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Glossary›Body Centered Psychotherapy

Glossary

Body Centered Psychotherapy

A therapeutic approach integrating bodily sensations, movement, and somatic awareness with psychological processes to address trauma, emotional dysregulation, and mental health.

What is Body Centered Psychotherapy?

Body centered psychotherapy, also called body-oriented psychotherapy or somatic psychology, is an approach to psychotherapy which applies basic principles of somatic psychology. Based on the anti-Cartesian notion that a functional unity exists between mind and body, this therapeutic framework views the psyche and soma as of equal importance for the development of psychological functioning and for intervention into psychological difficulties.

Rather than treating the mind and body as separate domains, body centered psychotherapy recognizes that psychological experiences manifest physically—in patterns of muscular tension, breathing, posture, and movement—and that working directly with these somatic expressions can facilitate emotional healing and psychological transformation. Practitioners use both psychotherapy and physical therapies for holistic healing, combining talk therapy with mind-body exercises and other physical techniques to help release pent-up tension that negatively affects a patient’s physical and emotional wellbeing.

Origins & Lineage

While historically there is evidence that the origins of body psychotherapy actually pre-date Freud, the approach originated in the work of Pierre Janet, Sigmund Freud and particularly Wilhelm Reich who developed it as vegetotherapy. Reich, born in 1897 in Dobrzanica (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, now in Ukraine), began medical studies at the University of Vienna in 1918, joined the Sexological Seminary founded by Otto Fenichel in 1919, was admitted to the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society at age 23, and was regarded by Sigmund Freud as one of his most gifted students.

From the 1930s, Reich became known for the idea that muscular tension reflected repressed emotions, what he called ‘body armour’, and developed a way to use pressure to produce emotional release in his clients. This work, which Reich termed character analysis, laid the foundation for the practice of vegetotherapy, which is now typically referred to as body psychotherapy. Reich was expelled from the psychoanalytic mainstream and his work found a home in the ‘growth movement’ of the 1960s and 1970s and in the countercultural project of ‘liberating the body’, and as a result, body psychotherapy was marginalised within mainstream psychology and was seen in the 1980s and 1990s as ‘the radical fringe of psychotherapy’.

Branches also were developed by Alexander Lowen and John Pierrakos, both patients and students of Reich, along with other post-Reichian practitioners. During the Second World War, Oslo became a crucial centre for those interested in how the body could be used in a psychotherapeutic setting, where psychiatrists, psychoanalysts, psychologists, physiotherapists, dance therapists, and vegetotherapists discussed passionately with each other, with Wilhelm Reich recognized as the founder of body psychotherapy serving as the catalyst.

How It’s Practiced

Body centered psychotherapy sessions integrate verbal dialogue with direct attention to bodily experience. The array of therapeutic techniques may include touch, movement, physical exercises and breathing techniques, with an emphasis on the non-verbal behaviour of both client and therapist. Integrating traditional talk therapy with practices that use the body as a healing resource, body centered therapy may include activities like stretching, breath exercises, tai chi, dance, yoga, massage, and relaxation techniques.

A practitioner might invite clients to notice sensations in their body while discussing an emotionally charged topic, track patterns of muscular tension or constriction, experiment with particular movements or postures, or use breathwork to regulate the nervous system. Therapists help clients notice how thoughts and emotions manifest in their posture, movement, and tension patterns and then work with these physical expressions to process unresolved issues. The therapeutic relationship itself is understood as an embodied encounter, with the therapist attuning to both their own somatic experience and that of the client.

Numerous branches of body psychotherapy trace their origins to particular individuals: ‘Bioenergetic analysis’ to the work of Lowen and Pierrakos; ‘Biosynthesis’ to the work of David Boadella; ‘Biodynamic Psychology’ to that of Gerda Boyesen. Pat Ogden created Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, which integrates cognitive and emotional processing with bodily awareness and movement, while Ron Kurtz developed Hakomi, a mindfulness-centered somatic therapy that helps clients study their moment-to-moment experiences to discover core beliefs and patterns.

Body Centered Psychotherapy Today

Body centered psychotherapy has gained increasing recognition in trauma treatment and is now taught in university programs, professional trainings, and clinical institutes worldwide. Major current theorists and practitioners in the field include Van der Kolk, Levine, Ogden, and Porges. Organizations offer webinars, certification programs, doctorates, and degrees in somatic psychology, body psychotherapy, and somatic practices.

Seekers encounter body centered psychotherapy through licensed therapists in private practice, trauma treatment centers, integrative mental health clinics, and specialized training institutes. Body centered therapy can be effective for a wide range of issues including anxiety, body image problems, eating disorders, stress, trauma, abuse, chronic pain, physical illness, terminal disease or disability. Multi-day workshops, intensive trainings, and certificate programs allow both clinicians and healing professionals to develop competency in somatic approaches.

Common Misconceptions

Body centered psychotherapy is not massage therapy, physical therapy, or bodywork, though it may incorporate elements of somatic awareness found in these modalities. It requires training in both psychological theory and somatic principles, not simply certification in movement or touch-based practices.

The field is sometimes confused with purely cognitive approaches that acknowledge the “mind-body connection” intellectually but do not work directly with bodily sensation and movement during sessions. Authentic body centered psychotherapy actively engages the soma as a primary entry point for therapeutic change, not as an afterthought or metaphor.

It is also not a uniform modality—the term encompasses diverse schools with different theoretical foundations, techniques, and emphases. A Hakomi practitioner works quite differently from a Bioenergetic analyst, though both fall under the umbrella of body centered psychotherapy.

How to Begin

Individuals interested in experiencing body centered psychotherapy should seek licensed mental health professionals with specific training in somatic modalities. The United States Association for Body Psychotherapy (USABP) maintains directories of qualified practitioners. When interviewing potential therapists, ask about their specific training lineage (Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, Hakomi, Somatic Experiencing, Bioenergetics, etc.) and their approach to integrating body and mind in sessions.

For clinicians seeking training, foundational texts include Ron Kurtz’s Body-Centered Psychotherapy: The Hakomi Method and Pat Ogden’s work on Sensorimotor Psychotherapy. Rooted in neuroscience and trauma research, Somatic Experiencing, Hakomi, trauma-informed Yoga and other body-based approaches guide clients toward greater regulation, resilience, and healing. Entry-level workshops and introductory courses offered by organizations like the Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute, Hakomi Institute, and various university-based programs provide experiential learning opportunities to assess fit with this approach before committing to multi-year certification programs.

Related terms

somatic experiencingpolyvagal theorytrauma informed carehakomi methodsensorimotor psychotherapybioenergetics
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