What Is Somatic Therapy? A Plain-Language Guide
What somatic therapy is, what it isn't, and what you might expect in a session.
Somatic therapy in Ottawa — bringing the wisdom of the body into the healing process, gently and without force.
Sometimes insight isn't enough. You can understand why you feel anxious, why you shut down, why certain things are so hard — and still feel stuck. That's because understanding lives in the mind, but the patterns live in the body.
Somatic therapy is body-centred psychotherapy — an approach that recognizes that the body is not a backdrop to our psychological experience, but an active participant in it. Our posture, our breath, the tension we hold without realizing it, the way we contract when we feel threatened — these are not merely physical. They are the language of our inner life.
In somatic therapy, we learn to read that language — not to override the body, but to listen to it. Often, what the body holds is older and deeper than what the conscious mind can access through words alone.
Somatic therapy sessions often look like talk therapy — but with a different quality of attention. You might be invited to notice a sensation, to track what happens in your chest when you speak about something difficult, or to notice how a memory lives in your body rather than just your mind.
There is no physical manipulation. You do not need to move or perform. Somatic work is subtle, internal, and always guided by your comfort. Some people find it requires an adjustment from the purely verbal — learning a new kind of listening.
Somatic therapy is particularly helpful for those whose difficulties are held in the body — chronic anxiety with physical symptoms, trauma that hasn't responded to purely talk-based approaches, patterns of numbness or dissociation, and the complex body-self relationship that often accompanies eating disorders. It is also valuable for those navigating identity shifts, major life transitions, or a sense of feeling unmoored from themselves — times when the mind searches for answers the body may already be holding.
It is not a replacement for other forms of therapy — it is an enrichment of them. In my practice, somatic awareness is woven throughout the work, rather than being a separate modality.
Central to somatic work is an understanding of the autonomic nervous system — the biological system that governs our responses to threat, safety, and connection. Many of the patterns that bring people to therapy (shutting down, lashing out, hypervigilance, collapse) are nervous system responses, not character flaws.
Part of somatic therapy is developing "nervous system literacy" — an understanding of your own patterns, your own triggers, and your own pathways back to regulation. This is practical, embodied knowledge that extends beyond the therapy room.
"The body keeps the score. But it also holds the map back home — if we learn to listen."
A free 20-minute consultation is a gentle way to begin — no commitment, just a conversation.
In-person in Ottawa or virtually across Ontario.