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Glossary›Somatic Practice

Glossary

Somatic Practice

A body-centered approach to awareness, healing, and regulation that emphasizes the body as experienced from within—through sensation, movement, and breath.

What is Somatic Practice?

Somatic practice refers to a family of body-centered modalities that cultivate internal awareness through attention to sensation, movement, breath, and the lived experience of embodiment. The term derives from the Greek word soma, meaning “living body.” Unlike approaches that observe the body externally or treat it as an object to be manipulated, somatic practice emphasizes first-person, subjective experience—the body as felt and known from the inside.

Somatic practices are used in diverse contexts: psychotherapy, movement education, trauma recovery, dance training, bodywork, and spiritual disciplines. What unifies them is the conviction that intelligence, memory, and meaning are stored not only in the mind but also in the tissues, nervous system, and movement patterns of the body. Practitioners develop skills in interoception (sensing internal states), proprioception (awareness of body position), and kinesthetic awareness to access and transform unconscious patterns.

Origins & Lineage

While body-centered awareness practices have ancient roots in yoga, qigong, and ritual movement traditions across cultures, the modern Western field of “somatics” as a distinct discipline emerged in the 20th century.

Wilhelm Reich is widely regarded as one of the founding figures of body psychotherapy, establishing a crucial link between psychological processes and their expression in the body through breath, muscular tension, and patterns of regulation. From the 1930s, Reich became known for the idea that muscular tension reflected repressed emotions, what he called ‘body armour.’ Despite his controversial later work and ultimate imprisonment, Reich’s clinical observations about embodied trauma laid groundwork for generations of practitioners.

The field coalesced as an institutional practice in the mid-20th century through innovators including F. Matthias Alexander (Alexander Technique, 1890s), Elsa Gindler, Moshe Feldenkrais (Feldenkrais Method), Charlotte Selver (Sensory Awareness), and Ida Rolf (Rolfing). Thomas Louis Hanna, a philosophy professor and movement theorist, coined the term “somatics” in 1976. Hanna founded the Novato Institute for Somatic Research and Training in 1975 and by 1976 produced an essay, “The Field of Somatics,” for Somatics: Magazine-Journal of the Bodily Arts and Sciences. Hanna defined Somatics as the body experienced from within, where we experience mind/body integration.

Many practitioners in the somatics field got their start in the late 1960s, influenced by events at places like the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, where founders such as Rolf, Lowen, Selver, Whitehouse, and Perls brought their work together.

Peter A. Levine developed Somatic Experiencing® in the 1970s and onward, focusing specifically on trauma resolution. Peter A. Levine developed the method. Other key contributors include Pat Ogden (Sensorimotor Psychotherapy), Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen (Body-Mind Centering), and practitioners who integrated body awareness into dance and movement practices.

How It’s Practiced

Somatic practice takes many forms, but most share common elements:

Slowing down and sensing: Practitioners are guided to decelerate habitual movement and thought patterns, tuning attention to subtle internal sensations—temperature, texture, vibration, contraction, expansion.

Tracking bodily states: The client’s attention is directed toward internal sensations (interoception, proprioception, and kinaesthesis) rather than cognitive or emotional experiences. This might include noticing where tension lives in the body, how breath changes with emotion, or what posture reveals about mood.

Gentle movement: Rather than exercise for fitness, somatic movement prioritizes awareness and efficiency. Somatic education incorporates practices that increase sensory awareness, interoception, and proprioception through guided movement exploration and mindfulness. Movements are often small, exploratory, and designed to reveal unconscious holding patterns.

Breathwork and regulation: Many somatic methods use breath as a tool to calm the nervous system, complete incomplete stress responses, or access emotional material held in the body.

Titration and resourcing: Particularly in trauma work, somatic practitioners use “titration”—approaching difficult material in small, manageable doses—and help clients identify “resource states” in the body associated with safety and calm.

In psychotherapy settings, somatic practitioners may work hands-on or verbally guide clients to notice sensations as they speak about difficult experiences. In movement education, teachers guide students through sequences designed to restore voluntary control and release chronic tension.

Somatic Practice Today

Somatic practice has expanded significantly in the 21st century, particularly with growing interest in trauma-informed care, nervous system regulation, and embodied healing.

Seekers today encounter somatic work through:

  • Psychotherapy: Trauma therapists trained in Somatic Experiencing®, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, or body-centered approaches integrate somatic methods into talk therapy.
  • Movement classes: Somatic yoga, somatic dance, Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement®, and other group classes emphasize internal experience over external form.
  • Bodywork: Modalities like Rolfing, craniosacral therapy, and body-centered massage incorporate somatic principles.
  • Workshops and trainings: Retreat centers, wellness studios, and training institutes offer immersive somatic education programs.
  • Online platforms: Since the COVID-19 pandemic, asynchronous and virtual somatic offerings have proliferated, making practices more accessible.

The book that kicked the high demand for somatic therapy off was The Body Keeps The Score by Bessel van der Kolk. This 2014 publication brought body-based trauma healing into mainstream therapeutic discourse and sparked widespread public interest.

Common Misconceptions

“It’s just stretching or relaxation.” While somatic practices may involve gentle movement or breathwork, the distinguishing feature is cultivating internal awareness and accessing the nervous system’s capacity for self-regulation—not merely physical flexibility.

“It’s only for trauma survivors.” Though somatic methods are powerful for trauma resolution, they’re equally valuable for stress management, chronic pain, enhancing athletic performance, deepening embodied creativity, and everyday emotional regulation.

“It’s unscientific or ‘woo-woo.’” Somatic therapies are backed by neuroscience and research on nervous system regulation. Research on polyvagal theory, interoception, and neuroplasticity increasingly validates clinical observations made by somatic pioneers decades ago.

“The term ‘somatic’ means one specific technique.” Somatics is an umbrella term encompassing dozens of distinct modalities. There is no single “somatic practice”—rather, a shared orientation toward first-person bodily experience.

“Modern somatics invented body awareness.” There is no single origin of somatic healing. Indigenous, African, Asian, and diasporic cultures have always engaged the body in practices of regulation, grief, joy, and collective restoration through dance, rhythm, stillness, breath, and ritual. The Western formalization of “somatics” in the 20th century codified and institutionalized principles that exist across human cultures and spiritual traditions.

How to Begin

To explore somatic practice:

Read foundational texts: Thomas Hanna’s Somatics: Reawakening the Mind’s Control of Movement, Flexibility, and Health (1988) offers a clear introduction to the field. Peter Levine’s Waking the Tiger (1997) focuses on trauma. Bessel van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score (2014) bridges neuroscience and somatics.

Try a class or session: Seek out Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement® classes, somatic yoga, or a session with a certified Somatic Experiencing® practitioner, Hakomi therapist, or Sensorimotor Psychotherapist.

Practice simple awareness: Pause several times daily to check in with your body. Notice your breath, the temperature of your hands, tension in your jaw, or the feeling of your feet on the ground. This simple practice of sensing from the inside is the foundation of all somatic work.

Find trained practitioners: Look for practitioners certified through reputable training programs (Somatic Experiencing International, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute, Feldenkrais Guild, etc.) rather than self-taught or casually trained instructors.

Somatic practice is ultimately an invitation to inhabit your own body with greater curiosity, compassion, and awareness—a return to the felt sense of being alive.

Related terms

somatic experiencingembodimentnervous system regulationinteroceptiontrauma informed practicebreathwork
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