Religious Trauma Symptoms: A Complete Checklist
Religious trauma — sometimes called Religious Trauma Syndrome (RTS), a term coined by psychologist Dr. Marlene Winell — refers to the psychological harm caused by authoritarian, fear-based, or controlling religious environments. The symptoms below are commonly reported by people who have left high-control religious groups and churches that use spiritual abuse as a tool of control.
You do not need to experience every symptom on this list for your experience to be valid. If you recognize yourself in multiple items across these categories, what you went through was real and it affected you.
Emotional Symptoms
- Chronic guilt that persists even when you have done nothing wrong
- Shame about normal human desires, thoughts, or emotions
- Anxiety that spikes around religious topics, church buildings, or religious music
- Fear of divine punishment, hell, or eternal consequences for leaving
- Grief over lost community, relationships, and the life you built inside the group
- Anger at leadership, at yourself for staying, or at the years you lost
- Depression or a pervasive sense of emptiness after leaving
- Emotional numbness or difficulty feeling joy, especially about things the church labeled as sinful
- A lingering sense that you deserve to be punished
- Difficulty experiencing positive emotions without guilt ("I don't deserve to be happy")
Cognitive Symptoms
- Black-and-white thinking: difficulty seeing nuance, gray areas, or multiple valid perspectives
- Difficulty trusting your own judgment or perceptions (a result of gaslighting)
- Intrusive thoughts about hell, damnation, the rapture, or end-times scenarios
- Difficulty making decisions without consulting an authority figure
- Confusion about your own beliefs, values, and identity
- Thought patterns that automatically return to the group's framework ("What would the church say about this?")
- Persistent doubt about your decision to leave ("Maybe they were right")
- Difficulty distinguishing your own thoughts from thoughts implanted by the group
- Perfectionism driven by fear of failure rather than desire for excellence
- Catastrophic thinking: expecting the worst outcome as divine punishment
Behavioral Symptoms
- Avoidance of anything associated with religion: churches, religious music, holidays, scripture
- People-pleasing and difficulty saying no (conditioned obedience)
- Difficulty setting healthy boundaries
- Withdrawal from social situations, especially groups
- Overworking or staying constantly busy to avoid processing emotions
- Self-sabotage or pulling away from good things ("I don't deserve this")
- Difficulty celebrating holidays that were forbidden by the group
- Compulsive checking or rule-following, even rules that no longer apply
Physical Symptoms
- Panic attacks, especially when triggered by religious content or environments
- Insomnia or nightmares related to religious themes (hell, the rapture, divine judgment)
- Chronic tension, headaches, or muscle pain with no medical explanation
- Digestive issues related to stress and anxiety
- Fatigue and exhaustion, especially in the first year after leaving
- Startle responses to sounds, phrases, or music associated with the group
Relational Symptoms
- Difficulty trusting people, especially authority figures or anyone in a leadership position
- Fear of being manipulated or controlled in new relationships
- Difficulty forming close friendships (the church may have been your only social world)
- Tension or estrangement from family members still inside the group
- Difficulty in romantic relationships, especially around topics of submission, authority, or roles
- Hypervigilance in social settings: constantly scanning for signs of manipulation or control
- Reluctance to join any group, organization, or community
How These Symptoms Develop
Religious trauma symptoms are not a sign of weakness or spiritual failure. They are a normal psychological response to abnormal conditions. High-control churches systematically override your autonomy, replace your judgment with the group's judgment, and use fear to maintain compliance. When you leave, your nervous system carries the residue of years of conditioned responses.
For a deeper understanding of the mechanisms that create these symptoms, see:
- Psychological Effects of Religious Indoctrination
- The Psychology of Indoctrination
- How Fear-Based Religious Teaching Affects Children
What to Do If You Recognize These Symptoms
If this checklist describes your experience, you are not alone and you are not broken. These symptoms are treatable and they do get better with time and support.
- Name what happened: Understanding that your experience has a name — religious trauma — is often the first breakthrough
- Find a trauma-informed therapist: Look for someone experienced with religious trauma or high-control groups. Our resources page lists directories.
- Follow a recovery framework: Our 12-step Recovery Roadmap provides practical guidance
- Read others' stories: Survivor accounts can be profoundly validating
- Take the self-assessment: Our self-assessment tool can help you evaluate the level of control you experienced