Written by Kristin Voris and Brooklyn Alvarez
Reviewed by Natasia Pelowski, New York University
Trauma Sensitive Yoga Deck for Kids: For Therapists, Caregivers, and Yoga Teachers combines yoga practices and psychological science to inform readers on the use of a yoga practice to aid in the treatment of and care for traumatized children.
David Emerson, director of the Center for Trauma and Embodiment at the Justice Resource Institute in Massachusetts, wrote in the preface that the work undergirding this yoga deck shifts it from a traditional focus on yoga in general to a specific application with children who have experienced developmental trauma. Emerson notes that talk therapy, the norm for trauma therapy in cognitive behavioral approaches, is not effective with younger children who, in most cases, don’t have language for their experience. The deck relies on language to facilitate its use, but the emphasis is on the bodily experience itself; the experiences do not need to be explained, or justified or interested, he wrote. Emerson explained that the deck was designed to meet “the wordless horror of chronic abuse and neglect with opportunities for positive body experiences†(XIV).

Finally, the book discusses the etymology of trauma, attachment theory, and trauma-sensitive yoga in practice. While the book acknowledges the development of research that has resulted into current distinctions between PTSD, C-PTSD and developmental trauma, it also acknowledges that more research is needed to scientifically back up most current practices of trauma. The book also includes further reading, notes and a bibliography.
The success of the book lies in its ability to empower the child at all times. It explains the sympathetic nervous system’s fight-or-flight response and how the empowerment of choice can counteract this aspect of post-traumatic-stress.
As a result of the demographically neutral language and easily accessible outlines of the postures, it appeals to a diverse group of readers—this appeal to both knowledgeable information for the adults and accessible information for the children makes this Trauma Sensitive Yoga Deck For Kids For Therapists, Caregivers, and Yoga Teachers stand out among other books on the care of traumatized children.
Kirsten Voris is a trauma-informed yoga instructor and writer who currently lives in southern Arizona.
Brooklyn Alvarez is a yoga instructor and psychologist-in-training (2021).
Natasia Pelowski studies psychology and writing at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study through New York University.
Voris, K., & Alvarez, B. (2019). Trauma sensitive yoga deck for kids: For therapists, caregivers, and yoga teachers. Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books.
