.
The Etiotropic Perspective
Etiotropic treatment focuses on identifying and addressing the source of a problem rather than simply managing symptoms. Think of it this way: if your car’s check engine light is on, you wouldn’t just cover the light—you’d find out what’s causing it and fix that. We apply this same principle to mental health.
While many traditional approaches focus on coping strategies and symptom management, we work to resolve the underlying issues creating your distress. This doesn’t mean coping skills aren’t valuable—they are. But our goal is to go deeper, addressing the root cause so that healing can occur at its source.
This deeper work requires more from you. Achieving cure-level results rather than symptom relief alone demands commitment, honesty, and willingness to engage intensively with the therapeutic process. Our program is more thorough and can be more intense than traditional therapy approaches.
For some people, this level of commitment doesn’t fit where they are right now—and that’s okay. Timing matters in healing. But for those who have suffered long enough and are ready to do what it takes to truly get well, or for those who want to prevent trauma from developing into chronic disorders, this approach offers something fundamentally different: the possibility of complete resolution rather than lifelong management.
If you’re ready to invest deeply in your healing, we’re ready to walk that path with you.

When Trauma Resolution Becomes Primary
Sometimes people who have experienced significant trauma don’t realize how deeply they’ve been affected. Trauma can shape your life in ways that feel normal because you’ve adapted to survive it. If during our assessment we identify unreconciled traumatic experiences, we will recommend Trauma Resolution Therapy™ (TRT™).
Unlike other therapies that address many aspects of coping with life, TRT™ has only one goal: to help you completely resolve trauma you have experienced. When severe trauma is affecting your life, TRT™ becomes the key that unlocks all other therapeutic progress. We consider your right to resolve trauma—regardless of when it occurred—to be primary.
What follows is an explanation of how TRT™ works and what makes it different from other approaches to trauma treatment.

Trauma Resolution Therapy (TRT™)
Trauma Resolution Therapy™ is our primary methodology for working with psychological trauma. TRT™ has one goal: to reverse trauma etiology. “Reversing etiology” means undoing what the traumatic event created in your system—essentially curing the trauma itself.
What TRT Does (and Doesn't Do)
TRT’s exclusive focus is resolving trauma at its source. It is not designed to change your behavior, make you a better partner or employee, or teach you life skills—though these improvements often happen naturally as a result of trauma resolution.
The purpose of this focused approach is to remove trauma’s effects from your reality system entirely. When trauma etiology is resolved, it no longer influences how you experience the world, make decisions, or relate to others.


How TRT Works
Rather than working through extensive discussion, analysis, or cognitive reframing of your trauma, TRT™ facilitates what we might call a biological extinction process. Through precisely directed therapeutic attention at specific increments of trauma dissolution, the molecular substrate that trauma created naturally breaks down and is eliminated.
This is fundamentally different from insight-based therapies that aim to help you understand or reframe your trauma, or exposure-based therapies that help you tolerate trauma triggers. While awareness and understanding may occur during TRT™, they’re not the healing mechanism—they’re simply byproducts of addressing trauma at its actual source.
The TRT Clinical Environment
TRT™ is delivered within what we call a “clinical module”—a structured therapeutic environment specifically designed to support complete trauma resolution. Think of it as creating optimal conditions for healing, similar to how a surgeon needs a sterile operating room to perform surgery effectively.
This structured environment includes specific agreements between you and your therapist, clinical standards, and interactive guidelines that focus all therapeutic attention precisely on your trauma’s source. These aren’t arbitrary rules—they’re essential conditions that allow the healing process to work at its deepest level.

What Supports Complete Resolution
Achieving complete trauma resolution—what we call cure-level results—requires certain conditions to be in place. Some factors can interfere with TRT’s ability to work at the biological level where trauma actually exists. Understanding these factors helps us work together to create the best possible conditions for your healing.
Factors that can limit complete resolution include:
- Psychotropic medications
- Substance use
- Active addiction
- Co-occurring conditions
- Concurrent behavioral programs
- Ongoing threats to safety
- Very early childhood trauma
- Additional paragraph
Psychotropic medications
While medications can be essential for managing certain conditions, they can interfere with TRT’s ability to access and resolve trauma at its source. If you’re currently taking psychiatric medications, we’ll discuss this during your assessment. In some cases, past medication use may also affect treatment outcomes, depending on how recently you discontinued use.
Substance use
Even occasional alcohol or recreational drug use can prevent complete trauma resolution. This includes social drinking—for example, having wine on weekends while participating in TRT™ during the week. This isn’t a moral judgment; it’s a biological reality about how substances affect the brain’s ability to process and resolve trauma.
Active addiction
If you’re currently struggling with alcohol or drug dependency, this needs to be addressed before TRT™ can be effective. Interestingly, addiction itself is often a source of trauma that we can address with TRT™—but only after you’ve achieved stable sobriety.
Co-occurring conditions
Conditions like Bipolar Disorder need to be stabilized before we can effectively address trauma. This doesn’t mean you can’t receive TRT™—it means we first stabilize the co-occurring condition, then proceed with trauma resolution once you’re ready. We don’t address these issues simultaneously because each requires its own focused treatment approach.
Concurrent behavioral programs
Rigorous behavioral control or modification programs running parallel to TRT™ can interfere with trauma resolution. The focus on controlling symptoms can actually prevent us from accessing and resolving the source.
Ongoing threats to safety
If you’re currently living in a situation where your physical safety is actively threatened—for example, an ongoing domestic violence situation—we need to address your immediate safety first. Specialized approaches exist for these circumstances.
Very early childhood trauma
TRT™ has limitations with trauma that occurred before approximately age three, though these traumas can sometimes be addressed when working on later trauma sources.
Additional paragraph
Why do these factors matter? Because TRT™ works by facilitating a natural biological process of trauma dissolution. When certain substances or conditions are present, they can block access to the neural pathways where trauma exists, preventing the complete resolution that makes TRT™ unique.

Measuring Resolution
How do we know when trauma is truly resolved? Rather than focusing primarily on whether symptoms have ended, we measure something more fundamental: the restoration of your identity.
Throughout TRT™, you’ll develop a clear understanding of three distinct versions of yourself:
This process is documented as part of your treatment, and both you and your therapist must agree that trauma has been completely resolved before concluding TRT™ for that particular source. The goal isn’t just feeling better—it’s being free from trauma’s influence on your identity and reality system.
Throughout TRT™, you'll develop a clear understanding of three distinct versions of yourself:
- Who you were before the trauma occurred—your values, beliefs, and sense of reality before the traumatic event contradicted them.
- Who you became during and after the trauma—how you had to change, what you had to do to survive, and how these survival adaptations may have created further contradictions to who you really are.
- Who you are now that the trauma is resolved—a restoration of your core identity, freed from trauma’s distorting influence.
Our Commitment
Above all, our approach is guided by focused-caring for each person as they are. We don’t fit you into a predetermined treatment protocol. Instead, we tailor our etiotropic methodology to your specific situation, your unique trauma history, and your individual needs.
Whether you’re a first responder who has given everything to protect others, a trauma survivor seeking genuine healing after years of symptom management, or someone newly confronting the effects of trauma, we’re here to focus our care on resolving what’s at the heart of your struggle.
Ready to learn more? Explore our Learning Center for in-depth information about trauma, TRT™ methodology, and the science behind our approach, or contact us to discuss whether our approach might be right for you



