Supporting legal teams to think clearly and work well under pressure
Practical, CPD training that strengthens judgement, resilience, communication and ethical decision-making in high-pressure legal environments.
Why this work matters
Legal work requires sustained attention, sound judgement and the ability to engage constructively with people in moments of stress, uncertainty and conflict.
Over time, these cumulative demands shape how individuals and teams think, communicate and make decisions, particularly under pressure.
Trauma-informed practice offers a practical, evidence-informed way of addressing these realities at a systems and practice level, rather than placing responsibility solely on individuals to cope better.
Research shows that lawyers experience significantly higher rates of psychological distress, anxiety, depression, stress and vicarious trauma than both the general population and many other professions, reflecting the sustained impact of high-pressure, trauma-exposed legal work.
This work focuses on strengthening professional capacity, supporting ethical judgement, attentiveness and human-centred legal practice.
Why this matters at an organisational level
When pressure is sustained and unmanaged, organisations may see:
- Reduced clarity and consistency in decision-making
- Strained communication with clients and colleagues
- Increased escalation in emotionally charged interactions
- Fatigue, burnout and attrition in high-exposure roles
- Increased risk to ethical judgement, professional conduct and regulatory compliance
In legal settings, sustained pressure affects more than individual wellbeing.
It influences outcomes at team, organisational and client levels.
Trauma-informed practice provides a practical, evidence-informed way of working with these realities.
It helps legal professionals remain present, clear and effective, particularly when the work is complex, adversarial or emotionally demanding.
Trauma-informed practice is not therapy, and it does not position professionals as fragile.
It is a principled, practical way of working that recognises how stress, uncertainty and past experience can affect attention, communication and decision-making.
What this work supports in practice
The emphasis is on applied professional capability, not abstract theory.
In legal contexts, this includes:
- Understanding how pressure and distress shape client behaviour and engagement
- Recognising how stress affects professionals’ clarity, judgement and capacity
- Working in ways that reduce unnecessary escalation, confusion or reactivity
- Creating conditions that support steadier, more effective professional engagement

It supports clearer conversations, stronger trust and more sustainable practice, particularly in client-facing and high-stakes roles.
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Testimonials
What people are saying
This approach has been applied across complex, high-responsibility environments including government, health, and regulated professional contexts.
A service design lens on legal work
Legal work is shaped not only by individual capability, but by systems: workflows, decision pathways, client touchpoints and organisational expectations.
This work helps legal teams examine:
- How legal processes and touchpoints influence stress and clarity
- Where decision pathways create friction or overload
- Practical adjustments that reduce unnecessary escalation

This ensures trauma-informed practice is embedded in how work happens, rather than being placed solely on individuals to cope better.
What teams say after the training
“Brilliant materials and great activities for our team. It will definitely better equip us to help with some of the public sector’s most complex social policy challenges.”
— Nick Sunderland, Director, Scyne Group
Delivery Information
Work is delivered through tailored workshops and facilitated sessions designed specifically for legal teams and organisations.
Sessions are adapted to role, context and seniority, and may be delivered online or in person.
Areas commonly explored
Depending on context, sessions may explore topics such as:
- Understanding stress and trauma responses in legal contexts
- Trauma-informed principles for client work
- Recognising and responding to escalation or shutdown
- Trauma-aware communication and interviewing
- Sustaining clarity and judgement under pressure
- Vicarious trauma, boundaries and professional sustainability
- Designing safer, clearer legal processes and client experiences
Content is tailored to the audience and organisational setting.
Topics can be claimed under CPD training categories including Ethics and professional responsibility, Professional skills, and Practice management and business skills.
Engagement & Pricing
Engagements are typically delivered as:
- CPD-accredited professional development sessions
- Short workshops or briefings for legal teams
- Tailored programs aligned to a firm’s context and needs
- Integration into existing learning and development frameworks

Sessions can be delivered as single stand-alone offerings or as part of a short series, depending on organisational goals.
About your facilitator
Jax Wechsler is a trauma-informed systemic designer, educator and coach with over 20 years’ experience working across complex social, financial and community systems.
She specialises in trauma-aware practice, nervous-system-informed approaches and service design, supporting professionals to create safer, clearer and more human-centred services. Jax has trained over a thousand practitioners internationally and has contributed to the book Designed with Care: Creating Trauma-Informed Content.
Her work blends evidence-informed insights with practical tools that support clearer thinking, steadier interactions and more sustainable professional practice in high-pressure environments.
If you’re exploring whether this work could support your team, you’re welcome to begin with a conversation.

“This work is about strengthening the conditions that support clear thinking and sound decision-making, especially when stakes are high and pressure is constant.”