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Glossary›Somatic Movement Therapy

Glossary

Somatic Movement Therapy

A body-centered therapeutic approach that addresses psychological distress and physical tension through movement, breath, and nervous system regulation.

What is Somatic Movement Therapy?

Somatic Movement Therapy is a body-centered therapeutic modality that uses movement, internal awareness, and nervous system regulation to address both physical and psychological conditions. The term “somatic” derives from the Greek soma, meaning “the body as perceived from within”—emphasizing first-person bodily experience rather than external observation. Unlike conventional physical therapy or performance-based movement disciplines, somatic movement therapy prioritizes proprioceptive and interoceptive awareness: how movement feels internally, how the nervous system responds to sensation, and how chronic patterns of tension can be reorganized through conscious attention.

Somatic movement therapy encompasses multiple distinct methodologies, including Hanna Somatic Education (also known as Clinical Somatic Education), the Feldenkrais Method, the Alexander Technique, Body-Mind Centering, and aspects of Somatic Experiencing when combined with movement practices. While approaches vary, all share the principle that many chronic conditions—muscular pain, restricted mobility, trauma-related dysregulation—are learned patterns held in the nervous system, and therefore can be unlearned or reorganized through careful sensory-motor education.

Origins & Lineage

The foundations of somatic movement therapy lie in the 19th-century physical culture movement, which included harmonic gymnastics and systems of personal cultivation through movement. Pioneers such as Genevieve Stebbins (1857–1934), who developed embodied movement methodologies based on the Delsarte expression system and Swedish Ling Gymnastics, influenced figures like Elsa Gindler (1885–1961) and Mabel Todd (1880–1956), whose work emphasized organic, integrated conceptions of health through bodily movement.

The term “somatics” itself was coined in 1976 by Thomas Hanna (1928–1990), a philosophy professor at the University of Florida. Hanna encountered the work of Moshe Feldenkrais, an Israeli physicist who had developed a method of movement education, at a 1973 workshop in Berkeley, California. Hanna subsequently organized the first Feldenkrais training program in the United States in 1975 and founded the Novato Institute for Somatic Research and Training with his wife Eleanor Criswell Hanna. In 1976, Hanna published the first issue of Somatics: Magazine-Journal of the Bodily Arts and Sciences and began using the term “somatics” to encompass various movement awareness practices.

Hanna’s innovation was the concept of “Sensory Motor Amnesia”—the loss of voluntary control over muscles due to habituated tension patterns resulting from stress, injury, or repetitive use. He developed the technique of “pandiculation,” a controlled contraction followed by slow release that retrains the motor cortex to release chronic muscular tension. His 1988 book, Somatics: Reawakening the Mind’s Control of Movement, Flexibility, and Health, became a foundational text. Hanna launched his training program in Hanna Somatic Education in 1990 but died later that year in an automobile accident, leaving 38 students with the foundation of his method.

Parallel developments in body-centered therapy trace through Wilhelm Reich (1897–1957), whose concept of “muscular armor”—chronic tension reflecting repressed emotions—influenced body psychotherapy beginning in the 1930s. Peter Levine, who holds doctorates in both medical biophysics and psychology, developed Somatic Experiencing beginning in the 1970s by studying how animals in the wild discharge trauma, creating a body-oriented approach to trauma resolution that integrates movement awareness with nervous system regulation.

How It’s Practiced

Somatic movement therapy sessions typically occur in one-on-one settings lasting 60 to 90 minutes, though group classes are also common. Practitioners may work hands-on or use verbal guidance to direct attention to specific sensations, movement patterns, and breathing. The movements themselves are typically slow, small, and exploratory rather than effortful or repetitive.

In Hanna Somatic Education, practitioners guide clients through pandiculation sequences while the client lies on a table, gently contracting specific muscle groups and then slowly releasing them to reset the resting muscle tone. The slow nature of the movement recruits the corticospinal tract in the motor cortex, the only part of the motor system capable of decreasing motor unit firing. Practitioners also teach self-care exercises clients can practice at home, often requiring just five minutes daily.

The Feldenkrais Method uses two formats: Awareness Through Movement (group classes with verbal instructions) and Functional Integration (hands-on individual sessions). Practitioners use gentle touch and movement to guide clients toward new patterns, focusing on small, precise movements that reveal functional relationships between body parts. The emphasis is on learning and exploration rather than correction.

Somatic Experiencing, while primarily a trauma therapy rather than purely movement-based, incorporates body awareness and movement as clients track physical sensations, notice impulses toward movement, and gradually complete defensive responses that were thwarted during traumatic events. Practitioners observe subtle shifts in breathing, muscle tone, and nervous system state.

Common techniques across modalities include: body scanning (systematically noticing sensation in different body regions), grounding exercises (orienting to physical support and sensory input), breath awareness, gentle stretching with attention to internal sensation, and progressive exploration of restricted movement patterns.

Somatic Movement Therapy Today

Seekers typically encounter somatic movement therapy through several channels. Many discover it after conventional physical therapy or pain management has provided insufficient relief. Chronic conditions commonly addressed include back pain, neck and shoulder tension, sciatica, repetitive strain injuries, and movement restrictions following stroke or neurological conditions.

Certified practitioners are found through professional organizations including the Association for Hanna Somatic Education, the Feldenkrais Guild of North America, and Somatic Experiencing International. Training programs typically require 150 to 800+ hours depending on the modality, often spread over two to four years.

Group classes, offered at yoga studios, wellness centers, and community spaces, provide an accessible entry point at $15 to $35 per session. Private sessions range from $80 to $200 per hour. Online classes and recorded sessions have become increasingly available, with evidence from a 2024 meta-analysis in BMJ Mental Health showing comparable outcomes for certain somatic interventions delivered via telehealth.

Retreats and intensive workshops, often held at centers like the Esalen Institute or Kripalu, offer immersive multi-day experiences. The modality has gained traction not only in therapeutic contexts but also in dance education, where somatic principles are used to enhance proprioceptive skills and reduce injury risk.

Common Misconceptions

Somatic movement therapy is not physical therapy, though the two may address similar conditions. Physical therapy typically works toward functional goals through strengthening and corrective exercises; somatic movement therapy works to reorganize neuromuscular patterns through awareness and sensory-motor learning.

It is not massage or bodywork, despite the presence of touch in some modalities. The touch is educational rather than therapeutic in the conventional sense—providing information to the nervous system rather than manually releasing tissue.

It is not the same as yoga, Pilates, or general fitness, though these practices may incorporate somatic principles. Traditional fitness emphasizes external form and aesthetic goals; somatic movement emphasizes internal sensation and functional efficiency. Joseph Pilates originally developed his method with somatic principles of mind-body connection and proprioceptive awareness, though most contemporary Pilates instruction focuses more on correct physical technique.

Not all somatic practices are equivalent. “Somatic experiencing” refers specifically to Peter Levine’s trauma therapy protocol; “Hanna somatics” refers to Thomas Hanna’s specific method; “Feldenkrais” is a distinct methodology. These terms are not interchangeable, though all fall under the umbrella of somatic approaches.

Finally, somatic movement therapy is not a quick fix. While some clients report immediate relief, sustained change typically requires consistent practice over weeks or months. The work is educational—teaching the nervous system new patterns—rather than interventional.

How to Begin

The most accessible entry point is Thomas Hanna’s book Somatics: Reawakening the Mind’s Control of Movement, Flexibility, and Health (Da Capo Press, 1988), which includes illustrated self-care exercises. Moshe Feldenkrais’s Awareness Through Movement (HarperOne, 1972) offers another foundational text with experiential lessons.

For hands-on experience, seek certified practitioners through professional registries. A typical course of Hanna Somatic Education involves three to eight sessions to address specific pain patterns, followed by a daily five-minute home practice. Feldenkrais sessions may be more open-ended, focusing on general improvement of movement quality.

Group classes labeled “Somatic Movement,” “Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement,” or “Somatic Yoga” provide low-cost experiential learning. Approach with curiosity about internal sensation rather than achieving external forms. The work requires patience and attention; benefits accumulate through consistent practice rather than intensive effort.

Related terms

somatic experiencingfeldenkrais methodbody psychotherapypolyvagal theorynervous system regulationbreathwork
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