Open notebook with pen, small potted plants, and table lamp on wooden desk.

Simple arrow pointing diagonally downward-left inside a circle.

Supportive Somatic Therapy

Rewrite the Story of Your Body


You may benefit from Supportive Somatic Therapy if:

  • Your life feels overwhelming: persistent anxiety, hypervigilance, or a sense of being "on edge" despite being high-functioning externally

  • You carry physical symptoms: experience chronic tension, fatigue or pain that you think is related to unresolved emotional experiences

  • You experience disconnection: detached from yourself, body, emotions or relationships and want to feel more authentic, present, and at ease

  • You struggle with codependency: trouble setting boundaries, fears with intimacy, issues with self-worth, or over-functioning for others

Person lying on a fluffy rug, face covered with hands, wearing a white shirt.
Forest scene with tall pine trees and distant mountains

You don’t need to stay in survival mode. Finding balance & ease is possible.

Reconnect with your body’s wisdom, build safety and trust within yourself, and gently release the patterns keeping you stuck.

$180 PER SESSION | 50 MINUTES

Mountain landscape with autumn foliage, rock in foreground, and lake.

About Supportive Somatic Therapy

Somatic therapy is a body-centered approach that recognizes the profound connection between your mind, physical body, emotions, and nervous system. It goes beyond talk therapy, focusing on how past experiences are stored in the body and impact your thoughts, behaviors, and overall well-being.

Supportive Somatic Therapy, versus an intensive, gives more time and space for healing and recovery to be gradual. While intensive sessions can provide positive shifts in a short amount of time for some clients, on-going change may require consistent therapy and integration of the new experiences for others.

This regular support also allows for a deeper therapeutic relationship to be created, which is a key ingredient in healing, as the relationship with your therapist provides opportunities for co-regulation, establishing safety and trust, tracking the body together, and empowering autonomy and choice.

Scheduling weekly or biweekly sessions will give you consistent practice of building skills and capacity to heal and connect with yourself and others. It also helps you experience corrective, healing moments in a nurturing and supportive relationship.

Wooden pathway through dense forest with tall pine trees.

What to Expect from Supportive Somatic Therapy.

You can expect a safe and supportive space where your experiences are met with compassion and without judgment. Together, we will work to create an environment of trust, allowing you to explore your emotions, physical sensations, and patterns stored in the body in way that is ‘titrated’ (think bite sized).

Initial sessions focus on learning body-based practices like grounding exercises, breathwork, gentle movement, or focused awareness of pleasant physical sensations to ensure you feel capable regulating your nervous system when distressed.

Once a felt sense of safety and ease is established, we may integrate Somatic Experiencing, EMDR, or Brainspottting to support you in accessing and processing trauma stored in the body. You may also feel prepared for doing EMDR or Brainspotting Intensives or Somatic Experiencing Touch Therapy.

We will focus on reducing feelings of overwhelm, anxiety, or stress from the past, while fostering a sense of calm and safety in your body in the present. By addressing the root causes of distress, clients can experience deeper self-compassion, tolerance, and improved connections in their relationships and daily lives.

Person wrapped in patterned blanket standing in a green field near trees.

Getting Started Is Easy

01.

Book a free 15 minute consultation.


02.

Schedule your 90-min intake session.


03.

Begin therapy, start healing!


THE MODALITIES

Somatic Experiencing, EMDR, & Brainspotting

As a therapist trained in Somatic Experiencing (SE), EMDR, and Brainspotting, I use these evidence-based modalities to tailor supportive somatic therapy to your unique needs:

  • Somatic Experiencing helps you release stored survival energy from your nervous system and build a tolerance to distress, allowing you to feel more present and at ease in your body.

  • EMDR supports you in reprocessing stressful and traumatic memories so they no longer hold the same emotional charge, creating space for moving forward into empowerment and peace.

  • Brainspotting allows us to access and process stressors and trauma through your brain’s deeper layers by working with your body’s natural signals and eye position, going from dysregulation to regulation.

Collectively, these modalities provide the framework needed to break free from old patterns, move through stress and trauma, and create a life of balance and connection. This work provides a transformative opportunity to understand how your past influences your present and to rewrite your story from a place of strength, resilience, and self-compassion.

Pine tree branches against a clear blue sky
Person sitting on wooden bench by a mountain lake

Frequently asked questions

  • Talk therapy focuses primarily on discussing thoughts and emotions through verbal communication, while somatic therapy emphasizes the body's role in processing emotions and experiences, utilizing techniques like movement, breathwork, and touch to address stored trauma within the body; essentially, talk therapy is more focused on the mind while somatic therapy integrates the mind and body connection.

  • Supportive Somatic Therapy is designed in a way in which you’re not required to talk in detail about the past woundings you’ve encountered. Rather we use an overview of the experience as means to elicit activation (or body sensations) to help us tap into where the brain and body are holding unresolved trauma or emotional energy.

  • Common body responses experienced include: muscle tension, trembling, tingling sensations, changes in breathing patterns (deep breaths, rapid breathing), feeling of heaviness or tightness in the chest, sensations of warmth or coolness, muscle twitching, shaking, sighing, yawning, and a sense of release or relaxation as tension is released from the body, often accompanied by emotional expressions like crying or laughter. After a session concludes, you might feel a little more sensitive than usual and sometimes might even feel a little worse - this can be because what we had previously not been aware of in our feelings or body, is now more on the surface where we can notice it. You might like to give yourself more space after a session, try and get an earlier rest that day or get some support with our self-care resources.

  • Reasons why past and current clients sought me out is: (1) they feel they have reached a plateau with their talk therapy journey - they have the mental perspective to see what is wrong but are stuck at changing the behavior and/or their mind is feeling clearer but their body symptoms have not changed, (2) medically they have taken all the different tests and are supposed to be “ok” but are not feeling that way at all, (3) they identify as being very “heady” people who are very analytical and feel very disconnected with their body, (4) they are aware that they have traumatic experiences (but might not remember them) from when they were in the womb, post-natal, or while still very young, i.e. pre-verbal, and (5) they are following a hunch that there is something more underneath what is showing up emotionally or physically, but are not sure what.

  • As bound trauma energy is released, your nervous system’s capacity (ability to organically and effortlessly manage stressors) increases. Energy that was being siphoned off to simply manage your symptoms is now newly available for use by other body processes. Clients have reported improved digestion, fear and anxiety reduction, an increased sense of physical and emotional balance, expanded resiliency and resourcefulness, a heightened sense of vitality, and a new capacity to more easily connect with and interact with others.


Person holding a vintage radio, standing on dry autumn leaves, wearing blue jeans and white sneakers with black stripes.

Your Story Can Be Rewritten.

Book page on ground with autumn leaves