Somatic Therapy for Sexual Trauma: What It Is and How It Works

Somatic Therapy for Sexual Trauma: What It Is and How It Works

You can know, intellectually, that the trauma is in the past. You can understand it, name it, have worked through it in talk therapy. And yet something in your body still responds. Sex feels unsafe even when your mind knows it is not. You go numb at a moment of closeness. You startle at a touch that should feel good. Your nervous system has not received the message that the threat is over.

This is not a failure of insight or willpower. It is how trauma works. And it is one of the central reasons that talk therapy alone, while valuable, is sometimes not sufficient for healing the ways sexual trauma has settled into the body and disrupted the body’s capacity for safety, pleasure, and connection.

Somatic therapy offers a different entry point: one that works with the body directly, rather than around it. Understanding what somatic therapy is, how it addresses trauma physiologically, and what the evidence says about its effectiveness can help survivors make informed decisions about their healing.

Why Trauma Lives in the Body

Trauma is not simply a memory. It is a physiological event that reshapes how the nervous system responds to perceived threat. When a person experiences something overwhelming, the body initiates survival responses: fight, flight, or freeze. In many cases of sexual trauma, the freeze response is dominant. The person becomes immobilized, unable to fight or flee, and the defensive response that was initiated in the body never completes.

According to the model underlying Somatic Experiencing, one of the most established body-based trauma therapies, this incomplete defensive response leaves the nervous system in a state of chronic activation or shutdown. A 2021 scoping literature review summarizing research on Somatic Experiencing found that post-traumatic stress symptoms are understood, within this framework, as a persistent overreaction of the innate stress system: the body remains primed for a threat that has passed, unable to return to a baseline state of regulation.

The impact on sexuality is both direct and significant. A 2023 study on trauma-focused treatment and sexual functioning found that sexual dysfunction is highly prevalent in individuals with PTSD, and that symptoms including reduced sexual desire, difficulty with arousal, dissociation during sex, and avoidance of intimacy frequently accompany trauma regardless of whether the original trauma was sexual in nature. The body’s threat response does not distinguish between contexts: if the nervous system is chronically activated, the conditions for sexual safety and pleasure are undermined across the board.

What Somatic Therapy Is (and What It Is Not)

“Somatic therapy” is an umbrella term for a range of therapeutic approaches that incorporate body awareness, physical sensation, and nervous system regulation as primary tools for healing, rather than treating the body as secondary to cognitive or verbal processing. The most researched modality within this category is Somatic Experiencing (SE), developed by Dr. Peter Levine and grounded in neurobiological and ethological research on how animals complete and discharge survival responses after threat.

Other body-based approaches that fall under the broader somatic umbrella include sensorimotor psychotherapy, EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), and trauma-sensitive yoga, each with their own theoretical frameworks and evidence bases. When a clinician describes working somatically with trauma, it is worth asking specifically which modality or approach they are using, as these differ in meaningful ways.

What somatic approaches share is the premise that healing trauma requires engaging the body’s own regulatory processes, not just the thinking mind. This is sometimes described as a “bottom-up” approach, in contrast to the “top-down” approach of purely cognitive or verbal therapies. Both directions of processing are valuable; somatic work is most often used alongside, rather than instead of, other therapeutic approaches.

Somatic therapy does not involve sexual touch of any kind. Sessions take place in a fully clothed, professional setting, with the therapist using verbal guidance, attention to sensation and posture, gentle movement, breath work, and tracking of physiological states to facilitate nervous system regulation and trauma discharge.

How Somatic Therapy Addresses Sexual Trauma Specifically

Sexual trauma creates a particular challenge for healing because the body part associated with the trauma is also the body part associated with intimacy, pleasure, and connection. Survivors frequently experience a splitting: a learned disconnection from their own physical experience as a protective strategy, which can generalize from the original threat to all sexual contexts.

Somatic therapy approaches this through several mechanisms that operate below the level of conscious narrative:

•  Nervous system regulation. Before any trauma processing can occur, the nervous system needs enough stability and capacity to tolerate activating material without becoming overwhelmed. Somatic work begins by building this regulatory foundation, helping the client develop the ability to move between states of activation and calm without becoming flooded or shut down.

•  Titration and pendulation. Rather than flooding the client with traumatic material, somatic therapy works in small doses, approaching the edges of distress and then returning to a resource or a regulated state. This back-and-forth movement, called pendulation in Somatic Experiencing, gradually expands the client’s tolerance and begins to discharge stored survival energy without retraumatizing.

•  Completing interrupted defensive responses. A core principle of SE is that the freeze response leaves incomplete motor sequences in the body: impulses to fight or flee that were suppressed. In a safe, titrated way, somatic therapy creates conditions for these responses to complete, which can produce a profound sense of release and resolution.

•  Restoring interoception. Sexual trauma often disrupts interoception, the ability to sense and interpret one’s own internal bodily states. Somatic work gently rebuilds this capacity, helping survivors reconnect with their bodies as a source of information and eventually of pleasure, rather than only as a site of threat.

•  Addressing dissociation. Dissociation during sexual activity is common among trauma survivors and can be profoundly distressing. Somatic approaches work directly with the physiological patterns underlying dissociation, helping clients develop greater presence and continuity of experience in their bodies.

What the Research Shows

The evidence base for somatic approaches to trauma is growing, though it is important to characterize it accurately. The 2021 literature review found preliminary evidence for positive effects of somatic experiencing on PTSD-related symptoms, with gains also noted in emotional regulation and overall wellbeing. The review’s authors were appropriately cautious, however, noting that the evidence base includes methodological limitations: most studies had small samples, few were randomized controlled trials, and long-term follow-up data were limited.

A more recent 2025 meta-analysis found somatic therapy was congruent with many patients’ lived experiences and their beliefs about mental health and further research is needed to develop somatic based interventions for PTSD.

The honest summary of the evidence is this: somatic approaches to trauma show meaningful promise and are widely used in clinical practice with good clinical rationale, but the research base is younger and less standardized than that of more established approaches such as CBT or EMDR. For most survivors, somatic work is used as part of a broader integrative treatment plan rather than as the sole intervention, and this integrative approach is consistent with how the research community understands best practice.

Somatic Therapy in the Context of Sexual Wellness

When somatic approaches are incorporated into sex therapy or sexual wellness treatment for trauma survivors, the goal is not simply symptom reduction but restoration: restoring the client’s relationship with their own body, their capacity for presence during intimacy, and their access to pleasure and connection on their own terms.

This work may involve:

•  Mapping body-based responses to sexual contexts. Understanding which physical sensations, postures, or situations activate threat responses, and working gradually to expand the window of tolerance around those cues.

•  Rebuilding a sense of safety in the body. For many survivors, the body itself has come to feel like an unsafe place. Somatic work helps to rehabilitate this relationship, creating the physiological conditions that make pleasure accessible again.

•  Integrating cognitive and body-based approaches. Combining somatic work with the psychoeducation, cognitive restructuring, and relational repair that sex therapy also offers creates a more comprehensive pathway to healing than either approach can provide alone.

Progress in this work is not linear, and it often requires patience. But for many survivors, it is the approach that finally reaches the places that talking alone could not.

Healing Is Possible, and It Starts with the Right Support

Sexual trauma affects the body, the nervous system, the capacity for intimacy, and the sense of safety in one’s own skin. Healing it requires approaches that meet the body where it is, not just where the mind can reach.

At Embrace Sexual Wellness, our Chicago-based clinicians work with survivors of sexual trauma using trauma-informed, body-aware approaches that respect both the complexity of what you have experienced and the pace at which your nervous system can safely engage with healing. We integrate somatic principles with sex therapy and evidence-based psychological approaches to provide care that is both clinically grounded and genuinely responsive to you as a whole person.

If you are a survivor of sexual trauma and are ready to explore what healing can look like for you, we invite you to take the first step. Schedule a free 10-minute phone consultation today. You do not have to navigate this alone.