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For years, mental health has been treated as something that exists only in the mind. But the body has been carrying much of that story all along. Somatic healing explains how.
Somatic therapy is emerging as a modern-age healing approach that involves not just the brain, but also the body. Instead of focusing only on thoughts and conversations, it works with the body’s responses and nervous system. It helps address stress and past experiences that don’t always surface through words.
Understanding Somatic Therapy & Its Types
Most people have heard of mindfulness meditation practice, MBSR, or MSC. These mind-body approaches have been around long enough to become pretty mainstream. Somatic therapy (aka body-based therapy) works along the same lines, but it hasn’t quite reached that level of recognition yet. What it does is tap into the connection between the mind and body to help people work through PTSD and other mental and emotional health struggles.
To put it simply, somatic therapy is built on one foundational truth. It is that your body remembers everything your mind has tried to move on from. Trauma, grief, chronic stress, these don’t just live in your thoughts. They live in your shoulders, your chest, the way you hold your breath without realizing it.
Somatic therapy works by listening to those signals, not just the story you tell about them.
Here are some of the most established approaches within somatic therapy.
Somatic Experiencing (SE)

Targets trauma stored in the Your Body nervous system, not just in memory. People leave sessions feeling more grounded, not more activated.
EMDR

Processes traumatic memories through bilateral stimulation so they stop running in the background. The memory stays but it loses its charge.
Dance & Movement Therapy

Get to what words keep missing by working through the body instead. Emotion that’s been sitting for years finds a way out through movement.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy

Treats the body’s responses in a session as information, not background noise. Reaches patterns that insight and conversation alone rarely shift.
Hakomi Method

Slows everything down until the body starts showing what the mind has learned to hide. Works with what’s underneath, not what’s being presented.
Bioenergetic Analysis

Goes after the tension the body has been holding onto for years through breath and movement. People often describe feeling more alive in their own body after this work.
Different methods, same underlying conviction: healing isn’t only a cognitive event. The body was there when it happened. It makes sense that the body gets to be part of what comes next.
Techniques Used in Somatic Therapy
Somatic therapy works on the understanding that life experiences don’t just stay in the mind; they settle into the body too. That’s why the work happens on both levels at once: what you’re feeling physically and what you’re carrying emotionally.
Some of the most commonly used techniques include:
Grounding – Grounding techniques bring attention back to physical contact with the present moment: feet on the floor, weight in the chair, and breath moving in and out. For a nervous system that’s been in survival mode, learning to feel safe in the present moment is the work itself.
Body Scanning – Rather than asking what you’re thinking, body-based therapy asks what you’re noticing. A body scan moves attention through different parts of the body slowly and without judgment. Tightness in the jaw. Heaviness in the chest. A held breath that loosens once it’s noticed.
Breathwork – It is one of the few autonomic functions we can consciously control, which makes it a powerful entry point into the nervous system. Certain breathing patterns activate the parasympathetic system, the body’s rest and recovery state.
Titration – Titration is the practice of approaching difficult material in small, manageable doses rather than all at once. A somatic therapist will guide you to the edge of what’s tolerable, allow the body to process a little at a time, and pull back before it becomes overwhelming.
Pendulation – The nervous system heals through contrast. Pendulation moves attention back and forth between a place of discomfort in the body and a place of ease or neutrality. This rhythm, distress and then safety, distress and then safety, teaches the system that it can move through difficulty and return to calm.
Touch and Movement – Depending on the approach and the therapist, somatic work may involve intentional movement based therapy, posture shifts, or, in some modalities, therapeutic touch.
Who Can Benefit from Somatic Therapy?
Somatic therapy isn’t just for people who’ve lived through something catastrophic. It’s for the person who has done years of talk therapy. It’s for someone who understands their patterns inside and out but still wakes up anxious every morning without knowing why.
It’s for
- The parents who snap at their kids and feel immediate shame because that’s not who they want to be.
- The professional who has built an impressive life and quietly feels nothing inside it.
- The people who’ve learned to ignore signals the body has been sending, like tight chest, knotted stomach, and unexplainable exhaustion.
Ultimately, it’s particularly powerful for those who tend to live from the neck up, the overthinkers, the high-functioning anxious, and the ones who intellectually know they’re safe but can’t seem to feel it. Wherever the body has been quietly holding what the mind couldn’t process, body-centered therapy offers a way through.
How to Start Your Somatic Therapy Journey?
Starting usually feels like the hardest part, not because somatic release therapy is complicated, but because most people don’t know where the door is.
The truth is, you don’t need to have everything figured out before you begin. Honestly, you don’t need a diagnosis, a clear story of what happened, or even the right words to describe what you’re carrying. What you need is a space that feels safe enough to start listening to your body, and that’s exactly what Insumataq Studio is built to be. Whether you’re brand new to somatic work or you’ve been on a healing path for years and are ready to go deeper, there’s an entry point here that meets you where you are.
Maybe you start with the Breath Reset: Monday Shake-Off on a random Monday when your shoulders are already up to your ears and you just need somewhere to put it all. It’s short, it’s online, and it asks nothing of you except to show up. Or maybe Thursday evenings end up being your thing, sitting with the Intro to Somatic Breathwork class and learning, for the first time, that your breath has been trying to help you this whole time. You just never knew how to let it. There’s no pressure to figure it all out at once. Insumataq Studio moves at your pace, because real healing doesn’t run on a deadline.
Conclusion
Most people don’t come to somatic therapy because their life fell apart. They come because life looks completely fine on the outside, and yet something quietly isn’t. They’ve done the journaling, the therapy, maybe even the meditation app. They understand themselves. They just still don’t feel better in their body, and they can’t quite explain why.
If that sounds familiar, you’re not missing something. You’re just working with tools that were never designed to reach where the real holding is happening.
Somatic therapy goes there. And so does everything happening at Insumataq Studio. Whether it’s a breathwork session that finally teaches your nervous system what calm actually feels like, a movement class that shakes something loose that words never touched, or a sound healing session where you just get to exist without performing or processing, something on that schedule was built for exactly where you are right now.
Stop waiting for the right time. It’s not coming. But the right class might be on Thursday.
Visit Insumataq Studio right now, browse the schedule, and book the session that made you pause for a second longer than the others.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
No. Talk therapy works with your thoughts. Somatic (movement, breathwork, and dance) therapy works with what your body is doing while you have those thoughts.
Not at all. Chronic stress, emotional numbness, feeling disconnected from yourself, these are all reasons people come to somatic therapy and leave feeling more like themselves.
That's more common than you'd think. Numbness is just the nervous system protecting itself. A good somatic therapist works with that, not against it. Feeling nothing is still information.
Some people feel a shift after their first session. For others it builds gradually. There's no fixed timeline because every nervous system moves at its own pace.
Absolutely. You don't need any background in healing work to begin. Sessions like the Intro to Somatic Breathwork at Insumataq Studio are specifically designed for people who are just starting out and want a gentle entry point.