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A Self-Soothing Touch Practice That May Help Quiet Repetitive Anxious Thoughts

Key Takeaways
  1. 1. Gentle Touch on Your Face and Arms Can Shift Your Brain Out of a Worry Loop

    • C-tactile afferents respond optimally to slow stroking at 3-5 cm/s on hairy skin
    • Havening targets face, upper arms, and palms to generate calming delta wave activity
    • The proposed mechanism involves electrochemical depotentiation of threat-encoded memories
  2. 2. The Practice Has a Specific Sequence You Can Learn in Five Minutes

    • Three touch zones are stroked in sequence: face, upper arms, palms, thirty seconds each
    • Concurrent distraction tasks like counting or visualization create a dual-attention state
    • The combination of touch plus cognitive engagement may facilitate memory reconsolidation
  3. 3. This Is Not a Cure, but It May Take the Edge Off When You Need It Most

    • Pilot studies show reduced distress scores, but no large randomized controlled trials exist yet
    • The broader self-touch literature supports the biological plausibility of the mechanism
    • Havening works best as a complementary tool alongside established approaches
References & Sources (10)

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.

  1. Ruden, R.A. (2011). When the Past Is Always Present: Emotional Traumatization, Causes, and Cures. Routledge.

    What we learned: Proposed the neurobiological model of havening: C-tactile activation generating delta waves that drive AMPA receptor dephosphorylation in the lateral amygdala, forming the theoretical foundation for this article.

  2. McGlone, F., Wessberg, J., & Olausson, H. (2014). Discriminative and Affective Touch: Sensing and Feeling. Neuron, 82(4), 737-755.

    What we learned: Established C-tactile afferents as a dedicated affective touch system projecting to posterior insula rather than S1, providing the neuroanatomical basis for why gentle self-touch activates emotional soothing pathways.

  3. Nader, K., Schafe, G.E., & LeDoux, J.E. (2000). Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval. Nature, 406(6797), 722-726.

    What we learned: Demonstrated that reactivated fear memories become labile and require protein synthesis to restabilize, establishing the reconsolidation window that havening's memory activation step is designed to exploit.

  4. Schiller, D., Monfils, M.H., Raio, C.M., Johnson, D.C., LeDoux, J.E., & Phelps, E.A. (2010). Preventing the return of fear in humans using reconsolidation update mechanisms. Nature, 463(7277), 49-53.

    What we learned: Showed that behavioral interventions during the reconsolidation window can persistently attenuate conditioned fear in humans without spontaneous recovery, validating the human applicability of reconsolidation-based approaches.

  5. Dreisoerner, A., Junker, N.M., Schlotz, W., Heimrich, J., Bloemeke, S., Ditzen, B., & Wolf, O.T. (2021). Self-soothing touch and being hugged reduce cortisol responses to stress: A randomized controlled trial on stress, physical touch, and social identity. Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology, 8, 100091.

    What we learned: RCT (N=159) demonstrating that self-touch reduced salivary cortisol following social stress comparably to partner hugging, providing direct evidence that self-administered touch activates calming pathways.

  6. Walker, S.C., Trotter, P.D., Swaney, W.T., Marshall, A., & McGlone, F.P. (2017). C-tactile afferents: Cutaneous mediators of oxytocin release during affiliative tactile interactions?. Neuropeptides, 64, 27-38.

    What we learned: Used fMRI to confirm that C-tactile-optimal stroking activates the posterior insular cortex while deactivating S1, and proposed C-tactile afferents as mediators of touch-induced oxytocin release.

  7. Feldman, R., Gordon, I., & Zagoory-Sharon, O. (2011). Maternal and paternal plasma, salivary, and urinary oxytocin and parent-infant synchrony. Developmental Science, 14(4), 752-761.

    What we learned: Documented oxytocin release during affectionate physical contact, supporting the endocrine pathway through which self-touch may produce calming effects.

  8. Tononi, G., & Cirelli, C. (2006). Sleep function and synaptic homeostasis. Sleep Medicine Reviews, 10(1), 49-62.

    What we learned: Characterized synaptic homeostasis during slow-wave sleep, showing that delta oscillations drive synaptic downscaling via AMPA receptor dephosphorylation, the mechanism Ruden extends to waking-state havening.

  9. van den Hout, M., Muris, P., Salemink, E., & Zandbergen, M. (2001). Autobiographical memories become less vivid and emotional after eye movements. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 40(2), 121-130.

    What we learned: Proposed the working memory taxation model for EMDR, showing that bilateral eye movements reduce memory vividness by competing for limited working memory resources, a mechanism paralleled by havening's concurrent cognitive tasks.

  10. Agren, T., Engman, J., Frick, A., Bjorkstrand, J., Larsson, E.M., Furmark, T., & Fredrikson, M. (2012). Disruption of reconsolidation erases a fear memory trace in the human amygdala. Science, 337(6101), 1550-1552.

    What we learned: Used fMRI to demonstrate amygdala-dependent fear memory reconsolidation updating in humans, providing neuroimaging evidence that the reconsolidation mechanism havening targets operates as proposed.

Gentle Touch on Your Face and Arms Can Shift Your Brain Out of a Worry Loop

Repetitive anxious thoughts persist partly because the underlying memory has been encoded with high emotional salience. Each time it resurfaces, the amygdala treats it as a current threat, triggering cortisol, adrenaline, and sympathetic activation. Havening, developed by Ronald Ruden, proposes that self-administered touch can disrupt this cycle by generating delta waves, the slow oscillations associated with deep sleep and neural restoration. The touch targets three zones: the face, the upper arms, and the palms.

The neuroanatomical basis centers on C-tactile afferents, unmyelinated nerve fibers in hairy skin that respond preferentially to gentle stroking at three to five centimeters per second. McGlone, Wessberg, and Olausson showed that these fibers project to the posterior insular cortex, involved in interoception and emotional processing, rather than to the somatosensory cortex that handles discriminative touch. When activated at their preferred velocity, C-tactile afferents trigger responses associated with social comfort: increased oxytocin, reduced cortisol, and shifts toward parasympathetic dominance.

Ruden's model suggests that delta waves generated by sustained gentle touch facilitate dephosphorylation of AMPA receptors on lateral amygdala neurons. These receptors maintain the potentiated synaptic connections encoding emotional memories. If depotentiation occurs, the emotional component weakens while factual content remains intact. The model draws on reconsolidation research, where memories become labile when reactivated and can be altered before restabilizing. This is why havening practitioners instruct people to briefly activate the distressing thought before beginning the touch sequence.

The Practice Has a Specific Sequence You Can Learn in Five Minutes

The protocol begins with brief activation of the distressing thought. You bring the anxious thought to mind just long enough to notice the emotional charge, rated on a subjective distress scale from zero to ten. You do not dwell on it. The activation is brief and intentional, lasting a few seconds. This step matters because the theoretical model requires the memory to be in an active, labile state for the touch-induced changes to take effect.

The touch sequence follows three stages. First, the face: stroke from the center of your forehead outward toward the temples, alternating hands, about one stroke per second, for thirty seconds. Second, cross your arms and stroke from shoulder to elbow on each upper arm at a slow, gentle pace for thirty seconds. Third, rub your palms together slowly in circular motions for thirty seconds. While performing the touch, engage in a concurrent mental task: count backward from twenty, visualize walking down a staircase, or hum a melody. This dual-attention state keeps the emotional brain occupied with soothing input while preventing the cognitive brain from reactivating the worry.

After one round of approximately ninety seconds, pause and re-rate distress. Repeat the sequence two to four times, or until the rating drops to three or below. The entire practice takes three to six minutes. The physical sensations are subtle but noticeable: warmth in the face and arms, slowing of breath, softening of muscle tension. Many people report that the anxious thought loses its grip before they can articulate why. The body's relaxation response often precedes the cognitive shift.

This Is Not a Cure, but It May Take the Edge Off When You Need It Most

The evidence specifically supporting havening techniques is promising but limited. Ruden published the theoretical model in 2011, proposing that the touch-induced delta waves depotentiate AMPA receptors on neurons encoding traumatic or distressing memories. A pilot study conducted at King's College London by Sumich and colleagues found significant reductions in state anxiety and subjective distress following havening sessions. Case reports from practitioners document rapid reductions in phobia intensity, PTSD symptoms, and chronic worry. However, these studies tend to have small sample sizes, lack randomized control groups, and rely heavily on self-report measures.

The underlying biological mechanisms have stronger independent support. The role of C-tactile afferents in emotional soothing has been established by McGlone, Wessberg, and Olausson across multiple studies. Dreisoerner and colleagues demonstrated in 2021 that self-touch reduced salivary cortisol comparably to interpersonal touch, suggesting the nervous system does not require another person for touch-based soothing. Feldman's research on oxytocin release during gentle physical contact provides additional support for the endocrine pathway. The memory reconsolidation framework, which havening draws on, has been validated independently by Nader, Schiller, and others showing that reactivated memories can be modified during a reconsolidation window.

The honest assessment is that havening occupies a middle ground: biologically plausible, clinically promising, and practically useful, but not yet validated to the standard of established treatments like CBT or EMDR. It differs from EMDR's bilateral stimulation in that it uses touch rather than eye movements, and it differs from grounding techniques like 5-4-3-2-1 in that it aims to modify the emotional encoding of specific thoughts rather than simply redirecting attention to present sensory experience. For someone who wants a tool they can use in the moment, when the thoughts are circling and nothing else is available, the risk is low and the potential benefit is real. It belongs in the toolkit, not on the shelf by itself.

This is educational content, not medical advice. It is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional.

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