Somatic therapy (also called body-centered or sensorimotor therapy) is a holistic approach to healing trauma, stress, and emotional patterns through the body. Rather than focusing solely on thoughts and emotions, somatic therapy invites you to tune into physical sensations, movement, breath, and nervous system states, because the body often holds the memories and habits we don’t consciously know.
The Foundations of Somatic Therapy
- Body as Wisdom Keeper
- Your nervous system retains experiences, from chronic stress to early trauma, that manifest physically (tight muscles, shallow breathing, fatigue).
- Somatic therapy helps access and release those patterns.
- Polyvagal-Informed Approach
- Rooted in Polyvagal Theory (by Dr. Stephen Porges), it recognizes ventral vagal (connection, safety), sympathetic (fight-or-flight), and dorsal vagal (freeze) states.
- Therapy shifts your nervous system into safety to support healing from the inside out.
- Integration of Mind, Body, and Emotion
- Combines conversation (psychotherapy) with gentle movement, breathwork, touch, and awareness.
- Builds new neural pathways through felt experience, not just intellectual insight.
How Somatic Therapy Works in Sessions
Developing Interoceptive Awareness
Clients learn to notice subtle signals like tension, heat, butterflies, building a sensory map of their internal experience.
Working with Breath and Movement
Exercises may involve slow breathing, grounding posture, micro-movements, or gentle guided stretches to shift nervous system state. Some exercises stimulate the vagus nerve, which is the main pathway towards safety and regulation.
Experiencing Felt Safety
Therapists guide clients into safety (ventral vagal state) before slowly introducing challenging sensations. This co-regulation supports trust in one’s own internal capacity.
Mapping Activation and Relaxation
By labeling and exploring sensations, clients learn to differentiate stress from safety and to consciously shift and integrate both.
Benefits of Somatic Therapy
- Trauma Processing – Helps release trauma stored in the body without retraumatization.
- Improved Emotional Resilience – Builds capacity to experience stress without overwhelm.
- Reduced Chronic Pain – Many clients experience relief from tension and long-standing pain.
- Increased Internal Confidence – Feeling safe in your body translates into self-trust and clarity.
- Enhanced Stress Regulation – Stronger ventral vagal tone means better stress recovery and emotional balance.
Who Can Benefit from Somatic Therapy?
- People experiencing unresolved anxiety, PTSD, burnout, or chronic stress
- Those who don’t feel like themselves and struggle to reconnect with their body or intuition
- Anyone wanting to cultivate internal confidence and resilience rooted in felt presence
Getting Started with Somatic Therapy
- Find a trained therapist or coach experienced in somatic or sensorimotor approaches.
- Begin with short, guided exercises (body scan, grounding breath) to build awareness.
- Schedule 2–4 sessions per month and practice small tools consistently.
- Use journaling or reflection as you notice shifts in mood, body tension, or internal clarity.
Further Reading
🔗 What is somatic therapy? – Harvard Health – Overview of body-based therapy for trauma and stress
🔗 Nervous System Regulation and Stress Relief – Creative Awareness – A Practical Guide from our approach to healing
Ready to Explore Somatic Healing?
If you’re asking, “What is somatic therapy?” or feel ready to experience its transformative power, I’d be honored to support you.
➡️ Book a free 45-minute discovery call and begin your path toward alignment, internal confidence, and lasting transformation.

