Part of Somatic cluster.
Short Answer
Somatic practices work directly with the body to regulate the nervous system. When talk therapy reaches its limits, the body holds the key.
What This Means
Somatic approaches recognize that trauma lives in the body as incomplete defensive responses, chronic tension patterns, and dysregulated autonomic states. Breathwork, grounding, and somatic experiencing work with physiological states directly rather than through narrative alone.
Why This Happens
The autonomic nervous system controls threat response, often outside conscious awareness. Talk therapy engages the prefrontal cortex, but trauma is stored in subcortical structures. Breathwork affects vagal tone. Grounding anchors you in present-moment safety.
What Can Help
- Somatic awareness — Somatic experiencing, breathwork practices (especially longer exhales), grounding techniques using the five senses, pendulation between activation and safety, resourcing pleasant sensations as anchors, and working with somatic-trained practitioners for deep trauma work.
- Nervous system regulation — Breathwork, grounding, and practices that shift your physiological state
- Trauma-informed therapy — Working with patterns at their source when they are entrenched
- Self-compassion — Understanding your responses as survival adaptations, not character flaws
When to Seek Support
If talk therapy has plateaued; if you experience primarily somatic symptoms (chronic pain, GI issues, tension); if you recognize trauma but cannot access it verbally; if dissociation is your primary response.
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Start Your Reset →Research References
This content draws on psychological research and trauma-informed care.
