Somatic Therapies for Creating Safety in the Body 

Somatic therapies are gentle, body-centered approaches to healing that honor the lived experiences, cultural identities, and resilience of all people. Multicultural communities, disabled folks and folks with different abilities, gender expansive families and individuals, and people of color can benefit from learning techniques which support the nervous system to move from sympathetic (activation) into parasympathetic (rest and digest).  

State violence, lawlessness, and ongoing human rights abuses carried out or sanctioned by government systems do not only exist as political realities; they are experienced viscerally in the bodies of those most impacted. For immigrants, people of color, and gender-expansive people, chronic exposure to surveillance, threat, discrimination, and institutional betrayal can condition the nervous system to remain in states of heightened vigilance, shutdown, or exhaustion. When safety cannot be reliably found in social systems meant to protect, the body adapts by prioritizing survival—often through hyperarousal, dissociation, or constriction—responses that may later be misunderstood or pathologized rather than recognized as adaptive. Over time, this ongoing stress can erode the body’s capacity for regulation, rest, and connection, particularly when harm is cumulative and intergenerational. Understanding these impacts through a somatic lens invites compassion and accountability, recognizing that nervous system responses are not individual failures, but embodied reflections of systemic violence and the absence of collective safety. 

Grounded in the early work of Wilhelm Reich and Peter Levine, and later shaped by mental health practitioners and community facilitators Resmaa MenakemPat Ogden, and Bessel van der Kolk, somatic therapy recognizes that trauma, especially trauma related to chronic stress, systemic oppression, and state violence, is not only held in our thoughts, but in our bodies and nervous systems. Somatic approaches may include practices such as tracking bodily sensations, breathwork, grounding exercises, mindful movement, and gentle awareness of posture or tension, all offered at a pace that supports choice and consent. These therapies help individuals understand how survival responses like fight, flight, freeze, or shutdown can become activated during high stress, and provide practical tools for emotional regulation and nervous system stabilization. By strengthening the body’s capacity to sense safety, even in moments of heightened stress or exposure to ongoing threat, somatic therapies support people in reconnecting with their bodies as sources of protection, wisdom, and embodied resilience. 

Creating a Sense of Safety in the Body 

Somatic practices you might explore with a therapist 

When people begin somatic therapy, one of the first goals is not processing emotions or memories, but helping the body feel a little safer. Safety in the nervous system often comes from small, repeated experiences of regulation, choice, and gentleness. 

Below are examples of practices a somatic therapist might guide you through—always at your pace, with permission to stop, adjust, or simply notice. 

Box Breathing (Finding Rhythm and Predictability) 

You might be invited to explore a simple breathing rhythm, such as box breathing. This isn’t about forcing relaxation, but about offering your nervous system a predictable pattern

You could try inhaling slowly through the nose for a count of four, pausing briefly at the top of the inhale, exhaling for four, and pausing again before the next breath. As you do this, you might notice how your chest, belly, or throat respond. 

A therapist may encourage you to adjust the counts so they feel comfortable—or to stop entirely if your body signals “that’s enough.” The goal is not perfect breathing, but listening to how your body responds to rhythm and pause

Bilateral Tapping (Supporting Regulation Through Alternation) 

Bilateral tapping involves gently tapping one side of the body and then the other, often on the thighs, arms, or shoulders. 

You might alternate left and right at a pace that feels soothing rather than mechanical. Some people find this creates a sense of grounding or presence, while others simply notice the sensation of touch. 

In somatic therapy, this practice is often paired with curiosity: 

  • What do you notice in your body as the tapping continues? 
  • Does one side feel different than the other? 
  • Would slowing down or stopping feel better right now? 

The emphasis is always on choice and agency, not pushing through discomfort. 

Gentle Rocking (Inviting Safety Through Movement) 

Rocking is a natural self-regulation movement many humans instinctively use, especially in times of stress. 

You might rock slowly forward and back in a chair, side to side, or even shift your weight gently while standing. A therapist may invite you to find a rhythm that feels calming—or simply neutral. 

Rather than asking “Does this relax me?” the invitation is often: 

  • Does this movement feel supportive? 
  • Is there a sense of settling, or simply less effort? 

Sometimes the body responds with a deeper breath, a sigh, or a subtle sense of ease. Sometimes it doesn’t—and both are okay. 

Orienting Through the Breath (Tracking Sensation Without Control) 

Instead of structured breathing, you may be guided to simply notice where the breath already moves

You might place a hand on your chest or belly and observe: 

  • Where do you feel the breath most clearly? 
  • Does the breath feel shallow, deep, uneven, or steady? 
  • What happens when you allow it to be exactly as it is? 

This practice supports emotional regulation by building tolerance for sensation, without needing to change it. Over time, this can help the nervous system learn that sensation itself is not dangerous. 

Self-Soothing Touch (Using Contact to Support Safety) 

Self-soothing touch can be as simple as placing a hand over your heart, wrapping your arms around yourself, or resting a hand on your cheek or neck. 

In somatic therapy, touch is always approached with consent—even with yourself. You might be encouraged to ask internally: 

  • Does this touch feel comforting, neutral, or uncomfortable? 
  • Would a different location or pressure feel better? 

The intention is not to force calm, but to offer the body a sense of containment and support, especially during emotional moments. 

Pendulation (Moving Between Ease and Activation) 

A somatic therapist may guide you to gently notice a place in your body that feels relatively calm or neutral, and then briefly notice an area that feels tense or activated—before returning to the calmer sensation. 

This back-and-forth helps the nervous system learn that it can move out of intensity and return to safety. Over time, this builds emotional resilience and regulation capacity. 

You are never asked to stay with discomfort longer than feels manageable. 

EMDR for Treating Trauma in Diverse Communities

Therapist takes notes as client sits on a sofa during a psychotherapy session.

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) is a therapeutic modality that integrates elements of exposure therapy, traditional talk therapy, and bilateral eye movement, as the individual follows and tracks the therapist’s fingers from right to left as they are invited to remember a memory associated with a trauma. The goal of EMDR therapy is to help individuals process past experiences and traumatic memories, integrating the associated sensations and psychosomatic symptoms as means of healing (Shapiro, 2014; Vereecken & Corso, 2024). “Over 300 studies and several meta-analyses have shown “higher or similar efficacy in PTSD compared to pharmacological or other psychological interventions” (Landin-Romero, 2018). The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence and the World Health Organization have recognized EMDR as a gold standard in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (Born et al., 2013; Landin-Romero, 2018).  

The Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) model, at the foundation of EMDR therapy, supports that “current experiences link into already established memory networks and can trigger the unprocessed emotions, physical sensations, and beliefs” belonging to traumatic or adverse life experiences, resulting in stressors triggering past memories stored in the body, causing dysregulation in the present. Bilateral eye movements activate “parasympathetic activation, resulting in physiologic calming” (Shapiro, 2014).  

There is growing empirical evidence (Vereecken, 2024) that EMDR is a highly effective modality for the treatment of PTSD and trauma in diverse populations, such as clients of color, veterans, asylum-seeking migrants, and LGBTQ+-identifying individuals. EMDR can be applied in therapy for children, teens, and adults, and has been observed to support positive outcomes after short-term durations of EMDR treatment (Bannink Mbazzi et al., 2021; Shapiro 2014; Vereecken & Corso, 2024). 

There was one study in which counseling interns offered an adaptation of EMDR called The Flash Technique (Yznaga et al., 2025) with migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border seeking asylum in the United States. The Flash Technique, a “low-intensity intervention,” or a treatment that is designed for settings which offer limited time for therapy, is a technique to help regulate the client’s nervous system so that the EMDR treatment could be more accessible and effective. Firsy developed by Manfield et al. (2017) Flash Technique, decreases in levels of distress for the client can result in as little as 15 to 20 minutes (Wong, 2021).  

First, the therapist invites the client to identify a distressful memory and is invited to remember, however not dwell on it. Later, the client is directed to direct their attention to a “positive engaging focus” (PEF), “something neutral such as slow breathing and body scan, or something positive such as a happy memory or an engaging conversation between the client and the therapist, e.g., discussing a hobby” (Yznaga et al., 2025). The therapist then prompts the client to blink their eyes 3 times, and loosely recall the memory, as if seeing it from a distance. “Over time, the vividness of the memory/image may degrade, and the memory would become less disturbing to the client” (Manfield et al.).  

Dr. Jenay Garrett speaks to the importance of approaching EMDR with an anti-racist lens and through integrating practices belonging to cultural humility and trauma-informed care, such as building upon clients’ strengths, celebrating their intersecting identities, and acknowledging power differentials between the client and therapist. Dr. Garrett offers guidance for how to integrate culturally humble practices with EMDR therapy, as she posits that EMDR therapy can lose impact without the client’s “collective, historical, and cultural experiences” being woven into the process in the first phase of treatment. (Garrett, 2025).  

EMDR is a therapeutic modality which can be adapted to a wide range of cultural groups and populations (Bannink Mbazzi et al., 2021; Garrett, 2025; Shapiro, 2014; Vereecken & Corso, 2024).  The bilateral eye movements, also known as saccadic eye movements [EMs], as our eyes do when we take a walk, send signals to the brain, activating the parasympathetic nervous system, increasing a calming effect as a result (Landin-Romero et al., 2018). EMDR is practical and effective and has been proven to reduce the distressing somatic and mental health symptoms resulting from traumatic experiences. Though discovered and developed in 1989, EMDR is experiencing a growth in interest as a short-term, evidence-based treatment for the healing of trauma in diverse communities.  

Sources 

Bannink Mbazzi, F.B., Dewailly, A., Admasu, K., Yvonne Duagani, Y., Wamala, K., Vera, A., Bwesigye, D., Roth, G. (2021). Cultural Adaptations of the Standard EMDR Protocol in Five African Countries. J EMDR Pract and Res.15:29-43. DOI:10.1891/EMDR-D-20-00028 

Manfield, P., Lovett, J., Engel, L., Manfield, D. (2017). Use of the Flash Technique in MDR therapy: Four case examples. J EMDR Prac Res.11(4):195–205. 

Born J., Rasch B., Gais S. (2013). Guidelines for the Management of Conditions Specifically Related to Stress. Geneva: World Health Organization. 

Garrett, J.G. (2025, July 25). Using EMDR with BIPOC Clients: Six Strategies for Children, Adolescents, and Adults. https://www.emdria.org/blog/using-emdr-with-bipoc-clients-six-strategies-for-children-adolescents-and-adults 

Landin-Romero, R., Moreno-Alcazar, A., Pagani, M., Amann, B.L. (2018). How Does Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy Work? A Systematic Review on Suggested Mechanisms of Action. Front Psychol. Aug 13;9:1395. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01395. PMID: 30166975; PMCID: PMC6106867. 

Manfield, P., Lovett, J., Engel, L., Manfield, D. (2017). Use of the Flash Technique in MDR therapy: Four case examples. J EMDR Prac Res. 11(4):195–205. 

Shapiro F. (2014). The role of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy in medicine: addressing the psychological and physical symptoms stemming from adverse life experiences. Perm J. Winter;18(1):71-7. doi: 10.7812/TPP/13-098. PMID: 24626074; PMCID: PMC3951033. 

Vereecken, S. & Corso, G. (2024). Revisiting Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy for Post-traumatic stress disorder: A Systematic Review and Discussion of the American Psychological Association’s 2017 Recommendations. Cureus. Apr 22;16(4):e58767. doi: 10.7759/cureus.58767. PMID: 38779227; PMCID: PMC11111257. 

Wong, S.L. (2021). A model for the Flash Technique based on working memory and neuroscience research. J EMDR Prac Res. 2021;15(3):123–135. https://doi.org/10.1891/EMDR-D-20-00048

Yznaga, S., Wong, S.L., Maniss, S. (2025). The Flash Technique as an Effective Low-Intensity Intervention for Migrants at the U.S. Point of Entry. J EMDR Pract and Res.19:0009.DOI:10.34133/jemdr.0009