The trauma body designates the soma as the primary locus in which overwhelming experience is encoded, retained, and re-enacted—a site that persists beyond verbal recall and cognitive reappraisal. The depth-psychology corpus approaches this construct from several converging directions. Bessel van der Kolk's influential formulation insists that physiological change is constitutive of trauma, not merely symptomatic of it, positioning the body as both archive and battlefield. Pat Ogden and the sensorimotor tradition hold that traumatized individuals carry 'snapshots' of failed defensive responses in chronic postural, respiratory, and neuromuscular patterns, and that somatic intervention is therefore a clinical necessity rather than an adjunct. Peter Levine's somatic experiencing framework draws on animal neurology to argue that incomplete survival responses become locked in the body, generating symptomatology that cannot be resolved at the level of cognition alone; his metaphor of the body as healer inverts the classical psychodynamic emphasis on verbal elaboration. Babette Rothschild contributes a psychophysiological lens, foregrounding autonomic arousal and the somatic signature of PTSD. A key tension runs through the literature: whether the body is best engaged bottom-up through direct somatic tracking, or whether cognitive and relational frames must accompany any somatic work. All major voices converge, however, on the foundational claim that trauma lives in flesh before it lives in narrative.
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the body knows what they do not know cognitively… intrusive body sensations, images, smells, physical pain and constriction, numbing, and the inability to modulate arousal—are, in fact, remnants of past trauma
Ogden argues that the traumatized body carries nonverbal, sensorimotor memories that operate independently of cognitive awareness, constituting the defining clinical problem of trauma-related disorders.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006thesis
'the bodies of traumatized people portray 'snapshots' of their unsuccessful attempts to defend themselves in the face of threat and injury'… These failed defenses can be rediscovered and revitalized by giving attention to the body
Drawing on Levine, Ogden contends that the trauma body encodes aborted defensive responses as chronic somatic patterns, and that therapeutic attention to the body is the mechanism by which mastery and competence are restored.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006thesis
a theory of human trauma and chronic stress, based on the practice of Somatic Experiencing®… a form of trauma therapy that emphasizes guiding the client's attention to interoceptive, kinesthetic, and proprioceptive experience
Payne, Levine, and Crane-Godreau theorize the trauma body as a system of disrupted interoceptive and proprioceptive processing, foregrounding bodily self-sensing as the core medium of both injury and healing.
Payne, Peter, Somatic experiencing: using interoception and proprioception as core elements of trauma therapy, 2015thesis
In being able to experience ourselves as sensing human animals we can begin to loosen trauma's grip on us and to transform its powerful energies. We don't confront it directly, however, or we could find ourselves seized in its frightening grip.
Levine posits that the trauma body must be approached obliquely through sensory self-awareness, as direct confrontation risks re-traumatization rather than resolution.
Levine, Peter A., Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma - The Innate Capacity to Transform Overwhelming Experiences, 1997thesis
This simple exercise will begin to welcome the soul back to the body. It's an important first step toward bridging the split between body, mind, and spirit that often occurs in the wake of trauma.
Levine frames trauma recovery as a process of somatic re-inhabitation, describing the split between body, mind, and spirit as the defining injury trauma inflicts upon the person.
Levine, Peter A., Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma—The Innate Capacity to Transform Overwhelming Experiences, 1997thesis
In the presence of danger, pain, extreme distress, or injury, a number of profound physiological changes ready the body for survival. To understand the core dilemmas of
Heller situates the trauma body within developmental neurobiology, arguing that survival-oriented physiological responses become the substrate of long-term adaptive survival styles when trauma occurs early in life.
Laurence Heller, Ph D, Healing Developmental Trauma How Early Trauma Affectssupporting
Instead of covering his head with his arms and freezing in a habitual immobilizing defense, he said that he had a feeling in his arms of wanting to push away… the slow enactment of this mobilizing defense, which had not been possible at the time of the trauma
This clinical vignette demonstrates how the trauma body preserves immobilized defensive impulses, and how sensorimotor therapy works by completing interrupted protective movement sequences.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
Her body mirrored these beliefs in rounded shoulders… a tendency to keep her head down, which echoed her sense of being damaged, and chronic hyperarousal.
Ogden illustrates how trauma-related cognitive beliefs and bodily posture form a mutually reinforcing feedback loop, with the body physically enacting the psychic damage of abuse.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
Terms such as part of the personality are 'metaphoric descriptive labels of mental and somatic action systems that have failed to integrate'… The failure to integrate defensive action systems with action systems of daily living is inevitable
Ogden links structural dissociation theory to the trauma body, showing that compartmentalized somatic action systems—not merely psychological states—are the neurobiological substrate of traumatic dissociation.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
Reexperiencing traumatic events in the form of flashbacks is very different from the recall of events as ordinary autobiographical memories… Flashbacks most often occur spontaneously, triggered by internal or external events
Ogden locates the trauma body's re-enactment function in the neurobiology of right-hemisphere activation and sub-cortical memory circuits that bypass ordinary autobiographical recall.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
Traumatized clients develop habits of attention in which they orient and attend to trauma-related beliefs… unable to take in other information. This maladaptive sequence leads to further somatic changes and bottom-up processes
Ogden demonstrates that the trauma body's dysregulated orienting responses create a closed perceptual loop in which somatic and cognitive distortions perpetually reinforce one another.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
the common denominator in trauma may be autonomic dysregulation outside of the window of tolerance
Ogden and Lanius identify autonomic dysregulation—expressed bodily as either hyperarousal or hypoarousal—as the physiological signature common to all trauma body presentations regardless of symptomatic variation.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
what makes therapy effective is deep, subjective resonance and that deep sense of truth and veracity that lives in the body
Van der Kolk affirms that the body is not only the site of traumatic injury but the medium of therapeutic efficacy, privileging embodied resonance over abstract, objective validation.
van der Kolk, Bessel, The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma, 2014supporting
Most psychotherapeutic approaches do not provide a methodology that directly addresses trauma-related bodily responses and chronically activated somatic symptoms.
Ogden identifies a critical gap in the treatment literature: the absence of systematic methodology for addressing the body's chronic somatic responses to trauma, which existing cognitive and pharmacological approaches cannot adequately resolve.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
traumatic memories differ from other memories in crucial ways… the intimate relationship between trauma and spirituality
Levine signals that the trauma body implicates not only memory and physiology but spirituality, suggesting that full healing requires integrating somatic, mnemonic, and existential dimensions.
Levine, Peter A., In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness, 2010supporting
cognitive, emotional, and sensorimotor processing are functionally mutually dependent and intertwined… the three levels of the brain and the corresponding information processing interact and affect each other simultaneously
Ogden grounds the trauma body concept in a tripartite neurobiological model in which sensorimotor disruption is not isolated but cascades across cognitive and emotional processing levels.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006supporting
Disturbances in regulation in bodily functions… over-reactivity or under-reactivity to touch and sounds… Diminished awareness/dissociation of sensations, emotions and bodily states
Van der Kolk catalogs the developmental trauma body's symptomatic profile—dysregulated bodily functions, sensory reactivity, and dissociation from somatic states—within a diagnostic framework for complex childhood trauma.
van der Kolk, Bessel, The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma, 2014supporting
she tensed her body and pulled away as the therapist began to put her hands in a position so that the client could push. Actual touch had not yet occurred, but the client already had a reaction of tensing.
This clinical illustration shows how the trauma body's anticipatory reactivity—tensing before touch occurs—reveals the depth at which somatic defensive patterns operate independently of present-moment reality.
Ogden, Pat, Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, 2006aside