Somatic Exercises: A Full Guide | The Honest Healer
The Honest Healer
Home Writing Podcast Book About Newsletter
Writing / Somatic Healing
Somatic Healing

Somatic Exercises: A Full Guide

Everything in one place — from grounding basics to daily embodiment.

Christie Quarton By Christie Quarton · 10 min read · July 2026

Your body has been holding onto things your mind resolved months ago, and no amount of understanding why is going to convince a clenched jaw to unclench itself. Somatic exercises are how you actually address that gap — movement and sensation instead of insight alone. This is the full rundown: what they are, the main categories, and how to actually build a practice instead of doing one exercise once and calling it healed.

What Somatic Exercises Actually Are

Somatic exercises are body-based practices designed to build awareness of physical sensation and help stored activation discharge, rather than just building strength or flexibility the way a typical workout would. The goal isn't performance. It's felt sense — actually noticing what's happening in your body as it happens, which turns out to be a skill most of us never developed because we've spent our whole lives living primarily in our heads.

The practiceclose your eyes for ten seconds and notice one physical sensation without naming or judging it. Just notice.

Category One: Grounding

Grounding exercises give your nervous system concrete, physical proof that you're supported right now, not in freefall. Feeling your feet flat on the floor, your back against a chair, the actual weight of your body being held by something solid. These are the simplest tools in the entire toolkit and also some of the most underrated, mostly because they seem too basic to actually do anything.

The practicepress your feet into the ground for ten seconds and notice the sensation of contact, not the thought of it.

Category Two: Discharge

Discharge exercises help a stress response actually complete itself instead of getting stuck halfway, which is what happens to most of the activation you experience in daily life since you rarely get to physically run from the thing that stressed you out. Shaking your hands and arms, a full-body shake if you can find privacy, even a vigorous stretch, all help stored activation finally leave the building.

The practicethirty seconds of shaking out your hands and arms, undignified as it feels. Dignity was never the goal here.

Category Three: Rhythmic and Repetitive Movement

Rhythm regulates. It's why every culture independently invented rocking a distressed baby without a single research paper to justify it, and the same principle works on you, an adult nervous system that still responds to steady, predictable motion. Rocking, swaying, walking at an even pace, all send a consistent signal: this is manageable, you can stay here.

The practicerock gently side to side for a minute with no destination or goal, just rhythm for its own sake.

Category Four: Orienting

Orienting exercises widen your awareness back out to your actual environment, correcting the narrowed focus that comes with activation. Slowly turning your head and letting your eyes land on different objects in the room, noticing color, shape, and texture, tells your nervous system that the present moment is safe enough to actually notice.

The practicename five things you can see right now, in detail, out loud if you can manage it.

Category Five: Breath-Linked Movement

Combining breath with movement — a slow inhale paired with reaching your arms overhead, a slow exhale paired with lowering them — links two regulating tools instead of using them separately. This category bridges somatic exercise and breathwork, and tends to feel more accessible to people who find stillness alone difficult to settle into.

The practiceinhale as you raise your arms overhead, exhale slowly as you lower them, five times.

Building an Actual Practice

Pick one exercise from each category and rotate through them across a week rather than trying all five in one sitting. Somatic work rewards consistency over intensity — a few minutes daily will get you further than one long session once a month. And if you have a significant trauma history, working with a trained somatic therapist alongside your own practice is worth considering, since some material benefits from professional support rather than going it entirely alone.

Pick one exercise from above and do it today, before you close this tab. That's the whole strategy.

Christie Quarton, founder of The Honest Healer, smiling warmly
About the author Christie Quarton

Christie writes and podcasts on somatic healing, breathwork, and nervous system regulation. She hosts the Be Gentle With Me podcast and wrote I am Safe, a loving guide to gentle healing.

Related reading

Nervous System · 7 min Somatic Exercises for Nervous System Regulation Gentle movement to help stored stress actually leave the body. Somatic Healing · 8 min Somatic Exercises to Release Stored Trauma Slow, safe practices for the tension your body has been holding for you. Somatic Healing · 8 min Somatic Healing: What It Is and How It Works Healing that starts in the body, not the story you tell about it.
← Back to Writing
Stay Close

Be gentle with your inbox

A soft note when there's something worth sharing. No noise, no pressure.

The Honest Healer Unfiltered dispatches from real life, by Christie.
Explore Writing Podcast The Book About
Elsewhere Substack Instagram Apple Podcasts
© 2026 Christie Quarton · The Wilds Within