Somatic therapy focuses on the connection between the mind and the body. While traditional talk therapy often centers on thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors, somatic therapy recognizes that emotions and life experiences also live in the body. By paying attention to physical sensations and bodily responses, clients can access and process emotions in a more direct and integrated way.
Understanding the body is an important source of information about our emotional world. Stress, trauma, and unresolved emotions often show up physically. You might notice tightness in your chest, tension in your shoulders, a knot in your stomach, or a sense of heaviness or numbness. Instead of ignoring these sensations, somatic therapy invites people to notice them with curiosity and without judgment.
During a therapy session that incorporates somatic therapy, the therapist may guide clients to slow down and tune into what they feel in their bodies while discussing a thought, memory, or emotion. For example, if a client begins talking about a stressful experience, the therapist might ask questions such as: What do you notice in your body as you talk about this? or Where do you feel that emotion physically?
These questions help bring attention to the body’s responses and allow emotions to be experienced rather than avoided or overanalyzed.
Somatic therapy does not require dramatic techniques or complicated exercises. Often, the most powerful work comes from simple practices. These might include noticing the breath, observing subtle body sensations, or allowing emotions to move through the body naturally. These small moments of awareness help people reconnect with themselves and begin processing feelings they may have pushed aside.
One of the most important parts of somatic therapy involves learning to experience sensations and emotions without judgment. Many people learn to push away uncomfortable feelings like anxiety, sadness, or anger. Unfortunately, avoiding emotions can keep them stuck in the nervous system.
Somatic therapy encourages clients to approach their inner experiences with openness and compassion. Instead of trying to immediately change what they feel, clients learn to notice sensations as they arise and allow them to pass naturally. Over time, this process helps people build a deeper sense of safety within their own bodies.
With practice, somatic therapy can expand a person’s window of tolerance. This term refers to the range of emotional and physical experiences someone can handle without becoming overwhelmed or shutting down.
As the nervous system becomes more regulated, people often find they can tolerate difficult emotions more easily. At the same time, they may become more open to positive experiences.
This benefit often goes unnoticed. When people numb or avoid uncomfortable emotions, they also limit their ability to feel pleasure and connection.
By building the capacity to feel and process a full range of sensations, somatic therapy creates more space for emotions like joy, love, connection, and pride.
Somatic therapy simplifies healing by guiding people back to the wisdom of their own bodies. Instead of trying to think their way out of emotional pain, clients learn to listen to what their bodies communicate.
Over time, many people discover that healing does not come from forcing change. It happens when we create enough safety to fully experience and move through our emotions.
If you are interested in somatic therapy for your own healing, reach out to Jenna at Holistic Psychotherapy with Jenna to get started.
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