Traumatic experiences require an ability to disconnect from ourselves and from the overwhelm around us—to keep the horror at a distance and preserve some sense of OK-ness. Psychologically splitting off experiences of humiliation, abandonment, and violation helps children survive and adapt but backfires in later life when it results in long-term self-rejection, self-neglect, or even self-hatred. Understanding trauma-related fragmentation as a survival response is vital to the work of all therapists who work with victims of abuse, domestic violence, or even combat.