What is a Somatic Practitioner?
A somatic practitioner is a professional trained to facilitate healing through body-centered methods that work with the relationship between physical sensations, nervous system responses, and emotional or psychological states. These practitioners use techniques including movement, touch, breathwork, and mindfulness to help individuals tap into their body’s wisdom and promote healing. Unlike clinicians who hold state-regulated licenses (such as psychotherapists or physical therapists), the word “practitioner” indicates they do not hold such licenses, though many complete rigorous training programs spanning hundreds of hours.
Somatic practitioners operate from the premise that mind and body are intimately connected, and thought, emotions, and sensations are interconnected and influence one another. They work with the understanding that the body holds and expresses experiences and emotions, and traumatic events or unresolved emotional issues can become ‘trapped’ inside. Their work addresses what conventional talk therapy may not reach: the physiological imprints of trauma stored in the nervous system and tissues.
Origins & Lineage
Somatic psychology was first studied by Wilhelm Reich, an Austrian physician who initially was Freud’s student, influenced by Sándor Ferenczi. Reich proposed in his book Character Analysis, published in 1933, that trauma stretches beyond our minds and could lead to inflammation, pain, muscular tension. Reich believed these symptoms are the “body armor” that would defend us against traumatic experiences.
The modern field took shape when Thomas Louis Hanna, a philosophy professor and movement theorist, coined the term somatics in 1976. Hanna and his wife Eleanor Criswell Hanna founded the Novato Institute of Somatic Research in 1975, and the following year coined the term “somatics” to encompass various movement awareness practices, including those of F.M. Alexander, Moshe Feldenkrais, Elsa Gindler, and Charlotte Selver.
In parallel, Peter A. Levine developed Somatic Experiencing (SE), one of the most widely practiced modalities. Levine received his Ph.D. in medical biophysics from the University of California in Berkeley and has worked in the field of stress and trauma for over 40 years. His core argument, laid out in his 1997 book Waking the Tiger, is that trauma is not primarily a psychological or cognitive problem but a biological one.
How It’s Practiced
Somatic practitioners work through diverse modalities but share common techniques. Sessions combine mindfulness, talk therapy, and alternative forms of physical therapy, with the therapist helping clients focus on their body and paying attention to physical responses once emotion is experienced. Treatment techniques include deep breathing, relaxation exercises, meditation, dance, exercise, yoga, vocal work, and bodywork akin to massage.
In Somatic Experiencing, the client’s attention is directed toward internal sensations—interoception, proprioception, and kinaesthesis—rather than cognitive or emotional experiences. Practitioners use techniques such as “titration” (working with small amounts of activation) and “pendulation” (moving between activation and calm states) to help clients safely process stored trauma without retraumatization.
Key aspects of a somatic practitioner’s role include creating a safe space for clients, assessing the client’s needs and tailoring practice accordingly, and facilitating mind-body connection through various techniques. Sessions may involve verbal dialogue, guided movement, breathwork, or consensual therapeutic touch depending on the modality and practitioner training.
Somatic Practitioners Today
Today’s somatic practitioners serve diverse populations. Professionals outside psychotherapy are increasingly taking somatic trainings, including medical workers, addiction counselors, spiritual directors, teachers, and yoga instructors. Training institutes offer rigorous, comprehensive programs culminating in Practitioner Certification in specific modalities, with graduates eligible for Somatic Practitioner membership levels.
Individuals typically encounter somatic practitioners through private sessions, group classes, workshops, or retreats. A 60-minute session can range from $100 to $200, with some practitioners offering sliding scale fees. To become a certified Somatic Experiencing Practitioner, individuals must complete training through Somatic Experiencing International consisting of three levels totaling 216 hours of instruction.
Common Misconceptions
Somatic practitioners are not medical or mental health professionals unless they also hold such licenses. There is no official accreditation for somatic therapy as a unified field, though specific modalities maintain certification standards. Practitioners do not “treat” trauma in the clinical sense; they help the nervous system recover from it.
Somatic work is not a quick fix. Some people experience significant shifts within 10–20 sessions; others with complex developmental trauma work with SE over months or years, as it is a gradual, non-linear process rather than a fixed protocol. Somatic therapy hasn’t caught up to cognitive behavioral therapy in understanding, use, or research proving its worth, though evidence is growing. A Cochrane analysis indicates that overall study quality is mixed.
Somatic work is not primarily about relaxation or massage, though it may include bodywork. It addresses nervous system dysregulation at a neurobiological level. While somatic experiencing can be healing, it also accesses trauma stored deeply in the body, and if treated by an inefficiently trained practitioner, may lead to retraumatization.
How to Begin
Those curious about somatic work can start by reading foundational texts. Thomas Hanna’s Somatics: Reawakening the Mind’s Control of Movement, Flexibility, and Health was published in 1988. Peter Levine’s Waking the Tiger (1997) and Bessel van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score offer accessible introductions to trauma-informed somatic approaches.
For hands-on experience, seek practitioners through directories. The US Association for Body Psychotherapy offers a Find a Therapist search tool online. Begin with a consultation to assess fit, as it’s most important to look for someone with experience in the practice and someone with whom you feel comfortable discussing personal issues. Group classes in Hanna Somatics or introductory Somatic Experiencing workshops provide low-cost entry points before committing to private sessions.











