Why Start Workplace Wellbeing Sessions with Icebreakers?
When we facilitate workplace mental health sessions—whether as part of a wellbeing workshop, leadership retreat, or regular check-in—participants often arrive carrying the stress of their day, uncertainty about the process, or hesitance to speak up in front of colleagues.
A well-chosen icebreaker can:
- Ease tension and help people feel more comfortable
- Foster a sense of connection and shared purpose
- Build psychological safety, which is the foundation for honest and constructive conversations
- Signal that this is a space for respect, curiosity, and compassion
Trauma-informed icebreakers go one step further—they create safety without pressuring participants to share anything deeply personal, and they respect individual boundaries.
Our 10 Favourite Trauma-Informed Icebreakers for Workplace Mental Health
1. “One-Word Check-In”
Each person shares one word describing how they’re feeling right now. It’s low-pressure, quick, and gives the facilitator a sense of overall energy in the room.
2. “Highlight & Hurdle”
Invite each participant to share one positive moment from their week and one challenge they’re currently navigating at work. This encourages balanced sharing without oversharing.
3. “Workplace Superpower”
Ask people to name a skill or quality they bring to the team—something they’re proud of. This builds confidence and invites peer appreciation.
4. “Guess Who?”
Before the session, collect one light-hearted fact from each participant. Read them out and have the group guess who it belongs to. This creates laughter and humanises colleagues.
5. “Common Ground Challenge”
In small groups, find three non-work-related things everyone has in common. This shifts focus from roles to relationships.
6. “Values Alignment”
Share a list of workplace values (e.g., respect, integrity, innovation). Ask each person to choose one that resonates and explain why. This fosters insight into team culture.
7. “Wellbeing Radar”
Participants rate themselves (1–5) on mental, emotional, physical, social, and work wellbeing. This helps visualise strengths and stress points.
8. “If I Were CEO for a Day…”
Invite participants to suggest one change they’d make to improve workplace wellbeing. This can spark meaningful, actionable ideas.
9. “Stress Release Toolkit”
Ask everyone to share one quick stress-relief strategy that works for them. Compile the responses into a team “toolkit.”
10. “Silent Line-Up”
Without speaking, team members line up in order based on a fun prompt (e.g., length of time in role, favourite tea/coffee preference). It’s playful and energising.
Facilitation Tips for Psychological Safety
- Respect privacy: Never pressure participants to share personal or sensitive information.
- Use clear boundaries: Keep activities relevant to work and wellbeing, not personal trauma histories.
- Be mindful of power dynamics: Ensure managers and team members feel equally included without creating discomfort.
- Debrief with care: After each activity, invite optional reflections such as:
- “What stood out for you?”
- “How does this relate to how we work together?”
- “What stood out for you?”
Why a Trauma-Informed Approach Matters
Not everyone comes into a workplace session feeling safe or ready to participate. Some may have experienced trauma—inside or outside of work—that influences how they engage. Trauma-informed facilitation means recognising this and ensuring:
- Participation is always optional
- Sharing is never forced
- Activities don’t single anyone out or trigger distress
- The environment feels predictable, respectful, and supportive
Conclusion
The right icebreaker doesn’t just “warm people up”—it sets the tone for meaningful, respectful dialogue. When sessions are facilitated with a trauma-informed lens, teams are more likely to feel connected, supported, and engaged.