Somatic Experiencing (SE)
A psychosomatic trauma approach developed by Peter Levine, which releases traumatic energy trapped in the body through progressive sensory titration and pendulation.
Presentation
Somatic Experiencing (SE) is a body-oriented trauma approach developed by Peter A. Levine, PhD in medical biophysics and psychology, starting in the 1970s. Inspired by observing survival mechanisms in wild animals, Levine noticed that animals naturally 'shake off' their bodies after danger to discharge activated survival energy (fight, flight, freeze). In humans, this natural discharge is often inhibited, leaving traumatic energy trapped in the autonomic nervous system.
SE does not primarily work on memories or cognitions but on bodily sensations (internal sensations, movements, postures, tensions) as the gateway to resolving trauma. The goal is to restore the nervous system's natural self-regulation capacity, blocked by traumatic experience.
Founder: Peter A. Levine (born 1942), PhD in medical biophysics and psychology
Core Principles
SE rests on several key concepts from neurophysiology and ethology:
Titration: work proceeds in small doses, gently touching traumatic material without overwhelming the patient. Unlike exposure approaches that 'dive into' trauma, SE approaches it drop by drop to prevent retraumatization.
Pendulation: natural movement between zones of contraction (traumatic activation) and expansion (resources, pleasant sensations). The therapist guides the patient to oscillate between these two poles to reestablish the nervous system's natural rhythm.
Discharge: release of trapped survival energy through trembling, spontaneous movements, deep breathing, temperature changes or warmth/tingling sensations.
Completion of defensive responses: interrupted survival gestures (hitting, fleeing, protecting) are completed in slow motion during sessions to restore feelings of efficacy and mastery.
Main Indications
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- Shock trauma (accidents, assaults, disasters)
- Developmental trauma and neglect
- Post-traumatic dissociation
- Trauma-related chronic pain
- Fibromyalgia and somatoform syndromes
- Anxiety disorders with somatic component
- Burnout with physical exhaustion
Session Overview
A Somatic Experiencing session lasts 50 to 75 minutes. The therapist begins by helping the patient identify resources — pleasant or neutral body sensations, positive memories, internal safe places. This 'sensory safety net' serves as a foundation throughout the work.
The therapist then invites the patient to attend to bodily sensations (interoception) related to traumatic material, proceeding through titration. They observe and name micro body signs: tensions, trembling, involuntary movements, breathing changes. Pendulation guides the patient between activation and resource, allowing the nervous system to regulate progressively. Work may include completion of interrupted defensive gestures. A typical protocol comprises 12 to 20 sessions.
Variations and Sub-techniques
- Classical SE (Peter Levine's protocol)
- SE with touch (light therapeutic touch)
- SE for infants and children
- SE combined with EMDR
- Trauma Releasing Exercises (TRE — SE-inspired)
Contraindications
- Acute psychotic episode
- Severe unstabilized structural dissociation
- Uncontrolled abreaction tendency
- Severe cardiac pathology (intense autonomic discharges)
- Advanced pregnancy (caution with intense body discharges)
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.