You’ve talked about your trauma in therapy. You understand what happened and why it affects you. Your mind gets it. But your body? Your body still tenses at certain sounds, still freezes in certain situations, still holds the trauma like it happened yesterday. Talking hasn’t released what’s stuck in your muscles, your nervous system, your physical self.
Somatic therapy approaches healing through the body, recognizing that trauma isn’t just a psychological experience—it’s a physiological one. The body that couldn’t escape, couldn’t fight back, couldn’t discharge the survival energy holds that incomplete response until it’s finally allowed to complete. Understanding somatic approaches can open new pathways to healing that talking alone cannot reach.
What Is Somatic Therapy?
Understanding body-based healing.
The Core Principle
The foundation:
- Trauma lives in the body, not just the mind
- The body holds what the mind can’t process
- Physical sensations are doorways to healing
- Talk therapy alone may not be enough
- The body needs its own attention
“Somatic” Defined
What the word means:
- From Greek “soma” meaning body
- Refers to body-based approaches
- Focus on physical sensations and experiences
- Working with the body directly
- Mind-body integration
The Body Keeps the Score
Why this matters:
- Trauma changes the body
- Stored in muscles, nervous system, posture
- Body responds to triggers even when mind is calm
- Physical symptoms often trauma-related
- Body must be part of healing
Types of Somatic Therapy
Various approaches:
- Somatic Experiencing (SE)
- Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
- Somatic psychotherapy
- Body-oriented trauma therapy
- Many related modalities
How Trauma Affects the Body
Understanding the physiology.
The Survival Response
Fight, flight, freeze:
- Danger activates nervous system
- Body prepares for survival action
- Energy mobilized for fighting or fleeing
- If neither possible, freeze response
- This is automatic and biological
When the Response Doesn’t Complete
Getting stuck:
- If you couldn’t fight or flee
- Energy gets trapped in the body
- Survival response doesn’t discharge
- Nervous system stays activated
- Body stays in survival mode
What the Body Holds
Physical manifestations:
- Chronic muscle tension
- Altered breathing patterns
- Changed posture
- Startle responses
- Nervous system dysregulation
- Physical symptoms without medical cause
The Body’s Memory
Different from cognitive memory:
- Procedural memory in the body
- Triggered by sensations, not just thoughts
- Body remembers what mind may not
- Implicit rather than explicit
- Shows up in physical reactions
Somatic Experiencing (SE)
Peter Levine’s approach.
The Theory
How SE understands trauma:
- Animals shake off trauma naturally
- Humans override this with thinking
- Survival energy stays trapped
- SE helps discharge this energy
- Completing the interrupted response
Pendulation
A key concept:
- Moving between activation and calm
- Back and forth like a pendulum
- Building capacity to tolerate sensation
- Not overwhelming the system
- Gradual release
Titration
Small doses:
- Working with trauma in small pieces
- Not overwhelming the system
- One drop at a time
- Preventing retraumatization
- Slow and safe approach
Tracking Sensations
Body awareness:
- Noticing physical sensations
- Where you feel things in your body
- What movements want to happen
- Following the body’s lead
- Sensation as guide
Completing the Response
Discharge:
- Allowing movements that were suppressed
- Trembling, shaking, spontaneous movement
- The body finally doing what it couldn’t
- Releasing trapped energy
- Natural completion
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
Pat Ogden’s approach.
Integrating Talk and Body
Combining modalities:
- Body-focused therapy
- With cognitive processing
- Addresses all levels
- Mind and body together
- Comprehensive approach
The Window of Tolerance
Central concept:
- Range where you can function optimally
- Too activated = hyperarousal
- Too deactivated = hypoarousal
- Trauma narrows the window
- Therapy expands it
Working with Movement
Physical actions:
- Noticing impulses to move
- Following through on movements
- Completing defensive actions
- Exploring postures and gestures
- Movement as healing
Embedded Resources
Building capacity:
- Internal resources in the body
- Calming postures, movements, breaths
- Physical anchors to safety
- Building before processing
- Foundation for deeper work
What Happens in Somatic Therapy
The experience.
Body Awareness
Developing sensation vocabulary:
- Noticing what you feel physically
- Where sensations are located
- Quality of sensations
- How they change
- Building body literacy
Slow Pace
Not rushing:
- Somatic work is typically slow
- Staying with sensations
- Not moving past them quickly
- Allowing processing time
- Patience with the process
Following the Body
Body leads:
- Therapist guides attention
- But body shows the way
- What wants to happen?
- What movements arise?
- Trusting body wisdom
Physical Responses
What might happen:
- Trembling or shaking
- Spontaneous movements
- Temperature changes
- Tingling or numbness
- Physical release
Emotional Release
Often accompanies physical:
- Tears without knowing why
- Anger arising
- Fear surfacing
- Emotions connected to body states
- Processing on multiple levels
Resourcing
Building capacity:
- Grounding exercises
- Finding places of safety in the body
- Building internal resources
- Stabilization practices
- Foundation for deeper work
Who Benefits from Somatic Therapy
When body-based approaches help.
Trauma Survivors
Primary application:
- PTSD and complex trauma
- Childhood trauma
- Physical or sexual abuse
- Accidents and injuries
- All forms of trauma
When Talk Therapy Hasn’t Been Enough
Stuck despite talking:
- You understand but still symptomatic
- Insight hasn’t changed the body
- Physical symptoms persist
- Need something more
- Body needs direct attention
Those with Physical Symptoms
Body manifestations:
- Chronic pain
- Unexplained medical symptoms
- Tension and tightness
- Somatic complaints
- Body holding what mind can’t process
Dissociation
Reconnecting to body:
- If you’re disconnected from body
- Numbness or absence of sensation
- Somatic therapy helps reconnect
- Gradual, safe return to body
- Healing the disconnection
Pre-Verbal Trauma
Before words:
- Trauma that happened before language
- Can’t access through talking
- Body remembers what mind doesn’t
- Somatic work can reach these memories
- Beyond verbal processing
Benefits of Somatic Therapy
Why this approach works.
Addresses the Root
Getting to the source:
- Not just symptoms
- The physiological basis of trauma
- Where it actually lives
- Releasing at the source
- Deep healing
Completes Interrupted Responses
Finishing what started:
- The body finally does what it couldn’t
- Survival energy discharges
- Response completes
- System returns to baseline
- Natural resolution
Builds Body Awareness
Reconnection:
- Learning to feel again
- Understanding body signals
- Living in your body
- Embodiment
- Foundation for ongoing wellness
Regulates Nervous System
Calming the alarm:
- Teaches nervous system it’s safe
- Builds capacity for regulation
- Expands window of tolerance
- Less reactive over time
- Physiological healing
Complements Other Approaches
Integration:
- Works well with talk therapy
- Can be combined with EMDR
- Adds dimension to treatment
- Body piece of comprehensive healing
- Fills what’s missing
What to Expect in Sessions
Practical aspects.
Initial Sessions
Getting started:
- Assessment and history
- Understanding your relationship with your body
- Learning about the approach
- Building resources
- Establishing safety
Session Format
What happens:
- May involve sitting, standing, movement
- Attention to body sensations
- Therapist guides awareness
- Slower pace than talk therapy
- Following the body’s lead
Physical Contact
Touch in somatic therapy:
- Some approaches include touch
- Always with consent
- Therapeutic, boundaried touch
- Not all somatic therapy involves touch
- Discuss with therapist
What You Might Experience
During sessions:
- Unusual sensations
- Movements arising
- Emotional waves
- Temperature changes
- Release and discharge
Between Sessions
Ongoing process:
- Body may continue processing
- New sensations or awareness
- Practice grounding techniques
- Journal observations
- Self-care important
Finding a Somatic Therapist
Getting started.
Look for Training
Credentials matter:
- Trained in specific somatic approach
- Somatic Experiencing Practitioners (SEP)
- Sensorimotor Psychotherapy trained
- Ongoing supervision and training
- Specialized knowledge
Questions to Ask
When vetting:
- What somatic training have you completed?
- How do you integrate body work with talk therapy?
- What’s your approach to pacing?
- How do you handle dissociation?
- What can I expect in sessions?
Trust Your Body
In choosing therapist:
- Notice how your body responds to them
- Do you feel safe?
- Does your body relax or tense?
- Your body’s response matters
- Body wisdom in choosing
Is Somatic Therapy Right for You?
Considerations.
Good Indicators
It might help if:
- Talk therapy hasn’t resolved physical symptoms
- You hold trauma in your body
- You’re disconnected from body sensations
- Physical symptoms accompany psychological ones
- You’re open to body-based work
Considerations
Things to know:
- May be intense at times
- Requires patience and slow pace
- Body work can bring up emotions
- Trust between you and therapist essential
- Commitment to the process
Combining Approaches
Not either/or:
- Can do alongside talk therapy
- Complements other modalities
- Many therapists integrate approaches
- Body piece of larger treatment
- Holistic healing
Your Body Knows
Your body was there when the trauma happened. It tried to protect you—to run, to fight, to freeze in hopes of surviving. Those impulses, that energy, may still be trapped inside, waiting for the chance to finally complete what couldn’t be completed then.
Somatic therapy offers your body that chance. By attending to physical sensations, following the body’s wisdom, and allowing what was interrupted to finally finish, healing can happen at the deepest level. The body that holds the trauma can release it.
You don’t have to stay trapped in a body that feels unsafe. With the right support, you can reclaim your physical self, regulate your nervous system, and live fully in your body again.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re interested in somatic therapy, please consult with a trained somatic therapist.
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