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Somatic psychotherapy tools: resourcing, titration and pendulation

#July 5, 2022

Somatic psychology studies the link between physical matter and energy, the association of bodily structures and mental processes. It embraces therapeutic and holistic approaches to the body to recover the mind-body connection. Somatic psychology takes its roots from ancient mind-body practices and the Western science of psychology, biology, and neuroscience. This therapy incorporates movements and various touching methods to activate the autonomic nervous system. While focusing on the body, the therapist and the client identify the places in the body where trauma is stored and find safe ways to release it.

Soma comes from the Greek word meaning “the living body”. According to somatic psychotherapists, external forces promote the splitting of the mind-body unity and this fragmentation harms the person’s health on a mental, physiological, and relational level. Somatic psychotherapy adds the ‘body’ dimension to conventional verbal psychotherapy. In the beginning, bodily therapy mainly focused on trauma survivors with PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) symptoms. In the last couple of years, helping clients find release through all kinds of stress-related issues has been in the picture.

When working with trauma, a session typically begins with facilitating a positive state and emphasizing resourcing. After this initial state, the therapist carefully touches upon complex events and feelings, ensuring that their pace is slow. Therapists try to elicit physical signs of bodily release such as “small shivers, deep breaths, hot or cold flashes. ” After these signs are shown, the stage of reorientation of the body into the present time starts. The body digests traumatic elements so that the natural rhythm and flow can return. Bodymind can be influenced and mediated by respectful, mindful, and safe interpersonal interactions.

Let’s go through some of the most important intervention tools somatic psychotherapy uses to achieve these goals:

Resourcing: This is how clients strengthen the feelings of stability and safety in the world by identifying already established resources and coming up with new ones to promote feelings of peace and ease. Trauma survivors often lose the feeling of safety in their own skin and environment. Resourcing provides a tool to reintroduce self-soothing. Resources work as a safe haven in trauma work, a place where the person can return to reestablish states of calmness. These resources can be positive memories, loved ones, or anything the person values. The repertoire of various resources is expanded in somatic experiences. Resourcing is about visual imagery and entails a “visual kinesthetic sensory experience” where you establish feelings of safety in your body. This teaches the nervous system that calmness can follow after the experience of stress. 

Titration: Titration is also called slowing or portioning. It is the “process of experiencing small amounts of distress with the goal of relieving pain”. Trauma is experienced “too fast, too much, too soon” for the body to handle. We lose our ability to process, integrate and digest when we experience an overload. Titration reverses that as the aim is slowing down. The person is only exposed to a small load of trauma so that the body can determine how to tolerate it. If the trauma work goes too fast, the clients can get overwhelmed with the memories of trauma. In order to heal, the exposure has to be gradual and slow-paced. You decide the pace and the amount of work you will deal with in titration. This gives you empowerment and enough space for healing to occur. While revisiting past experiences and traumas, the therapist tracks the bodily responses and how they are experienced.

Pendulation: “Pendulation is shifting your focus between stressful content and something completely non-stress related. ” Pendulation is sometimes referred to as looping as we loop between conflict-free states and trauma states. For a healthy person, the nervous system is in a continuous “state of expansion and contraction” which is called pendulation. The fluidity of the transition between alertness and calmness can be disrupted in trauma survivors, meaning they can get stuck in the state of action. Pendulation techniques emphasise consciously experiencing resourced states to support the nervous system’s transition loop. After that, the bodily system can start moving between more and less resourced phases. Somatherapy aims to help clients regain that flexibility. One way of achieving that is through circling between resources and small titrations. This loop starts the natural cycle of self-regulation in the nervous system. Regaining pendulation also means regaining homeostasis, the state where the body is in balance and complete regulation. One simple technique of pendulation is paying attention to how your body feels. Identify where you feel the stress and try to actively experience this feeling. Scan your body again and this time find a place where you feel either natural or calm. After you find this place, take a moment to experience this sensation as well. Keep this cycle going where you experience two different areas and the feelings these areas facilitate. 

Overall, somatic therapy aims to guide the clients to become aware of their bodies and adopt methods to release their tension. This therapy uses the fundamental functions of the nervous system. The most important tools somatherapy uses are resourcing, pendulation, and titration. Some of the methods used in these tools are “breathing exercises, sensation awareness, physical exercise, massage, and grounding exercises” among many others. Somatherapy can be used to heal trauma and regain the balance of the body. 

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References

Coping with distress: Pendulation technique. (2016, August 30). Sarah McIntyre, LPC. http://www.sarahmcintyrelpc.com/coping-with-distress-pendulation-technique/. DuBois-

Maahs, J. (2020, October 16). What Is Somatic Therapy and How Can It Benefit You? Talkspace. https://www.talkspace.com/blog/somatic-therapy-what-is-definition-get-started-guide/.  

Goldstein, E. (2021, April 19). 10 Somatic Interventions Explained – Integrative Psychotherapy Mental Health Blog. Integrative Psychotherapy & Trauma Treatment. https://integrativepsych.co/new-blog/somatic-therapy-explained-methods. 

On the importance of Titration for Trauma Healing. The Art of Healing Trauma. (n.d.). https://www.new-synapse.com/aps/wordpress/?p=1842. 

Ross, S. (2020, August 31). Resourcing, Pendulation and Titration: Practices from somatic experiencing®. Psychotherapy for Women, Families, and Children in Berkeley, CA. https://sarahrossphd.com/resourcing-pendulation-titration-practices-somatic-experiencing/. 

Walling, C. (2017, December 18). Psychotherapy for your body: The role of somatic psychology today. GoodTherapy.org Therapy Blog. https://www.goodtherapy.org/blog/psychotherapy-for-your-body-role-of-somatic-psychology-today-0605174. 

What is Somatic Psychotherapy? Somatic Psychotherapy Australia. (n.d.). https://somaticpsychotherapy.asn.au/about-us/what-is-somatic-psychotherapy/.

What is Somatic Psychotherapy? Well Clinic San Francisco. (2019, July 30). https://www.wellsanfrancisco.com/somatic-psychotherapy/. 

Welch, A. (2018, October 21). A Look At Core Energetics and other Somatic Therapy Approaches – Seattle School of Body. Psychotherapy. 

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