“…Through the theoretical framework of the Biopsychosocial Model of Perceived Racism (Clark et al, 1999), we propose the accumulation of race-based stress, without adaptive coping strategies, may lead to racial trauma—a chronic and cumulative presentation of race-based stress symptoms (Bryant-Davis & Ocampo, 2005; Carter, 2007; Hargons et al, 2021). Race-based stress reaction, or the immediate, involuntary response one experiences following a racist stressor, is the earliest point of intervention to prevent the progression to racial trauma (Hargons et al, 2021). Furthermore, what Black people learn through racial socialization about how they should respond to racist stressors (i.e., don’t let them get under your skin, or if you react “poorly” you’re giving them a reason to kill you) (Anderson et al, 2019; Thomas & Blackmon, 2015), may lead to suppression of the normal stress reaction and recovery process.…”