Somatic therapy recognizes that freudian psychology is stored and expressed in the body — and that healing requires attention to bodily experience, not just thoughts.
The Somatic Perspective on Freudian Psychology
Traditional talk therapy addresses freudian psychology primarily through cognition. Somatic approaches add the body's wisdom:
- Freudian Psychology creates physical tension, postural patterns, and nervous system states that maintain it
- The body 'keeps the score' — especially when freudian psychology has trauma origins
- Bottom-up (body to mind) processing can access material unavailable to cognitive approaches
Somatic Therapy Approaches for Freudian Psychology
Somatic Experiencing (SE): Developed by Peter Levine, tracks bodily sensations to resolve trauma and freudian psychology.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy: Integrates somatic techniques with attachment theory for freudian psychology.
EMDR: Uses bilateral stimulation to process traumatic memories contributing to freudian psychology.
Body-oriented CBT: Adds somatic awareness to standard cognitive-behavioral work.
When Somatic Therapy Is Especially Helpful for Freudian Psychology
Somatic approaches are particularly valuable when freudian psychology has trauma origins, when talk therapy has plateaued, or when physical symptoms are prominent.