Using trauma-informed coaching for true transformation.
By Shingirai Makosa
In 2016, my life changed in an instant. A devastating motor vehicle accident left me paraplegic. I lost more than the ability to walk—I lost the map to the life I thought I was building. But in the silence of recovery, I discovered something unexpected: poetry. It wasn’t just a creative outlet. It became my medicine, my mirror and, eventually, my method. Through words, I began to rebuild—not escape. I wrote my way back to myself, one line at a time.
At the heart of it all is a trauma-informed coaching blueprint—one shaped by lived experience, psychological frameworks, and the transformative power of language. I don’t separate my poetry from my coaching or consulting. They are interwoven, each informing the other. When I guide clients through change, I use the same tools I use to write: structure, rhythm, reflection, and emotional truth.
Trauma-informed coaching is often misunderstood as simply being gentle or empathetic. But it’s far more strategic than that. It’s about designing spaces where people feel safe enough to transform. It prioritizes psychological safety, choice, and collaboration. Clients are not passive recipients of advice—they are co-creators of their healing, and every session should be built on trust and empowerment.
To structure transformation, it’s important to rely on frameworks that bring clarity and depth. The Hero’s Journey, for example, is one I return to often. Outlined by the famous mythologist Joseph Campbell in his book The Hero with a Thousand Faces, this process consists of three main stages: departure, initiation, and return. It is a cyclical pattern that allows clients to see their lives as narratives—through an ordinary world, a call to change, a challenge, and a return. This arc helps them locate themselves in the process, and it helps me write poems that mirror their path.
Another effective tool to unpack beliefs and consequences is the ABC Model and Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT). When a client faces a limiting belief, it can help identify the activating event, explore the belief it triggered, and examine the emotional and behaviuoral consequences. Then, through poetry or coaching dialogue, I can challenge that belief and rewrite the story.
The Power of Poetry
I’ve come to see poetry as a public health tool. It raises awareness, challenges stigma, and invites collective healing. For example, I write on equity, peace, mental health, and cultural resilience—not just as a poet, but as a systems thinker. My poems are not just art; they are interventions. They speak to communities, opening space for dialogue, reflection, and transformation. Poetry and coaching converge: Both illuminate patterns, reveal possibilities, and invite intentional change.
Ultimately, my process—The Poet’s Blueprint—is about harnessing the interplay of structure and creativity. It is a method that respects the intelligence of human experience, the depth of emotion, and the necessity of strategy. Healing, like art, takes time, intention, and a willingness to sit with discomfort while nurturing growth.
My journey from paralysis to possibility has taught me that transformation is rarely linear—but when approached with care, it is profoundly sustainable.
Through trauma-informed coaching infused with poetic practice, we can guide individuals and organizations not just to recover, but to flourish. The blueprint is not a set of instructions; it is an invitation: to witness, to create, to grow and, ultimately, to bloom.
BIO
Shingirai Makosa is a poet, trauma-informed coach, wellness counsellor, and founder of Shimak Consultants based in Cape Town, WC, ZA (https://shimakconsultants.co.za) and Abled Transformation, a strategic unit of Shimak Consultants. Shingirai’s work bridges organizational design, public health, and healing-centered coaching, and he currently is pursuing a Master’s of Public Health. Whether supporting an individual through personal growth or guiding a team through organizational change, Shingirai approaches each engagement with the same question: “What does safety look like here—and how do we build it?” Contact Shingirai via email at: makosashingirai@yahoo.com. He also writes under the pen name “The Poet’s Echo” and his poetry and reflections are shared via a dedicated facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61564717587110.
The Slow Bloom
from The Poet’s Echo
Some seeds sleep under quiet ground,
No voice, no sprout, no growing sound.
But deep inside, a life begins,
Unseen by sun, untouched by winds.
Wait, and it wins.
Don’t rush the leaf before its day,
Some roots take time to find their way.
The soil may seem too dark, too deep,
But gentle things awaken sleep.
Trust time to keep.
The rain may fall and storms may yell,
Something stirs in nature’s spell.
A flower knows when it is due,
It doesn’t chase the skies so blue.
It waits, then grew.
So be the bud not yet in bloom,
No need to shake the earth or room.
Your time will come to lift and rise,
And open petals to the skies.
Wait without cries.
Healing takes time—and that’s okay.
You don’t need to rush or force your recovery.
There is strength in stillness, in waiting, in trusting that your time to rise will come.
You are not behind.
You are becoming.
Even if others can’t see it yet, trust that something within you is reaching for the light.
Surviving was brave.
Healing is sacred.
And thriving?
That’s the next bloom.
