Somatic therapy is an evidence-based therapeutic approach that integrates mind and body to process trauma and stress stored in the nervous system, offering effective treatment for experiences that traditional talk therapy alone cannot fully address.
Your body remembers what your mind tries to forget. While traditional therapy focuses on talking through problems, somatic therapy recognizes that trauma lives in your muscles, breath, and nervous system - and healing happens when you learn to listen to what your body is telling you.

In this Article
What is somatic therapy?
The word “somatic” comes from the Greek word soma, meaning body. At its core, somatic therapy is a holistic approach that integrates mind and body, treating you as a whole person rather than focusing solely on your thoughts. While traditional talk therapy primarily engages your cognitive mind through conversation and reflection, somatic approaches expand the therapeutic toolkit to include bodily sensations, movement, breath, and physical awareness.
Think about what happens when you feel anxious. Your shoulders might creep toward your ears. Your jaw clenches. Your breathing becomes shallow. These physical responses aren’t just side effects of emotion. They’re part of the emotion itself. Somatic therapy recognizes this connection and works directly with your body to process difficult experiences.
The body as a record keeper
One of the central ideas behind somatic therapy is that traumatic and emotional experiences can become “stored” in the body. When something overwhelming happens, especially if you couldn’t fully process it at the time, the experience may linger as chronic muscle tension, habitual posture patterns, or ongoing nervous system dysregulation. Your body essentially keeps the score when your conscious mind moves on.
This perspective aligns closely with trauma-informed care, which recognizes that trauma affects the whole person. Somatic therapy offers specific tools to address what words alone sometimes cannot reach.
Where somatic therapy comes from
The roots of somatic therapy trace back to Wilhelm Reich, a student of Freud who noticed that his patients held emotional tension in their muscles. He called this “body armor” and began incorporating physical techniques into his practice. Decades later, Peter Levine developed Somatic Experiencing after observing how animals in the wild discharge stress through physical movement. Pat Ogden contributed Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, which integrates body awareness with attachment theory.
Today, somatic therapy often incorporates mindfulness-based approaches to help you tune into physical sensations without judgment. Somatic therapy works best as a complement to cognitive approaches, not a replacement for them. The goal is to give you access to information your body holds, then integrate that awareness with the insights traditional therapy provides.
The neuroscience of body memory: how your nervous system stores what your mind forgets
Your brain doesn’t store memories in just one place. It uses different systems for different types of information, and understanding this distinction helps explain why your body sometimes knows things your conscious mind doesn’t.
When something happens to you, two memory systems activate simultaneously. Your hippocampus works like a librarian, organizing experiences into coherent stories with beginnings, middles, and ends. These are called explicit memories: the ones you can consciously recall and describe. But running alongside this narrative system is something far more ancient and automatic.
Implicit memory: the body’s silent record keeper
Implicit memory operates through your amygdala and body tissues, storing sensory impressions, emotional responses, and physical sensations without creating a storyline you can access. This system doesn’t require conscious awareness to function. It’s why you can ride a bike years after learning, why certain songs trigger specific moods, and why the smell of a particular cologne might make your stomach tighten before you even register what you’re smelling.
During overwhelming experiences, stress hormones can actually impair your hippocampus’s ability to encode information properly. The narrative system goes offline or functions poorly. But your amygdala keeps recording. Your body keeps recording.
The result? Sensory fragments, emotional intensities, and physical responses get stored without an accompanying story. You’re left with body memories that have no mental narrative attached to them. Your chest tightens in certain situations. Your shoulders creep toward your ears around specific people. You feel a wave of dread in places that should feel neutral. These aren’t random glitches. They’re implicit memories surfacing without the context your explicit memory system would normally provide.
This is precisely why talking about difficult experiences doesn’t always bring relief. You can understand something intellectually while your body continues responding as if the threat never ended.
Polyvagal theory and your three nervous system states
Neuroscientist Stephen Porges developed polyvagal theory to explain how your autonomic nervous system constantly scans for safety and danger, then shifts your entire physiology in response. According to this framework, your nervous system operates in three primary states.
The ventral vagal state is your safe and social mode. Here, your heart rate is calm, your breathing is easy, and you can connect with others. You feel present and engaged. This is where healing happens.
The sympathetic state is your fight-or-flight response. Your heart pounds, muscles tense, and energy mobilizes for action. This state exists to help you survive immediate threats.
The dorsal vagal state is shutdown or freeze mode. When fighting or fleeing isn’t possible, your system conserves energy by slowing everything down. You might feel numb, disconnected, foggy, or collapsed.
These responses aren’t choices. They’re automatic survival strategies your nervous system deploys based on its assessment of your environment. The problem arises when your system gets stuck. Long after the original danger passes, your body can remain locked in sympathetic activation or dorsal shutdown, responding to the present as if past threats were still active.
Vagal tone refers to the strength and flexibility of your vagus nerve’s influence on your body. Strong vagal tone means you can move fluidly between states, returning to calm after stress. Weak vagal tone means getting stuck becomes more likely, and recovery takes longer.
This science explains something you may have experienced firsthand: anxiety that appears without obvious cause, tension that persists despite relaxation efforts, or emotional numbness that descends without warning. Your body isn’t malfunctioning. It’s responding to implicit memories and nervous system patterns that exist below the threshold of conscious awareness. And this is exactly where somatic therapy begins its work.
How somatic therapy works
Traditional talk therapy typically works from the top down: you analyze thoughts, identify patterns, and hope those insights eventually shift how you feel in your body. Somatic therapy flips this approach entirely. It starts with physical sensations and works upward toward emotions and understanding.
This bottom-up processing recognizes that trauma often bypasses the thinking brain altogether. When something overwhelming happens, your body responds before your conscious mind can make sense of it. According to a systematic review of somatic therapy’s efficacy, this body-based approach leads to improved emotional regulation and heightened body awareness, suggesting that working through physical sensation creates meaningful psychological change.
The core mechanisms
Somatic therapists use several key techniques to help you access and release what’s stored in your body.
Pendulation involves gently moving your attention between areas of distress and areas of calm or resource in your body. You might notice tension in your chest, then shift awareness to the steadiness in your feet on the ground. This back-and-forth teaches your nervous system that discomfort isn’t permanent and that safety exists alongside difficulty.
Titration means processing trauma in small, manageable doses. Rather than diving into the most intense memories all at once, somatic therapy breaks things down so your system doesn’t become overwhelmed. Think of it like slowly adjusting to cold water rather than jumping in.
Window of tolerance refers to the zone of arousal where you can actually process and integrate experiences. Too activated, and you’re flooded. Too shut down, and nothing registers. Somatic therapy helps you stay within this window where real healing becomes possible.
Completing what got interrupted
When you face a threat, your body prepares to fight, flee, or freeze. But often these responses get interrupted. Maybe you couldn’t run. Maybe you had to stay still and silent. That incomplete defensive energy doesn’t just disappear.
Somatic therapy allows your body to finally complete these interrupted responses in a safe environment. Your muscles might need to push, your legs might need to move, your voice might need to emerge. When these actions find completion, the nervous system can finally settle.
Building interoception, your ability to sense what’s happening inside your body, becomes the foundation for all of this work. As you develop finer awareness of internal sensations, you gain a direct pathway to emotional regulation that doesn’t require thinking your way through.
Types of somatic therapy: comparing major modalities
Not all somatic therapies work the same way. Some focus purely on body sensations, while others blend physical awareness with talk therapy or movement. Understanding the most common approaches can help you find the right fit for your needs and preferences.
What are the types of somatic therapy?
Somatic Experiencing (SE) was developed by Peter Levine and focuses specifically on how trauma gets stuck in the body. In SE sessions, your therapist guides you to track subtle body sensations, noticing where tension, numbness, or activation shows up. A key technique called pendulation helps you move between states of activation and calm, teaching your nervous system that it can shift out of stress responses. Research on Somatic Experiencing’s effectiveness supports its use for trauma treatment, particularly for helping people complete freeze responses that were interrupted during overwhelming experiences.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, created by Pat Ogden, integrates body awareness with attachment theory and cognitive processing. This modality recognizes that early relationship experiences shape how we hold ourselves physically. Sessions might involve noticing your posture when discussing a difficult memory, then exploring what shifts when you change that physical pattern. It works especially well for people with complex trauma or attachment wounds.
The Hakomi Method uses a gentler, mindfulness-based approach that incorporates body awareness to access core beliefs and emotional material. Therapists trained in Hakomi create a safe, curious atmosphere where you can notice body sensations without trying to change them. This approach often reveals unconscious beliefs that drive behavior, making it particularly useful for people exploring patterns in relationships or self-perception.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is primarily a cognitive approach, but it incorporates somatic processing through bilateral stimulation and body awareness. During EMDR, you track eye movements or other alternating sensations while processing difficult memories. Your therapist regularly checks in about body sensations, recognizing that true processing includes physical release.
Body-Mind Centering takes a movement-based approach, using exploration of different body systems to build self-awareness. This modality may appeal to you if you prefer active, experiential work over sitting and talking.
When comparing these approaches, consider a few key dimensions. Somatic therapy training requirements vary significantly: SE and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy require extensive specialized certification, while some practitioners integrate basic somatic awareness into existing trauma-informed principles. Session structure also differs, ranging from mostly verbal processing with body check-ins to primarily movement-based exploration. The best choice depends on your specific concerns, whether you prefer structured or exploratory approaches, and how comfortable you feel with body-focused work. Many therapists combine elements from multiple modalities to create a personalized approach.
Somatic therapy techniques and exercises
Somatic therapy techniques give you practical ways to tune into your body’s signals and release stored tension. While some of these practices can be explored on your own, they’re most effective when learned alongside a trained therapist who can guide you through deeper work safely.
Grounding and body awareness practices
Body scanning is one of the foundational somatic therapy exercises. You move your attention slowly from head to toe, noticing whatever sensations arise: warmth, tightness, tingling, or numbness. The goal isn’t to change anything or judge what you find. You’re simply observing, like a curious scientist gathering data about your own experience.
Grounding exercises help anchor you in the present moment through physical sensation. This might mean pressing your feet firmly into the floor and noticing the support beneath you, or feeling your back against a chair and letting yourself receive that contact. These simple practices can interrupt anxious spirals by pulling your attention out of racing thoughts and into your body’s direct experience of safety.
Resourcing takes grounding a step further. You identify specific internal or external sources of calm, whether that’s a memory of a peaceful place, the feeling of sunlight on your skin, or the presence of a beloved pet. When stress rises, you can consciously connect to these resources to help your nervous system settle.
Breathwork and movement techniques
Your breath offers a direct pathway to your nervous system. Lengthening your exhale activates your parasympathetic response, the branch responsible for rest and digestion. Try breathing in for four counts, then out for six or eight. Rhythmic breathing patterns can also help regulate your system when you feel dysregulated or overwhelmed.
Gentle movement is another core component of somatic therapy techniques. Shaking your hands, rolling your shoulders, or stretching intuitively allows your body to discharge tension naturally. Animals do this instinctively after a threat passes. You might also explore spontaneous movement, letting your body guide you rather than following a prescribed routine.
Boundary work uses physical exercises to strengthen your sense of personal space and agency. This could involve pushing against a wall, practicing saying “no” while making a stop gesture, or simply noticing how much space you take up in a room. These practices help rebuild a felt sense of safety and self-protection.
While these introductory practices can offer real benefits, deeper trauma work requires the guidance of a trained practitioner. A skilled somatic therapist creates the safety needed to process difficult material without becoming overwhelmed.
Physical signs your body is releasing trauma: what’s normal and when to slow down
When somatic therapy begins to work, your body may respond in ways that feel unfamiliar or even strange. Understanding what to expect can help you stay grounded during the process and recognize when you might need to pause.
What are physical signs your body is releasing trauma?
The most common sign is trembling or shaking. This isn’t a sign that something is wrong. Your nervous system is actually completing the fight-or-flight response it couldn’t finish during the original overwhelming experience. Animals in the wild shake after escaping predators for exactly this reason.
Other normal release signs include:
- Temperature shifts: sudden hot flashes or waves of chills moving through your body
- Spontaneous deep breaths or yawning: your nervous system naturally regulating itself
- Tears: these may come with specific emotions or appear without any clear reason
- Tingling or buzzing sensations: often in the hands, feet, or along the spine
Less common but still normal experiences include spontaneous movements (your arm might want to push away, or your legs might want to run), unexpected sounds or vocalizations, and vivid imagery or memory fragments surfacing briefly.
When to slow down or pause
Not every intense experience during somatic work is beneficial. Some signs indicate you need to slow down:
- Dissociation: feeling spacey, disconnected from your body, or like you’re watching yourself from outside
- Emotional flooding: being overwhelmed by feelings that won’t settle
- Physical pain: sharp or persistent discomfort that intensifies
- Panic that doesn’t ease: anxiety that continues escalating rather than moving through
Healthy trauma release works like a pressure valve opening gradually, not a dam breaking all at once. This principle, called titration, means processing happens in manageable doses. You should feel challenged but not overwhelmed, and intense moments should be followed by periods of settling and relief.
These physical responses are best supported by a trained practitioner who can help you recognize the difference between productive release and signs that you need to slow down.
What to expect in somatic therapy: a 12-week session overview
Starting any new therapy can feel intimidating, especially when it involves tuning into your body in unfamiliar ways. Knowing what to expect can ease some of that uncertainty. While every person’s experience differs, a general 12-week framework offers a helpful roadmap for understanding how somatic therapy typically unfolds.
Most sessions last 50 to 60 minutes and blend conversation with guided body awareness exercises. Some sessions may include gentle movement or, in certain approaches, therapeutic touch, but only with your explicit consent. Your therapist will always explain what’s happening and why, giving you full control over the pace.
Weeks 1 to 3: Building safety and body awareness
The first few sessions focus entirely on foundation. Your therapist will spend time building rapport with you, learning about your history, and understanding what brings you to therapy. You’ll also start learning about your nervous system: how it responds to stress, what activation feels like in your body, and how to recognize when you’re moving toward overwhelm.
During this phase, you’ll practice basic body awareness skills. This might mean simply noticing where you feel tension or ease, or tracking how your breathing changes when discussing certain topics. Your therapist will help you identify resources, internal or external sources of calm and stability you can return to when things feel intense. This groundwork creates the safety needed for deeper work ahead.
Weeks 4 to 10: Resourcing and gradual processing
With a foundation in place, the middle phase strengthens your capacity to tolerate uncomfortable sensations without becoming overwhelmed. You’ll practice pendulation, the skill of moving attention between areas of discomfort and areas of calm. This builds your window of tolerance, expanding how much activation you can experience while staying present.
Around weeks 8 through 10, your therapist may gently guide you toward processing held trauma. This happens through titrated exposure, meaning small, manageable doses of activation rather than diving into the deep end. You might work on completing interrupted defensive responses, allowing your body to finally finish movements it couldn’t make during the original overwhelming experience. A randomized controlled trial of Somatic Experiencing demonstrated that this structured, gradual approach produces meaningful results within a defined treatment period.
Weeks 11 to 12: Integration and moving forward
The final phase connects what you’ve learned in sessions to your everyday life. You’ll work with your therapist to develop ongoing practices you can use independently, whether that’s a brief body scan before stressful meetings or grounding techniques for moments of anxiety. This is also time to reflect on the shifts you’ve experienced and plan for continued growth, whether that means additional therapy, periodic check-ins, or practicing on your own.
If you’re curious whether somatic-informed therapy might help you, ReachLink offers a free assessment to match you with a licensed therapist who fits your needs, with no commitment required.
These timelines vary significantly based on your unique history and goals. Someone processing a single traumatic event may find resolution sooner, while a person with complex trauma might benefit from a longer course of treatment. Your therapist will help you determine what timeline makes sense for you.
Benefits of somatic therapy
Somatic therapy offers a unique set of advantages that complement traditional talk-based approaches. By working directly with the body, this therapeutic method can create shifts that feel both profound and lasting.
Reaching what talk therapy cannot
Some experiences live in the body rather than in conscious memory. Traumatic events, especially those from early childhood or overwhelming situations, often get stored as implicit memories: sensations, reflexes, and tension patterns that words alone cannot access. Somatic therapy provides a pathway to these body-stored responses, making it particularly effective for traumatic disorders that have resisted other treatment approaches.
Stronger emotional regulation
One of the most practical benefits is an expanded window of tolerance, the range of emotional intensity you can handle without becoming overwhelmed or shutting down. Through somatic work, you learn to notice early signs of activation and use body-based tools to stay grounded. This improved regulation often translates to reduced anxiety symptoms and a greater sense of control during stressful moments.
Relief from physical symptoms
Chronic tension headaches, digestive issues, and persistent pain frequently have roots in stored stress. Research on health outcomes suggests that somatic approaches can reduce these physical symptoms by releasing the underlying tension patterns. When your nervous system learns it no longer needs to brace for danger, your body can finally relax.
Deeper self-understanding
Somatic therapy builds interoception, your ability to sense internal body signals. This heightened awareness helps you recognize what you need, set boundaries, and make decisions aligned with your authentic self. Many people describe feeling truly at home in their bodies for the first time.
Skills that last
Somatic therapy equips you with self-regulation tools you can use long after sessions end. Grounding techniques, breath practices, and body awareness exercises become resources you carry with you. While the evidence base for somatic approaches continues to grow and more rigorous clinical trials are needed, existing research points to meaningful benefits for trauma recovery and overall wellbeing.
How to find a qualified somatic therapist
Finding the right somatic therapist takes a bit of research, but knowing what to look for makes the process much easier. Not all therapists who mention body-based approaches have the same level of training, and understanding the differences helps you make an informed choice.
Credentials and training to look for
Several respected certifications indicate specialized somatic training. A Somatic Experiencing Practitioner (SEP) has completed at least three years of rigorous training in Peter Levine’s approach to trauma resolution. Sensorimotor Psychotherapy certification requires extensive coursework in integrating body awareness with traditional talk therapy. Hakomi certification involves multiple levels of training in mindfulness-based somatic methods.
You’ll also encounter therapists who describe themselves as somatic-informed rather than certified somatic specialists. This distinction matters. A somatic-informed therapist has some training and integrates body awareness into their practice, which can still be valuable. A certified somatic specialist, on the other hand, has completed comprehensive programs with supervised clinical hours specifically focused on body-based interventions.
Neither approach is inherently better for everyone. Your needs, the issues you’re addressing, and the therapist’s overall skill all play a role. What matters most is that you understand what level of training your therapist has and feel confident in their expertise. When searching for a somatic therapist, look for licensed mental health professionals who clearly list their somatic credentials and training background. Transparency about qualifications is a good sign.
Questions to ask before starting
Before committing to work with a somatic therapist, a consultation call gives you the chance to assess fit. Ask about their specific training and certifications in somatic approaches. Inquire about their experience with concerns similar to yours, whether that’s trauma, anxiety, chronic pain, or something else.
Understanding how they integrate body work with talk therapy helps set expectations. Some therapists weave somatic techniques throughout sessions, while others dedicate specific portions to body-focused work. Ask about their approach to pacing and safety, especially if you’re working through difficult experiences. A skilled somatic therapist should be able to explain how they help clients stay regulated and avoid overwhelm.
Watch for red flags during these conversations. Therapists who push too fast, dismiss your discomfort, or lack clear training in trauma-informed approaches may not provide the safe container this work requires. Be cautious of anyone guaranteeing specific outcomes, as ethical practitioners acknowledge that healing looks different for each person.
Many somatic therapists are licensed mental health professionals, which means their services may qualify for insurance coverage. Verify both their credentials and your plan’s benefits before starting. If you’re considering online options, many somatic techniques adapt well to telehealth, though certain modalities that involve hands-on work or extensive movement may be more effective in person.
Ready to explore whether somatic-informed therapy is right for you? ReachLink’s free matching assessment connects you with licensed therapists at your own pace. Download the app for iOS or Android to get started.
Finding support through body-based healing
Your body holds wisdom that thinking alone cannot always access. When difficult experiences live in your muscles, breath, and nervous system rather than in conscious memory, somatic approaches offer a pathway to healing that complements traditional talk therapy. The physical sensations you’ve been carrying—tension that won’t release, anxiety without clear cause, or numbness that descends unexpectedly—aren’t random. They’re your body’s way of communicating what needs attention.
If you’re curious whether somatic-informed therapy might help, ReachLink’s free assessment can match you with a licensed therapist who integrates body awareness into their practice. There’s no commitment required, and you can explore options at your own pace. For support wherever you are, download the ReachLink app on iOS or Android.
FAQ
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What is somatic therapy and how does it differ from traditional talk therapy?
Somatic therapy is a body-centered approach that focuses on the connection between mind and body to heal trauma and stress. Unlike traditional talk therapy that primarily uses verbal processing, somatic therapy incorporates physical sensations, movement, breathing, and body awareness. It recognizes that trauma and emotions are stored in the nervous system and body tissues, requiring both mental and physical approaches for complete healing.
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What conditions can somatic therapy help with?
Somatic therapy can be effective for treating trauma, PTSD, anxiety, depression, chronic stress, grief, and attachment issues. It's particularly helpful for people who feel disconnected from their bodies, experience chronic tension or pain without clear medical causes, or have difficulty regulating emotions. This approach is also beneficial for those who have tried talk therapy but still feel stuck or notice their symptoms manifesting physically.
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What should I expect during a somatic therapy session?
A somatic therapy session typically begins with checking in about your current physical and emotional state. Your therapist may guide you through body awareness exercises, breathing techniques, or gentle movements. Sessions often involve tracking sensations, noticing areas of tension or comfort, and learning to release stored stress through the body. The pace is usually slower than traditional therapy, allowing time to process physical responses and build body awareness skills.
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How long does somatic therapy typically take to show results?
Many people notice some benefits from somatic therapy within the first few sessions, such as increased body awareness, reduced physical tension, or improved emotional regulation. However, deeper healing typically occurs over several months of consistent work. The timeline varies depending on the complexity of issues being addressed, your comfort with body-based approaches, and how regularly you practice techniques outside of sessions.
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Is somatic therapy suitable for everyone?
While somatic therapy can benefit many people, it may not be suitable for everyone initially. Those with certain medical conditions, severe dissociation, or active substance abuse may need stabilization first. Some individuals may feel uncomfortable with body-focused approaches initially and might benefit from starting with traditional talk therapy before incorporating somatic elements. A qualified therapist can help determine if somatic therapy is appropriate for your specific situation and needs.
