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Glossary›Somatic Education

Glossary

Somatic Education

A field of movement-based learning that cultivates internal body awareness to improve coordination, reduce pain, and enhance voluntary motor control through conscious attention to neuromuscular patterns.

What is Somatic Education?

Somatic education is individual development through movement exploration (both physical and emotional), kinesthetic sensation, and awareness. The field encompasses methods that teach individuals to sense and control their bodies from within—what practitioners call first-person perception. Somatic education describes methods of education which worked with both the mind and body to improve health and functioning. Unlike passive bodywork or purely physical exercise, somatic education engages the learner’s voluntary nervous system to re-educate habitual movement patterns, often addressing chronic pain, restricted mobility, and postural problems through heightened sensory awareness rather than mechanical intervention.

Origins & Lineage

The first generation of “somatic pioneers” included Frederick Matthias Alexander, Moshe Feldenkrais, Mabel Elsworth Todd, Gerda Alexander, Ida Rolf, Milton Trager, Irmgard Bartenieff, and Charlotte Selver, active primarily in Europe throughout the early twentieth century. The Alexander technique was developed by Frederick Matthias Alexander, an actor, in the 1890s. Born in 1904 in Russia, Moshé Feldenkrais became the next major figure in the burgeoning field of somatic education.

The term “somatics” itself was coined by Thomas Louis Hanna (November 21, 1928 – July 29, 1990), a philosophy professor and movement theorist, in 1976. In 1973, Hanna relocated to San Francisco and assumed the directorship of the graduate school at the Humanistic Psychology Institute (now the Saybrook Institute), where he encountered the teachings of Moshe Feldenkrais. Together with his wife Eleanor Criswell Hanna, they started the Novato Institute for Somatic Research and Training in 1975 and published the journal “Somatics: Magazine-Journal of the Bodily Arts and Sciences.” Hanna coined the term “somatics” to encompass various movement awareness practices, including those of F.M. Alexander, Moshe Feldenkrais, Elsa Gindler, and Charlotte Selver.

How It’s Practiced

Most somatic education programs explore developmental movements and access the power and plasticity of the central nervous system to improve human function by increasing self-awareness in movement. Sessions typically involve slow, gentle, mindful movements performed either with a practitioner’s hands-on guidance or through self-directed exercises. In Feldenkrais clinical work, the practitioner moves the person, whereas with Hanna Somatic Education, the person is moving, and more importantly, the person is doing voluntary movement.

Practitioners guide students to notice subtle differences in sensation, effort, and coordination. Hanna’s most groundbreaking discovery was the movement technique of voluntary pandiculation, which quickly reduced muscular tension, and since it relaxed muscles through learning rather than passive manipulation (such as in stretching or massage), the effects were typically long-lasting. The emphasis is on learning—students are taught to recognize and release habitual tension patterns by engaging their motor cortex, the part of the brain that controls voluntary movement.

Somatic Education Today

Contemporary seekers encounter somatic education through multiple channels. Private sessions of 60-90 minutes with a skilled practitioner can be a most effective way to release particular inefficient muscular patterns, where a practitioner works with you to help develop a more accurate sense of your body and to recondition muscle control. Group classes are a great way to begin or to reinforce progress in self-awareness and movement, with exercises based on the work of Thomas Hanna effective at eliminating pain and increasing movement and flexibility.

Methods like the Feldenkrais Method, the Alexander Technique, Rolfing, and the Trager Approach are garnering new attention today for their subtlety and effectiveness at taking advantage of the brain’s capacity for neuroplasticity. The field has expanded into dance education, music conservatories, occupational therapy, and clinical psychology. Over 100 contemporary body-mind practices exist today, ranging from hands-on work to movement-based approaches.

Common Misconceptions

Somatic education is not physical therapy, massage, or bodywork done to a passive recipient. It is not bodywork done ‘to’ you. The Feldenkrais Method is not a treatment, adjustment, or exercise program. Hanna’s Clinical Somatics is very much an education process, not a therapy or ‘treatment’, with its aim to empower you to better understand how and why stress and tension get ‘stuck’ in your body.

It is also not a quick fix. The work requires active participation, curiosity, and time. While practitioners may use gentle touch to guide awareness, the core mechanism is neurological re-learning through the student’s own voluntary movement and attention. The field does not claim to cure disease, though practitioners report improvements in functional movement disorders and chronic pain conditions.

How to Begin

Thomas Hanna published his ideas in Somatics: Reawakening The Mind’s Control Of Movement, Flexibility, And Health in 1988. This book remains the foundational text for understanding the philosophy and contains practical movement sequences, including the Daily Cat Stretch series. Audio recordings by Hanna and Eleanor Criswell Hanna guide practitioners through specific movement lessons at home.

For hands-on experience, seek certified practitioners of Hanna Somatic Education, the Feldenkrais Method, or the Alexander Technique. Many offer introductory group classes before committing to private sessions. Look for practitioners trained through established institutes—the Novato Institute has trained many in the full range of techniques and theory comprising Hanna Somatic Education. Expect to approach the work with patience, as somatic learning accumulates gradually through repeated attention to internal sensation and movement quality.

Related terms

feldenkrais methodalexander techniquebody mind centeringnervous system regulationembodimentneuroplasticity
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