135 N. Old Woodward Ave., Suite 200, Birmingham, Michigan, 48009
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Somatic Therapy

Heart and Mind Counseling – Body-Based Healing for a Calmer, Safer Nervous System

At Heart and Mind Counseling, our clinicians provide Somatic Therapy—a trauma-informed, body-first approach that helps your nervous system release stored tension, reduce trauma symptoms, and restore a felt sense of safety. While talk therapy engages the mind, somatic work invites the body to complete stress responses and settle.

We proudly serve clients online in 23 states: Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

We also have offices in Michigan located in Birmingham, Clinton Township, and Mt. Clemens, and we provide telehealth services across all our licensed states.


What Is Somatic Therapy?

Somatic Therapy focuses on how stress and trauma live in the body—muscle tension, posture, breath patterns, startle reflexes, numbness, and shutdown. By building moment-to-moment bodily awareness and guiding gentle regulation, your system can complete incomplete defensive responses and return to balance.

Our team integrates leading somatic frameworks in a clinical, secular way:

  • Somatic Experiencing–informed principles (titration, pendulation, resourcing) to safely discharge activation.
  • Sensorimotor-informed interventions to track sensations, movement, and impulses with mindful attention.
  • Polyvagal-informed practices to support vagal tone and social engagement (such as orienting, vocalization, and breath pacing).
  • Mindfulness + Somatics blending when helpful—combining grounded awareness with body cues.

How Somatic Therapy Helps

Somatic work can reduce symptoms rooted in nervous-system dysregulation and improve overall resilience.

Common benefits include:

  • Less hypervigilance, startle, and “on edge” feelings
  • Reduced shutdown/numbness and better emotional range
  • Improved sleep, digestion, and energy
  • Fewer stress-related aches, tension, and headaches
  • Greater capacity for connection and boundaries
  • Expanded “window of tolerance” for daily stressors

Who it supports: trauma recovery (including developmental/complex trauma), anxiety, chronic stress, grief, medical or health conditions, chronic pain, and performance blocks. Somatic skills also complement EMDR, CBT, DBT, ACT, and Mindfulness-Based Therapies.


What Happens in a Somatic Session

Sessions are collaborative, slow, and choice-based. We move at your nervous system’s pace and prioritize safety.

  • Check-in & Resourcing: identifying anchors of safety (images, sensations, memories, breath styles).
  • Interoceptive Tracking: noticing subtle body cues like warmth, pressure, tingling, or ease.
  • Titration & Pendulation: gently alternating between moments of discomfort and safety.
  • Orienting & Grounding: using the five senses, breath, or physical surroundings to stay present.
  • Breath Pacing: longer exhales, box breathing, or humming to calm the nervous system.
  • Micro-movements: small impulses—reaching, pushing, or turning—that help complete protective body responses.
  • Completion & Integration: pausing to sense shifts, stillness, or relief as your body settles.

Body-Based Techniques We May Use

In addition to core somatic practices, our therapists may integrate complementary, touch-based modalities such as Havening Techniques and Tapping (EFT – Emotional Freedom Techniques).

  • Havening: slow, soothing touch on the upper arms, face, or hands while processing distressing emotions or memories, helping calm the nervous system and reduce emotional intensity.
  • Tapping (EFT): light tapping on acupressure points (forehead, around the eyes, collarbone) while naming thoughts or feelings, reducing physiological stress signals and enhancing emotional regulation.

Both Havening and Tapping are considered somatic interventions because they work directly through the body’s sensory and nervous systems. They can be used on their own or integrated into EMDR, Mindfulness-Based Therapy, and other psychotherapy sessions.


Somatic Therapy vs. Mindfulness-Based Therapies

These approaches work beautifully together but have different primary focuses:

Somatic Therapy

  • Focus: body physiology and nervous-system regulation (activation, posture, tension, breath).
  • Method: movement, orientation, breath, and sensory tracking to release stored survival energy.
  • Best when: the body feels amped, numb, or “stuck,” even when you understand the issue mentally.

Mindfulness-Based Therapies (MBT)

  • Focus: awareness and acceptance of inner experiences through attention training.
  • Method: body scans, breath anchors, compassion, and acceptance practices.
  • Best when: worry, rumination, and emotional reactivity dominate daily life.

Curious about mindfulness skills that complement somatic work? Visit our Mindfulness-Based Therapies (MBT) page.


Research and History (At a Glance)

Somatic approaches emerged as clinicians observed that talking alone didn’t always resolve the body’s stress responses. Over the past several decades, therapies drawing on nervous-system science, trauma physiology, and attachment research have shown strong benefits for trauma, anxiety, and stress-related conditions.

  • Autonomic Regulation: balancing between mobilization (fight/flight) and rest/connection.
  • Bottom-Up Processing: addressing body sensations before or alongside cognitive insight.
  • Window of Tolerance: expanding capacity to feel emotions safely without overwhelm.

Research and clinical evidence show that integrating somatic methods with psychotherapy improves functioning, reduces trauma symptoms, and enhances overall wellbeing.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What conditions does Somatic Therapy help?
A: Somatic therapy can help with trauma and PTSD, anxiety, chronic stress, grief, chronic pain, health-related stress, and relationship difficulties caused by nervous-system reactivity.

Q: What if focusing on my body feels overwhelming?
A: We go slowly and use titration—small “sips” of sensation with frequent returns to safety. You’ll always have choice and can pause or shift at any time.

Q: Do I have to re-tell my trauma story?
A: Not necessarily. Many sessions focus on present-moment sensations and regulation rather than detailed storytelling.

Q: Can Somatic Therapy be done via telehealth?
A: Yes. Grounding, orienting, and breath-based techniques work well over secure video sessions.

Q: How soon will I notice change?
A: Many clients notice subtle shifts (feeling calmer, less reactive, sleeping better) within a few sessions; deeper changes develop gradually with consistent practice.

Q: Is this compatible with EMDR, CBT, DBT, ACT, or Mindfulness?
A: Absolutely. Somatic work often enhances these therapies by improving nervous-system regulation and emotional tolerance.

Q: Do you take insurance?
A: Yes. We accept most major insurances including BCBS PPO, Aetna, United/Optum, Medicare, and others. Our team will help you verify your benefits.


Getting Started

Ready to feel safer in your body and steadier in your day? Our clinicians can help you build a more regulated nervous system through Somatic Therapy.

We have offices in:
Birmingham, Michigan
Clinton Township, Michigan
Mt. Clemens, Michigan

Telehealth Available in 23 States:
Alabama, Colorado, Delaware, District of Columbia, Georgia, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

Call: (904) 896-4998
Website: www.heartandmindcounseling.com

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