
For decades, most approaches to trauma therapy focused primarily on the mind. Clients were encouraged to talk through painful experiences, understand what happened, and change the way they think about it. These approaches can be helpful. But researchers and clinicians are increasingly recognizing something important: trauma doesn’t live only in thoughts or memories; it also lives in the body.
You might hear someone say, “I know I’m safe now, but my body still feels anxious.” That experience is very common after trauma. Even when the mind understands that danger has passed, the nervous system can continue reacting as if the threat is still there.
Trauma activates the body’s survival system, often known as fight, flight, or freeze. These reactions are controlled by the autonomic nervous system and happen automatically.
Normally, once a threat is over, the body returns to a calm and balanced state. But trauma can disrupt that process. The nervous system may stay in a heightened state of stress long after the event has ended.
According to the American Psychological Association, traumatic stress can alter the body’s stress response, making people more sensitive to perceived danger.
Because of this, trauma survivors may experience physical symptoms such as:
Persistent physical tension – headaches, neck or back pain, clenched jaw
Changes in energy or sleep patterns – chronic fatigue, insomnia, or restless sleep
Heightened alertness – feeling on edge, easily startled, or hypervigilant
Digestive or stomach issues – nausea, bloating, or frequent discomfort
Disconnection from the body – feeling numb, detached, or “not fully present”
These symptoms are not simply psychological. They are physiological responses tied to the body’s stress system.
Awareness of these signals allows for proactive strategies such as grounding exercises, breathwork, or body-oriented therapy techniques. By noticing what the body is communicating, trauma survivors can address both physical and emotional stress more effectively
Traditional talk therapy can help people understand their experiences and develop healthier ways of thinking. However, trauma often affects areas of the brain connected to emotional and physical responses, areas that operate below conscious awareness.
This means someone may logically know they are safe but still feel anxious or tense in their body.
Because of this, many trauma specialists now emphasize approaches that help regulate the nervous system alongside traditional therapy.
A key concept in modern trauma treatment is nervous system regulation. Recovery often involves helping the body relearn how to move out of survival states and back into safety.
The nervous system has two major branches involved in stress regulation:
The sympathetic nervous system, which activates fight-or-flight responses
The parasympathetic nervous system, which helps the body rest and recover
Trauma can cause the sympathetic system to remain overactive, leaving individuals in a constant state of alertness. Alternatively, some people shift into shutdown or numbness, a protective response sometimes associated with the freeze reaction.
Therapies that involve the body aim to restore balance between these systems.
Several therapeutic approaches now incorporate the body as part of trauma recovery. These methods help individuals reconnect with physical sensations and restore a sense of safety.
Some commonly used approaches include:
Focuses on helping individuals to safely notice and gently release physical sensations associated with stress or trauma.
It integrates a body awareness system which supports emotional and physical regulation.
Encourages individuals to observe bodily sensations to help calm the nervous system.
Incorporates bilateral stimulation to help the brain process traumatic memories more effectively.
These approaches do not replace talk therapy. Instead, body-based therapies help address this imbalance by working directly with the nervous system rather than relying solely on cognitive processing.
Trauma recovery is rarely just about changing thoughts or revisiting memories. Increasingly, mental health professionals recognize that healing involves both the mind and the body.
An integrated approach may include:
Talking through experiences in a safe therapeutic space
Learning skills to regulate the nervous system
Recognizing physical signals of stress
Practicing grounding or relaxation technique
By addressing both the mind and the body, therapy can support deeper and more sustainable healing.
Effective therapy often depends on the therapist’s skill, the client’s needs, and the therapeutic relationship itself. In many cases, the most helpful approach is not choosing between mind-focused or body-focused therapy but combining insights from both.
Copyright@2023 Blossom Wellness Spa, Inc.
Copyright@2023 Blossom Wellness Spa, Inc.