Icon of a hand holding growing plants on a purple background, symbolizing growth to represent our Mission.

Our Mission

To cultivate radically inclusive, compassionate, and empowered communities through trauma-informed work designed to drive sustainable change.

Icon of person with telescope to represent our vision

Our Vision

We believe in building a culture where trauma is recognized, healing is paramount, relationships are the primary value, and cultural humility is a universal goal.

Empowered Educators. Resilient Futures.

Educators and youth-serving professionals today face the complex needs of students impacted by childhood trauma. Without trauma-informed training, staff often lack the tools to foster emotional safety and resilience, leading to secondary traumatic stress, burnout, and high turnover in schools.

Trauma-informed training equips entire school communities with the skills to recognize trauma responses, practice cultural humility, and build resilience. Educators also learn protective strategies to support their own well-being, making them better prepared to care for the students they serve.

Four women standing together indoors, smiling, with one wearing a shirt that says 'be kind'.

Why We’re Here

Resilient Futures is a nonprofit founded in 2018 to promote well-being and healing through trauma-informed practices. We partner with communities to address the widespread impact of trauma using evidence-based strategies rooted in the principles of trauma-informed care.

Through education, collaboration, and community engagement, we create safe spaces for learning, growth, and resilience. Our programs equip individuals and organizations with the tools to understand trauma, foster healing, and drive systemic change.

  • In 2018, Resilient Futures was created when three clinical psychologists, Dr. Laura McArthur, Dr. Eleonora Cahill, and Dr. Megan Brennan, united under a unified mission to cultivate safe and resilient communities for every young person.

    Resilient Futures was conceived to help bridge the gap in trauma-informed training within schools and youth-serving organizations.

    Behind many youth behavioral challenges lie untold stories of adversity, where what appears as maladaptive behaviors are often survival mechanisms in disguise. Now the question was how to bring this knowledge, along with practical trauma-informed tools and strategies, to Educators and Community Leaders - shifting mindsets, behaviors, and ultimately school culture - to drive sustainable change.

    Drawing from their experience at acclaimed academic institutions such as the Harvard School of Education, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), UPenn, and more, the trio saw the urgent need for a dedicated nonprofit entity to cater fully to the clamoring demands for training and support from educational institutions nationwide.

    As society grapples with the harsh realities of poverty, abuse & neglect, and other forms of trauma affecting our youth at alarming rates, Resilient Futures stands for hope and healing. With each passing day, schools and organizations increasingly acknowledge the profound impact of trauma on their students, teachers, and everyone in the school community. Consequently, the demand for trauma-informed training and programming has surged. 5 years since its founding, Resilient Futures has trained 5,400+ educators and community leaders, impacting over 165,000 students across the country.

    At the heart of their work remains the commitment to unraveling the intricate web of trauma. Through comprehensive training and advocacy, Resilient Futures champions the cultivation of environments where safety and resilience flourish for all.

Voices of Resilience

Hear from our client partners about their experiences working with Resilient Futures to implement trauma-informed practices within their schools and organizations.

The Phoenix flower

Logo with text 'resilient futures' surrounded by lavender flowers, a white crescent, and the words 'Relate. Reflect. Restore. Renew.' underneath.

With only a few drops of water, the Phoenix flower can be revived from dehydration and thrive. Like the Phoenix flower, through centralizing relationships and opportunities to relate & reflect, we can then restore and renew as individuals and communities.

Impact since 2018

Infographic highlighting statistics related to trauma-informed initiatives. It shows 1,750+ trauma-informed equity-centered trainings completed, over 40 schools and community institutions, and 5,300+ trauma-informed educators and community leaders.
Infographic showing impact: 161,500+ students impacted with an illustration of people holding hands, 40 community partners with heart-shaped tree graphics, and $2.8 million+ raised from fundraising and donations depicted with hands and money icons.

Give to further our Mission

Our schools and youth-serving communities are in need of trauma-informed education, training, and resources. Your tax-deductible gift helps us expand training and resources to more educators, schools, and youth-serving organizations.

Interested in learning more about our Trauma-Informed Futures© Programming & Services?