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Post-Traumatic Growth: PTGI, Worksheets, and Healing Tools

Published on Dec 07, 2023

Updated on Mar 17, 2026

Updated on Mar 17, 2026

Table of Contents

Post-Traumatic Growth: Using the PTGI and Reflective Worksheets to Support Healing and Resilience

As conversations around trauma healing continue to expand, sparked by influential works such as The Body Keeps the Score and Gabor Maté’s The Myth of Normal, more people are exploring not only how to recover from trauma, but also how to grow after it. One model that supports this exploration is Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG), a framework describing how meaningful psychological change can emerge through the process of healing from adversity [1].

PTG does not imply that trauma is beneficial. Instead, it recognizes that through emotional awareness, self-reflection, and cognitive reframing, many people develop strengths, insights, and values that were not present before the trauma occurred.

This article explores two reflective tools and one standardized assessment, the Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI), used to support insight, resilience, and well-being.

What Is the Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI)?

The PTGI is a 21‑item self-report questionnaire designed to assess how individuals perceive positive psychological change after highly challenging life events [1]. Each item is rated on a five-point scale ranging from “I did not experience this change” to “I experienced this change to a very great degree.”
The PTGI measures five domains of growth:

  • Personal Strength – recognizing inner resilience
  • New Possibilities – discovering new priorities or opportunities
  • Improved Relationships – greater empathy and deeper connection
  • Spiritual or Existential Change – shifts in meaning or purpose
  • Appreciation of Life – increased gratitude and presence

Initially developed to study growth after a crisis, the PTGI is now used across clinical practice, trauma therapy, and self-development. It helps individuals recognize how growth may already be unfolding while also identifying areas that need more support [2].

How the PTGI Is Used

The PTGI can support individuals and clinicians by helping to:

  • Assess perceived growth
  • Track changes over time
  • Highlight specific domains for further reflection
  • Offer language to describe internal shifts

While higher total scores may reflect greater perceived growth, the subscale scores often provide deeper insight. These patterns help people understand how their growth is emerging, rather than evaluating whether they “should” feel better.

If trauma has contributed to anxiety, emotional overwhelm, or lingering stress responses, you may also find support through re-origin’s neuroplasticity-based approach to trauma loops.

Reflective Worksheets That Support Post-Traumatic Growth

In addition to formal assessments, reflective worksheets help build emotional awareness, self-compassion, and cognitive flexibility, all core components of PTG and trauma recovery.

Worksheet 1: Self-Compassion Scale

Self-compassion supports trauma healing by helping individuals meet difficulty with kindness instead of self-judgment. The Self-Compassion Scale is a 26‑item questionnaire assessing how individuals relate to themselves during moments of suffering, inadequacy, or distress [3].
The statements explore themes such as:

  • Self-judgment versus self-kindness
  • Emotional balance
  • Common humanity
  • Awareness during difficult moments

The total score reflects the level of self-compassion currently practiced. This worksheet is often used to help individuals identify patterns of self-criticism and begin developing a more caring internal dialogue.

Worksheet 2: Radical Acceptance Worksheet

Post-traumatic growth often begins with accepting reality as it is, instead of resisting or wishing it were different. The Radical Acceptance Worksheet guides individuals to reflect on experiences or emotions that feel difficult to accept [4].

This tool invites exploration of:

  • What happened
  • Emotional responses
  • What was in one’s control
  • What lies beyond control
  • How future responses could reduce distress

Radical acceptance is not about approving harmful events. It reduces emotional resistance and creates space for resilience, perspective, and long-term healing.

Growth After Trauma: Rebuilding Meaning and Perspective

Trauma can disrupt assumptions about safety, identity, and the world. This disruption may feel disorienting, but it can also open space for reflection and renewal. As individuals process their experiences, they often discover new values, strengths, or ways of relating to others [5].

Post-traumatic growth is not linear. It unfolds alongside ongoing healing and may coexist with distress. Over time, the rebuilding of meaning can support a deeper sense of self and emotional well-being.

A Neuroplasticity-Based Approach to Trauma Recovery

Alongside worksheets and reflection tools, neuroplasticity-based practices help retrain the brain patterns that remain active long after a traumatic event. Trauma often keeps the nervous system in a heightened state of threat, leading to cycles of hypervigilance, emotional overwhelm, or limbic system dysregulation [6].

The re-origin program guides individuals through self-directed brain retraining to help:

  • Reduce threat responses
  • Interrupt trauma-related symptom loops
  • Build adaptive neural pathways
  • Strengthen emotional resilience
  • Restore a sense of safety within the body

When Additional Support Is Needed

If trauma-related symptoms interfere with daily functioning, emotional well-being, or a sense of safety, professional support is essential. Therapists can offer additional assessments, structured guidance, and individualized care.

PTG is not a required outcome of trauma. Healing does not need to produce growth in order to be valid. Yet with the right tools, community, and support, many people discover that growth can emerge over time in empowering and meaningful ways.

For individuals seeking additional structure and support, the re-origin brain retraining program offers a science-based pathway toward nervous system regulation and emotional healing:

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is post-traumatic growth?

Post-traumatic growth refers to positive psychological changes that can develop during the process of healing from trauma (Calhoun & Tedeschi, 1996)[1]. These changes may include new strengths, deeper relationships, or greater meaning. PTG does not dismiss pain or distress. Instead, it recognizes that growth and struggle can coexist.

How is the Post-Traumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI) used?

The PTGI is a validated questionnaire that helps people identify areas of growth after trauma (Tedeschi et al., 2018)[2]. It measures shifts in personal strength, relationships, meaning, and appreciation of life. Many clinicians use it to track progress over time. Individuals also use it for self-reflection and emotional insight.

Is post-traumatic growth the same as recovery?

No. Recovery focuses on reducing distress and restoring stability. PTG focuses on the meaningful changes that may emerge alongside ongoing healing. You can experience growth even if symptoms are still present (Tedeschi & Moore, 2020)[5].

Can brain retraining support trauma healing?

Yes. Trauma often leads to patterns of heightened threat and limbic system activation (van der Kolk, 2014)[6]. Brain retraining uses neuroplasticity to calm these patterns and build healthier, more adaptive neural pathways. Programs like re-origin help people break trauma-related loops and restore emotional safety.

Do reflective worksheets help with post-traumatic growth?

Reflective tools like the Self-Compassion Scale and Radical Acceptance Worksheet support emotional awareness and self-kindness (Neff, 2003)[3]. These practices help individuals understand their inner experiences and reduce resistance to difficult emotions. Worksheets also complement therapy and brain retraining. Over time, they support clarity, perspective, and resilience.

Post-Traumatic Growth: PTGI, Worksheets, and Healing Tools

References
  1. [1] Calhoun, L. G., & Tedeschi, R. G. (1996). The Posttraumatic Growth Inventory: Measuring the positive legacy of trauma. Journal of Traumatic Stress.
    [2] Tedeschi, R. G., Shakespeare-Finch, J., Taku, K., & Calhoun, L. G. (2018). Posttraumatic Growth: Theory, Research, and Applications. Routledge.
    [3] Neff, K. D. (2003). The development and validation of a scale to measure self-compassion. Self and Identity, 2(3), 223–250.
    [4] Linehan, M. M. (1993). Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Personality Disorder. Guilford Press.
    [5] Tedeschi, R. G., & Moore, B. A. (2020). Posttraumatic growth as transformation. Journal of Humanistic Psychology.
    [6] van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking.
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