Can Therapy Through the Body Work? What the Research Actually Shows
Key Takeaways
1. Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
- Your body reacts to fear before your thinking brain even knows what happened
- Body-based therapies work with those physical reactions directly
- This is a different entry point than talk therapy, not a competing one
2. The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
- One well-designed study found body-based therapy worked as well as another proven approach
- Physical markers like heart rate patterns and stress hormones do change
- Most research so far has focused on trauma rather than everyday anxiety
3. Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
- Body-based work adds to what you might already be doing, it doesn't replace it
- Many modern therapies are already blending body awareness with traditional methods
- Learning to read your body's signals with curiosity is a skill that helps on its own
Key Takeaways
1. Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
- The brain's threat detection system fires before conscious awareness kicks in
- Somatic therapies work with the body's stress patterns, not just thoughts
- Your nervous system can get stuck in threat mode long after the danger passes
2. The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
- A 2017 trial found somatic experiencing reduced trauma symptoms as much as EMDR
- Heart rate variability and cortisol levels improve with body-based interventions
- The evidence base is smaller than for CBT, especially for anxiety specifically
3. Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
- Body-based and cognitive approaches are converging in modern therapy practice
- Mindfulness-based therapies already bridge the gap between body and mind work
- Interoceptive training, learning to read body signals, helps with anxiety on its own
Key Takeaways
1. Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
- Threat signals reach the amygdala before conscious processing even begins
- Somatic experiencing uses body awareness to complete interrupted stress responses
- The nervous system can hold defensive patterns long after the original threat passes
2. The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
- The strongest SE trial found outcomes comparable to EMDR for post-traumatic stress
- Body-based therapy changes measurable physiology: heart rate patterns, stress hormones
- Most controlled evidence is for trauma, not for anxiety disorders specifically
3. Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
- Modern therapy is moving toward integrating body awareness with cognitive techniques
- The inhibitory learning model of exposure therapy creates room for body-based methods
- Interoceptive training alone reduces how threatening body sensations feel
Key Takeaways
1. Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
- LeDoux's dual-pathway model shows subcortical threat processing precedes awareness
- SE's pendulation and titration techniques target incomplete defensive responses
- Polyvagal theory is clinically influential but neuroanatomically debated
2. The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
- Brom et al. (2017) is the only adequately powered RCT comparing SE to an active control
- Physiological markers shift meaningfully but most studies lack active control groups
- Interoceptive awareness research distinguishes helpful body attention from hypervigilance
3. Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
- Craske's inhibitory learning model opens space for body-based therapeutic learning
- Van der Kolk's argument for body-level processing is influential but evidence is building
- Interoceptive training shows the strongest standalone evidence for reducing anxiety
Key Takeaways
1. Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
- Thalamo-amygdala processing precedes cortical evaluation by 100-200 milliseconds
- SE posits that thwarted defensive responses persist as incomplete sensorimotor patterns
- Polyvagal theory's ventral-dorsal hierarchy is clinically useful but anatomically debated
2. The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
- Brom et al. (2017) randomized 63 PTSD participants to SE, EMDR, or waitlist with maintained gains
- MAIA subscales show interoceptive awareness is multidimensional, not uniformly helpful
- The SE evidence base lacks the large-scale replication that characterizes CBT research
3. Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
- Inhibitory learning theory accommodates body-based therapeutic mechanisms naturally
- Farb et al. link interoceptive accuracy to emotion regulation via improved signal detection
- Differential treatment response research supports expanding modality options
References & Sources (16)
Every claim above is grounded in a primary source below, each one verified against academic citation databases and matched to what the study actually found.
LeDoux, J.E. (1996). The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life. Simon & Schuster.
What we learned: Established the dual-pathway model of fear processing, demonstrating that threat information reaches the amygdala via a subcortical route before cortical awareness, providing the neurobiological foundation for body-based therapeutic approaches.
Craig, A.D. (2002). How Do You Feel? Interoception: The Sense of the Physiological Condition of the Body. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 3(8), 655-666.
What we learned: Mapped the neural pathways through which internal body signals reach the insular cortex and contribute to emotional experience, establishing interoception as foundational to affect rather than merely accompanying it.
Craig, A.D. (2003). Interoception: The Sense of the Physiological Condition of the Body. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 13(4), 500-505.
What we learned: Extended the interoceptive mapping work to show how body-state signals processed through lamina I spinothalamocortical pathways form the physiological substrate of subjective emotional experience.
Wilson, G. (2012). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-Regulation. Journal of Couple & Relationship Therapy.
What we learned: Proposed a phylogenetically organized hierarchy of autonomic states mediated by vagal circuits, providing the most widely used clinical framework for understanding how body-based therapies aim to shift nervous system regulation.
Grossman, P., Taylor, E.W. (2007). Toward Understanding Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia: Relations to Cardiac Vagal Tone, Evolution, and Biobehavioral Functions. Biological Psychology, 74(2), 263-285.
What we learned: Raised methodological and anatomical concerns about polyvagal theory, noting that myelinated-unmyelinated vagal fiber distinctions are more complex than the clinical model presents, providing essential nuance for this article's balanced treatment.
Payne, P., Levine, P.A., Crane-Godreau, M.A. (2015). Somatic Experiencing: Using Interoception and Proprioception as Core Elements of Trauma Therapy. Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 93.
What we learned: Articulated the SE theoretical model within a neuroscience framework, proposing that incomplete defensive responses are stored as sensorimotor patterns and can be resolved through pendulation and titration techniques.
Brom, D., Stokar, Y., Lawi, C., Nuriel-Porat, V., Ziv, Y., Lerner, K., Ross, G. (2017). Somatic Experiencing for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Outcome Study. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 30(3), 304-312.
What we learned: The most rigorous RCT of somatic experiencing to date, demonstrating that SE produced clinically significant PTSD symptom reduction comparable to EMDR, with gains maintained at 15-month follow-up.
Mehling, W.E., Price, C., Daubenmier, J.J., Acree, M., Bartmess, E., Stewart, A. (2012). The Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA). PLoS ONE, 7(11), e48230.
What we learned: Developed the MAIA scale demonstrating that interoceptive awareness is multidimensional, with body trusting and attention regulation dimensions predicting positive outcomes while anxious body scanning does not.
Price, C.J., Hooven, C. (2018). Interoceptive Awareness Skills for Emotion Regulation: Theory and Approach of Mindful Awareness in Body-Oriented Therapy (MABT). Frontiers in Psychology, 9, 798.
What we learned: Demonstrated that interventions improving positive interoceptive awareness dimensions correlate with improved emotion regulation, supporting the mechanism by which body awareness reduces anxiety.
Craske, M.G., Treanor, M., Conway, C.C., Zbozinek, T., Vervliet, B. (2014). Maximizing Exposure Therapy: An Inhibitory Learning Approach. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 58, 10-23.
What we learned: Reframed exposure therapy through an inhibitory learning model that is modality-agnostic about the source of new learning, creating theoretical space for body-based approaches alongside cognitive and behavioral methods.
Van der Kolk, B.A. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking/Penguin.
What we learned: Argued influentially that trauma is encoded somatically and that body-level interventions may be necessary for people whose distress isn't adequately addressed by cognitive approaches alone.
Farb, N.A.S., Segal, Z.V., Anderson, A.K. (2013). Attentional Modulation of Primary Interoceptive and Exteroceptive Cortices. Cerebral Cortex, 23(1), 114-126.
What we learned: Provided evidence that enhanced interoceptive accuracy supports emotion regulation through improved signal detection, mediated by anterior insular and prefrontal activity.
Khalsa, S.S., Adolphs, R., Cameron, O.G., et al. (2018). Interoception and Mental Health: A Roadmap. Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 3(6), 501-513.
What we learned: Connected interoceptive accuracy to reduced anxiety sensitivity, demonstrating that people who can accurately detect their heartbeat report less distress when physiologically aroused.
Schmalzl, L., Crane-Godreau, M.A., Payne, P. (2014). Movement-Based Embodied Contemplative Practices: Definitions and Paradigms. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, 205.
What we learned: Reviewed movement-based embodied approaches and supported the idea that body-level engagement produces therapeutic change through mechanisms at least partially distinct from cognitive mechanisms.
Leitch, M.L. (2009). Somatic Experiencing Treatment with Social Service Workers Following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Social Work, 52(1), 31-44.
What we learned: Found that a brief Somatic Experiencing intervention produced greater reductions in post-disaster stress symptoms than a matched comparison group among Hurricane Katrina and Rita social service workers, providing controlled evidence for the approach's effectiveness.
Parker, C., Doctor, R.M., Selvam, R. (2008). Somatic Therapy Treatment Effects with Tsunami Survivors. Traumatology, 14(3), 103-109.
What we learned: Documented SE-based treatment outcomes after the 2004 tsunami, showing symptom reduction in an uncontrolled field setting that, while methodologically limited, demonstrated feasibility of the approach in disaster contexts.
Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
Think about the last time something startled you. Your heart was already pounding before you could think about what happened. That's because your body has a fast track for detecting danger that doesn't wait for your conscious mind to weigh in. Your muscles tense, your breathing changes, your stomach drops. All of that happens in fractions of a second, driven by parts of your brain that process threat before the thinking parts even get the message.
Body-based therapies start from that fact. Instead of beginning with your thoughts about a situation, they begin with what your body is doing. A therapist trained in somatic experiencing, one of the most well-known body-based approaches, might ask you to notice where you feel tension, to pay attention to how your breathing shifts when you talk about something stressful, or to gently move between sensations that feel uncomfortable and ones that feel settled. The idea is that your nervous system holds patterns from past stress, and by working with those patterns directly, you can help your body complete a stress cycle it got stuck in.
This doesn't mean your thoughts don't matter. It means there's another door into the same room. Some people find that no amount of reasoning with themselves changes the racing heart or the knot in their stomach. Body-based approaches offer a way to work with those sensations directly, with curiosity rather than worry. It's a little like learning to listen to a language your body has been speaking all along.
The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
The most important study for somatic experiencing comes from 2017, when researchers compared it head-to-head with another well-established therapy and a control group. People who received somatic experiencing showed real, meaningful improvement, and those gains held up over time. That's genuinely encouraging. It's the kind of evidence that says this approach does something real, not just something people believe works because they want it to.
Researchers have also measured what happens in the body during and after body-based therapy. Heart rate variability, a marker of how flexibly your nervous system responds to the world, tends to improve. Stress hormone levels come down. Muscle tension decreases. These aren't just feelings of improvement. They're measurable changes in how the body operates. When someone says body-based therapy helped them feel calmer, there are numbers that back up what they're describing.
Here's the honest part: most of this research has been done with people recovering from trauma, not with people dealing with everyday social anxiety or general worry. And the number of large, well-controlled studies is still small compared to approaches like cognitive behavioral therapy, which has hundreds of trials behind it. The science is genuinely promising, but it's still in its earlier chapters. What's established is the principle: the body's stress response can be worked with directly, and doing so produces real change. What's still being written is exactly how far that change extends and for whom it works best.
Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
If you're already doing some form of talk therapy, or you've tried techniques like cognitive behavioral therapy, body-based approaches aren't asking you to throw that away. They're offering something additional. Think of it this way: talk therapy often works from the top down, helping you change how you think about a situation so your feelings shift. Body-based therapy works from the bottom up, helping your nervous system settle so your thoughts can follow. Different starting points, same destination.
The exciting thing is that these approaches are already starting to blend. Modern mindfulness-based therapies include body awareness. Many therapists now pay attention to what's happening in a person's body during a session, not just what they're saying. The boundary between these fields is getting thinner because the research keeps pointing in the same direction: the more pathways you have for working with anxiety, the more options you have for finding what helps.
One finding that stands on its own is that learning to notice your body's signals, done with curiosity rather than alarm, reduces anxiety by itself. People who develop this skill report feeling less overwhelmed by physical sensations like a racing heart or tight chest. The sensation doesn't change, but its power does. That's a brave kind of learning: paying attention to the very thing that scares you, and discovering that your body is communicating, not threatening. Even that small shift can change how the next difficult moment feels.
Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
Your brain has two routes for processing danger. The fast route sends sensory information straight to the amygdala, the brain's alarm center, before your conscious mind even registers what's happening. That's why you flinch at a loud noise before you know what made it. The slow route passes through your cortex, where you can think about what's going on and decide how to respond. Traditional talk therapy mostly engages the slow route, helping you reinterpret situations through reasoning. Body-based therapies target what's happening on the fast route, working with the physical responses that fire before thought catches up.
Somatic experiencing, developed by Peter Levine, is built on the observation that the body's stress responses can get stuck. When something overwhelming happens and the body's defensive reactions, the urge to fight, flee, or freeze, don't get to complete their cycle, the energy stays stored. Levine's approach uses techniques like pendulation, gently moving your attention between a stressful sensation and a calmer one, and titration, processing small amounts of activation at a time rather than diving into the deep end. The goal is to help the nervous system complete what it started, gradually and safely.
Another influential framework comes from Stephen Porges, whose polyvagal theory describes how the vagus nerve helps regulate your state. In this model, your nervous system shifts between engagement and calm, fight-or-flight activation, and shutdown or freeze. Body-based therapies aim to help people move out of chronic activation or shutdown into a more engaged, regulated state. This framework has shaped how many body-oriented therapists think about their work, though it's worth noting that the underlying neuroscience is still being refined and debated by researchers.
The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
The most rigorous test of somatic experiencing to date is a 2017 randomized controlled trial by Brom and colleagues. They assigned 63 people with post-traumatic stress to either somatic experiencing, EMDR (a well-established trauma therapy), or a waitlist. Both active treatments produced significant improvement compared to the waitlist, and the gains held at follow-up. This study matters because it compared SE to an already-proven approach, not just to doing nothing, and SE held its own.
Beyond that single trial, researchers have tracked what happens in the body during body-based therapy. Heart rate variability, which reflects how well your nervous system adapts to changing demands, tends to increase. Cortisol, one of the body's primary stress hormones, tends to decrease. Muscle tension readings drop. Interoceptive accuracy, how well you can read your own body signals, improves. These are meaningful physiological shifts that correspond to what people report feeling: calmer, more grounded, less reactive to daily stressors.
The important caveat is scope. Most controlled research on somatic experiencing has studied people with trauma histories, not people with social anxiety or generalized worry. And while the physiological evidence is encouraging, many studies use small samples or lack active control groups. Compared to cognitive behavioral therapy, which has hundreds of randomized trials across different anxiety presentations, body-based approaches are still building their case. The principle that the body's stress response can be directly addressed is well-supported. The specific question of how much somatic experiencing helps with anxiety, compared to other options, doesn't have a definitive answer yet.
Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
The most useful way to think about body-based therapy isn't as a replacement for talk therapy but as an expansion. Cognitive behavioral therapy works by helping you examine and change thought patterns that drive anxiety. Body-based therapy works by helping your nervous system down-regulate the physical activation that maintains it. These are different entry points into the same problem, and the evidence increasingly suggests they're complementary. Some people respond better to one approach, some to the other, and many benefit from elements of both.
This convergence is already happening in clinical practice. Third-wave cognitive therapies like acceptance and commitment therapy and mindfulness-based stress reduction have been incorporating body awareness for years. Exposure therapy, traditionally focused on behavioral change, is now understood through an inhibitory learning model that emphasizes creating new learning experiences, and body-based approaches offer another way to generate that learning. The old division between mind therapies and body therapies is giving way to a more integrated understanding of how people heal.
One finding with particularly strong standalone evidence is that interoceptive training, systematically learning to notice and interpret your body's signals with accuracy rather than alarm, reduces anxiety sensitivity on its own. People who develop this capacity become less frightened by the physical sensations that accompany anxiety: the racing heart, the shallow breathing, the tension. The sensations don't disappear, but the person's relationship with them changes. That shift from fearing your body's signals to understanding them is one of the bravest steps in the whole process, and it's available to anyone willing to start paying attention.
Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
The case for body-based therapy rests on well-established neuroscience. When the brain detects a potential threat, sensory information reaches the amygdala through a subcortical pathway that bypasses conscious awareness entirely. Your heart rate spikes, your muscles brace, and your breathing shifts before you've had a single conscious thought about what's happening. This fast-track processing is efficient for survival but creates a problem for therapy: if the body's alarm system activates before thinking kicks in, approaches that start with thought may not reach the source of the activation.
Somatic experiencing, the approach developed by Peter Levine, works directly with these body-level responses. Levine proposed that traumatic or overwhelming experiences leave incomplete defensive responses stored in the nervous system. His techniques, including pendulation, shifting attention between distressed and calm body areas, and titration, processing small amounts of nervous system activation at a time, aim to help the body discharge stored tension gradually. The polyvagal theory framework, developed by Stephen Porges, adds another layer: the vagus nerve helps regulate states ranging from social engagement to fight-or-flight to shutdown, and body-based therapies aim to guide the nervous system toward more regulated states.
An important caveat: while the existence of subcortical threat processing and interoceptive pathways is well-established neuroscience, the clinical frameworks built on top of them involve interpretation. Polyvagal theory has been enormously influential in body-oriented therapy but its specific claims about vagal circuitry are debated among neuroscientists. The useful takeaway isn't that any single theory has it all figured out, but that the body's stress response system operates partly independently of conscious thought, and working with it directly is a legitimate therapeutic approach with a sound neurobiological rationale.
The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
The best controlled evidence for somatic experiencing comes from Brom and colleagues, who published a randomized controlled trial in 2017 comparing SE, EMDR, and a waitlist for people with post-traumatic stress disorder. Both SE and EMDR produced clinically significant symptom reduction compared to waitlist, and the improvements were maintained at follow-up. This matters because EMDR already has a substantial evidence base, so matching it in a head-to-head comparison is meaningful. But the sample was small, just 63 participants, and the study addressed trauma, not generalized anxiety or social anxiety.
Physiological research adds supporting evidence from a different angle. Studies using body-based interventions, including but not limited to SE, have documented increases in heart rate variability, a marker of parasympathetic tone and nervous system flexibility. Cortisol levels decrease. Muscle tension measurements drop. Interoceptive accuracy, measured by tasks like heartbeat detection, improves. Price and Hooven found that interventions improving body awareness correlate with better emotion regulation, and Mehling and colleagues showed that the helpful dimensions of interoceptive awareness, such as body trusting and attention regulation, are distinct from hypervigilant body scanning, which can actually increase anxiety.
The honest picture is a field with a compelling theoretical base and growing but limited controlled evidence. Uncontrolled studies and case series show positive results, but they can't rule out placebo effects or natural recovery. The gap between somatic experiencing and cognitive behavioral therapy in terms of evidence volume is substantial: CBT has hundreds of randomized trials across many anxiety presentations. That doesn't mean body-based therapy doesn't work. It means the research hasn't been done at the same scale yet. What's established is that body-level interventions produce real physiological change. What's still being determined is the size of the clinical benefit relative to other options, and which people benefit most.
Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
The question isn't whether body-based therapy should replace talk therapy. The evidence doesn't support that framing, and the most thoughtful clinicians in both camps aren't making that argument. The stronger position is that body-based approaches represent an additional pathway for working with anxiety, one that complements cognitive and behavioral methods. Craske and colleagues' inhibitory learning model, now the leading framework for understanding how exposure therapy works, emphasizes that what matters is the creation of new learning that competes with old fear associations. Body-based approaches offer another channel for generating that new learning, through the body's sensory experience rather than through cognitive reappraisal alone.
This integration is already visible in clinical practice. Third-wave cognitive behavioral therapies, including mindfulness-based stress reduction and acceptance and commitment therapy, incorporate body awareness as a core component. Van der Kolk's influential argument, that for some people, particularly those with trauma histories, top-down cognitive approaches may not access the body-level activation patterns that maintain distress, has pushed the field toward more integrated models. The controlled evidence for that specific claim is still building, but the clinical intuition has shifted: most modern therapists pay attention to what's happening in the body, not just what the person is saying.
The strongest standalone evidence in this space is for interoceptive training, the systematic development of accurate body awareness. Farb and colleagues found that improved interoceptive awareness supports emotion regulation, and Khalsa's research connects interoceptive accuracy to reduced anxiety sensitivity. People who learn to notice their body's signals with accuracy rather than alarm become less reactive to the physical sensations that define anxiety: the pounding heart, the tight chest, the shallow breath. The courage to pay attention to what your body is telling you, rather than bracing against it, turns out to be one of the most useful skills anxiety research has identified.
Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
The neurobiological foundation for body-based therapy draws from several lines of evidence. LeDoux's work on fear conditioning established that sensory information reaches the amygdala via a thalamo-amygdala pathway that bypasses cortical processing, producing defensive responses before conscious awareness. Craig's research on interoception demonstrated that signals from the body's internal state, processed through the posterior and anterior insular cortex, are fundamental to emotional experience itself, not merely accompaniments to it. These findings together suggest that a significant portion of emotional processing originates in body-level signals that feed upward into conscious experience, rather than originating in thought.
Somatic experiencing, formalized by Levine and described in Payne, Levine and Crane-Godreau's 2015 theoretical paper, builds on ethological observations that animals complete stress responses through physical discharge behaviors, including trembling, shaking, and deep spontaneous breathing. The SE model proposes that human trauma and chronic stress involve thwarted defensive responses, fight-or-flight activation that was initiated but never completed, leaving the nervous system in a state of incomplete activation. Techniques like pendulation, alternating attention between activated and resourced body areas, and titration, processing small doses of activation to avoid re-overwhelming the system, aim to help the body resolve these incomplete responses incrementally.
Porges's polyvagal theory provides an additional framework, proposing a hierarchy of autonomic states mediated by the ventral vagal complex, which supports social engagement, the sympathetic nervous system, which supports mobilization, and the dorsal vagal complex, which mediates immobilization or shutdown. The theory has been enormously influential in clinical practice, shaping how body-oriented therapists conceptualize their interventions. However, Grossman and Taylor raised methodological and anatomical concerns, noting that the specific claims about distinct vagal circuits are more complex than the clinical model suggests. The useful clinical insight, that the autonomic nervous system shifts between identifiable states and can be guided toward regulation, remains valuable even if the neuroanatomical specifics require refinement.
The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
Brom and colleagues' 2017 RCT remains the strongest controlled evidence for somatic experiencing. The trial randomized 63 participants with PTSD to SE, EMDR, or waitlist, with assessments at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and follow-up. Both SE and EMDR produced statistically significant improvements compared to waitlist on the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale, and gains were maintained at follow-up. The study used adequate randomization, blinded assessment, and intention-to-treat analysis. Its limitations are the small sample size, PTSD-specific population, and the absence of a placebo control beyond waitlist. Interpreting how SE compares to CBT for anxiety requires extrapolation that the data doesn't fully support.
Beyond the Brom trial, the evidence includes uncontrolled studies (Leitch, 2007; Parker, Doctor and Selvam, 2008 after the 2004 tsunami) showing symptom reduction, and studies of broader body-based interventions documenting physiological change. HRV improvements suggest increased vagal tone. Cortisol reductions indicate decreased hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation. The MAIA scale developed by Mehling and colleagues added important nuance: interoceptive awareness isn't unidimensional. The "not distracting," "attention regulation," "body listening," and "body trusting" subscales predict reduced anxiety, while anxious body scanning doesn't. This distinction has practical implications for how body awareness is taught therapeutically.
A balanced assessment places somatic experiencing in a category of therapies with strong theoretical grounding, encouraging preliminary evidence, and an evidence base that hasn't yet been tested at the scale of more established treatments. CBT for anxiety disorders has been evaluated in hundreds of RCTs with thousands of participants across diverse populations. SE has one well-designed RCT with 63 participants, studying a different condition. This isn't a criticism of SE; it's a description of where the field is. The appropriate clinical stance is cautious optimism: the mechanisms are plausible, the early evidence is positive, and the gaps are specific enough to be addressed by future research.
Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
The integration of body-based and cognitive approaches is supported by evolving models of how therapy works. Craske and colleagues' inhibitory learning model, now the dominant framework for understanding exposure therapy, moves beyond simple habituation to propose that effective therapy creates new inhibitory associations that compete with old fear associations. This model doesn't privilege the entry point: new learning can be generated through cognitive reappraisal, behavioral exposure, or body-level experiences that teach the nervous system something new about the feared situation. Body-based approaches fit naturally within this framework as another channel for generating inhibitory learning.
Van der Kolk's 2014 argument that trauma survivors may need body-level interventions because their distress is encoded somatically rather than cognitively has been influential in widening clinical practice. The controlled evidence for this specific claim, that body-based approaches work for people who don't respond to cognitive approaches, is still limited. But the broader point about differential treatment response is well-supported: different people respond to different modalities, and the clinical toolkit benefits from having options that enter through different pathways. Schmalzl, Crane-Godreau and Payne's review of movement-based embodied approaches supports the idea that body-level engagement produces therapeutic change through mechanisms that are at least partially distinct from cognitive mechanisms.
Interoceptive training represents the best-evidenced specific mechanism within body-based approaches. Farb and colleagues demonstrated that enhanced interoceptive awareness supports emotion regulation by improving the accuracy of internal signal detection. Khalsa's research connected interoceptive accuracy to reduced anxiety sensitivity, finding that people who can accurately sense their heartbeat report less distress when physiologically aroused. The practical implication is that the courage to pay accurate attention to your body, distinguishing signal from alarm, isn't just a philosophical reframe. It's a trainable capacity with measurable effects on how the body's stress signals are processed and experienced.
Your Body Has Its Own Way of Processing Fear
The neurobiological case for body-based therapy rests on converging evidence from affective neuroscience. LeDoux's fear conditioning research (1996) demonstrated that the thalamo-amygdala pathway transmits threat-relevant sensory information to the amygdala roughly 100-200 milliseconds before cortical evaluation completes, producing defensive responses prior to conscious awareness. Craig's interoceptive mapping work (2002, 2003) established that internal body signals, conveyed via lamina I spinothalamocortical afferents to the insular cortex, form the physiological substrate for subjective emotional experience. These findings indicate that emotional processing isn't exclusively top-down: body-state signals actively construct emotional experience through bottom-up pathways, providing a neurobiological rationale for engaging the body's sensory systems therapeutically.
Payne, Levine and Crane-Godreau (2015) articulated the SE model within this framework. They propose that threatening experiences that overwhelm the organism leave incomplete sensorimotor patterns, truncated fight, flight, or freeze responses stored as procedural memories. SE's pendulation (alternating attention between activated and resourced somatic regions) and titration (maintaining activation within a manageable range) aim to gradually complete these interrupted sequences. The model draws on ethological observations of post-threat discharge behaviors in animals but extends them to human chronic stress. While compelling, the claim that incomplete defensive responses persist as somatically encoded memories hasn't been directly tested with neuroimaging at the specificity the model implies.
Porges's polyvagal theory (2011) proposes a phylogenetically organized autonomic hierarchy: the myelinated ventral vagal complex (social engagement and calm), the sympathetic system (mobilization), and the unmyelinated dorsal vagal complex (immobilization). Body-based therapies aim to shift clients from dorsal vagal shutdown or sympathetic fight-flight toward ventral vagal engagement. The framework has profoundly influenced somatic practice. However, Grossman and Taylor (2007) raised concerns that the myelinated-unmyelinated vagal fiber distinction is more anatomically complex than the theory presents, and that respiratory sinus arrhythmia doesn't map cleanly onto the proposed hierarchy. The clinical utility of this state-based model may exceed its neuroanatomical precision.
The Evidence Is Promising but Honest About Its Limits
Brom, Stokar, Lawi, Nuriel-Porat, Ziv, Lerner and Ross (2017) conducted the most rigorous SE trial to date. Sixty-three participants meeting DSM-IV PTSD criteria were randomized to 15 sessions of SE, EMDR, or waitlist. Primary outcome was the CAPS, assessed by blinded evaluators. Both active groups improved significantly (SE: CAPS M=68.3 to 32.1; EMDR: M=65.2 to 30.8), with gains maintained at 15-month follow-up. Intent-to-treat analysis was used. Limitations include small sample size, absence of a credible placebo beyond waitlist, PTSD-specific population, and no independent replication at scale.
Mehling, Price, Daubenmier, Acree, Bartmess and Stewart (2012) developed the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness, disaggregating body awareness into eight subscales. The dimensions predictive of positive outcomes, particularly attention regulation, body listening, and body trusting, are empirically distinct from anxious somatic hypervigilance. This carries direct clinical implications: body-based therapies must cultivate receptive, regulated awareness rather than amplifying threat-focused scanning. Price and Hooven (2018) found that interventions improving these positive interoceptive dimensions correlated with improved emotion regulation, though causal direction remains to be established through experimental designs.
Situating SE within the broader evidence base requires honest proportionality. A search of the controlled trial literature for anxiety disorders yields hundreds of CBT trials across social anxiety, generalized anxiety, panic, and specific phobias, with meta-analyses involving thousands of participants and well-established effect sizes. Somatic experiencing has one adequately powered RCT for a related condition (PTSD), plus uncontrolled studies and case series (Leitch, 2007; Parker et al., 2008). This gap doesn't invalidate SE; many now-established treatments went through a similar trajectory. But recommending SE as a primary standalone treatment for anxiety disorders would outpace the current data. The appropriate position is that the mechanisms are neurobiologically plausible, the preliminary evidence is positive, and the field needs larger trials with active comparators for anxiety-specific populations.
Body-Based and Talk-Based Approaches Are Stronger Together
Craske, Treanor, Conway, Zbozinek and Vervliet (2014) reframed exposure therapy through an inhibitory learning model, proposing that successful exposure creates new inhibitory associations that suppress, rather than erase, the original fear memory. This model is modality-agnostic regarding the source of new learning: cognitive reappraisal, behavioral approach, and body-level experience can all generate inhibitory associations. Body-based approaches fit within this framework as methods for creating new sensorimotor experiences that compete with stored threat patterns. The integration is theoretically elegant because it resolves the false dichotomy between mind-based and body-based approaches: both aim to generate new learning, through different entry points, operating on overlapping neural substrates.
Farb, Segal and Anderson (2013) provided evidence that enhanced interoceptive awareness supports emotion regulation through improved accuracy of internal signal detection. Their work demonstrated that individuals with greater interoceptive accuracy showed more effective emotional recovery, mediated by activity in the anterior insula and prefrontal regulatory regions. Khalsa, Adolphs, Cameron and colleagues (2018) extended this by showing that interoceptive accuracy predicts lower anxiety sensitivity: people who can accurately detect their heartbeat are less disturbed by physiological arousal. The mechanism appears to be signal-to-noise: accurate interoception allows the individual to correctly interpret a racing heart as "my body responding to exertion" rather than "something is wrong," reducing catastrophic misinterpretation.
The clinical trajectory for body-based approaches mirrors other evidence-based therapies. Acceptance and commitment therapy went through compelling theory with limited controlled evidence before the research caught up. Mindfulness-based interventions followed the same arc. Somatic experiencing appears to be on this trajectory: strong rationale, encouraging preliminary evidence, and a need for large-scale trials that would place it definitively alongside established treatments. For the person reading this, the takeaway is both honest and hopeful. Your body isn't just along for the ride when you're anxious. It's an active participant with its own processing system, its own stored patterns, and its own capacity for new learning. Working with that system, whether through formal somatic therapy or the quieter courage of learning to listen to your body with curiosity, is real work with real potential.
This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.
Try putting this science to practice:
Do the rep
BreathTwo minutes, no account.