Trivedi Depression Pathways™: A Trauma-Informed Model for Recurring Depression

Trivedi Depression Pathways™: A Trauma-Informed Model for Recurring Depression Depression isn’t one illness. It’s many doorways into the same room — and each one needs a different key. Why "just depression" is rarely just depression For decades, depression has been talked about as one thing — usually framed as a chemical imbalance, usually treated with one class of medication. That framing has helped many people. But it has also left many others wondering why the standard approach hasn't been enough, or why their depression keeps returning even after "successful" treatment. Part of the reason is that depression rarely arrives alone.

Trivedi Depression Pathways™: A Trauma-Informed Model for Recurring Depression2026-05-23T17:48:21+05:30

Positive Childhood Experiences May Strengthen Adult Resilience After Childhood Trauma

Positive Childhood Experiences May Strengthen Adult Resilience After Childhood Trauma Our newly published study by Dr Gunjan Y. Trivedi (Wellness Space), published in the journal Acta Psychologica, highlights an important insight in mental health research: Positive Childhood Experiences (PCEs) may strengthen adult resilience, even among individuals exposed to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs). The study examined how both positive and adverse childhood experiences (for more details, click on childhood trauma research in India) are associated with psychological resilience among Indian adults (N = 347). For decades, mental health research has focused primarily on childhood trauma, abuse, neglect, and other adverse childhood

Positive Childhood Experiences May Strengthen Adult Resilience After Childhood Trauma2026-05-23T18:04:17+05:30

Deccan Chronicle featuring Riri Trivedi and Anagha Nagpal’s parenting book: This Book Won’t Teach You Parenting – May, 2025

Psychotherapist Riri G. Trivedi and parent educator Anagha Nagpal have co-authored a book that explores Indian parenting through the lens of healing childhood trauma, encouraging self-reflection, and breaking negative patterns. The book also highlights ways parents can model calm, regulated responses to stress for their children. It was featured in The Deccan Chronicle’s ‘Bookmark’ segment, where Neil Pate curates and reviews notable new releases.   The article outlines the book’s key themes and explains how it equips readers with practical tools to navigate the complexities of modern parenting. The editor adds that Trivedi and Nagpal offer a “parenting compass” for

Deccan Chronicle featuring Riri Trivedi and Anagha Nagpal’s parenting book: This Book Won’t Teach You Parenting – May, 20252026-04-30T18:20:14+05:30
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