Somatic Heals What Your Mind Can’t
Tired of just talking and feeling stuck?
A body based path might be the missing key to healing anxiety and trauma.
Tired of just talking and feeling stuck?
Stress, trauma, and unresolved wounds don’t just live in the mind—they get stored in the body. That’s why simply talking about the past isn’t always enough to bring relief or lasting change.
Developed by Dr. Stephen Porges, Polyvagal Theory gives us a groundbreaking map of how the nervous system responds to stress and safety. By understanding this “map,” we can see why we shut down, snap, or spiral—and more importantly, how to guide the body back into balance.
-
Most of us are told to think our way through struggles and uncomfortable emotions. We now know that sometimes it's not enough to think or talk our way out of trauma. We need to have a body based approach
Soma (Of the Body) Somatic therapy recognizes that our nervous system, posture, gut, muscles and even our breath hold stories our mind alone can’t explain. By honoring and noticing what the body's wisdom is telling us through bodily sensations we can open new pathways for healing and rewiring.
As a certified somatic therapy practitioner I help clients reconnect with their bodies so they can release anxiety, regulate emotions, and build safer, more secure relationships with themselves and others. Somatic attachment therapy focuses on how early attachment patterns live in the body and how we can create new, healthier ways of relating through nervous system regulation and embodied awareness.n text goes here
-
Talk therapy can be incredibly helpful for understanding patterns, gaining insight, and finding words for your story. At the same time, many forms of trauma live in the limbic part of the brain rather than the cognitive part. As Bessel van der Kolk describes in his book The Body Keeps the Score, this is why symptoms like rage, anxiety, nail biting, disassociation, restlessness, or phobias may persist and triggered in certain situations even when we had all the talk therapy available to us.
Somatic therapy bridges that gap. It works directly with the body and nervous system, teaching you how to regulate in the moment instead of only analyzing the past. Talk therapy helps you understand. Somatic therapy helps you release the stuck trauma.
-
A somatic practitioner guides you to tune into your body’s signals and responses, drawing on principles from polyvagal theory. Practitioners support clients in coming into their bodies, allowing space for uncomfortable emotions and building resilience over time by learning to stay present with them. Somatic work helps those who have unprocessed trauma gradually work through it and complete the unfinished cycles of anxiety.
This work includes learning to regulate through somatic exercises such as grounding, orienting, breath-work, and gentle movement, which help shift the body from fight‑flight or shutdown back into a state of safety and connection. This might look like slowing down your breath, noticing sensations, or practicing gentle exercises that bring your nervous system back into balance.
Somatic practitioners often integrate tools like:
Nervous system regulation exercises
Grounding and mindfulness practices
Gentle movement and breath-work
Exploring attachment patterns
Techniques to release anxiety in the moment of panic
Techniques for releasing stored stress and trauma
The goal isn’t to “fix” you but to create a safe space where your body can relearn calm, resilience, and connection.
-
There are various modalities that are evidence based and science backed. It is hard to know where to start. What is important is that you have the awareness to start and I am here to help you navigate the how part. Below is a list of modalities I am fond of and is science backed.
I incorporate these modalities in the mental gym program as well as in my 1:1’s where I see fit with full client consent of course.
Polyvagal-Informed Practices
Breath work techniques
Trauma Release Exercises (TRE)
Craniosacral therapy (in person only)
Tapping (EFT)
Sound Healing and Vibration Work
*EMDR and Brain Spotting is a very safe and effective way to process trauma that I am a fan of and would highly recommend anyone in need of healing generational trauma to seek this type of therapy.
“A body-based path might be the missing key to healing anxiety and trapped unresolved trauma no matter how big or small”
— Sogol Johnson, MA, ACC