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