Somatic Exercises to Release Stored Trauma | The Honest Healer
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Somatic Exercises to Release Stored Trauma

Slow, safe practices for the tension your body has been holding for you.

Christie Quarton By Christie Quarton · 8 min read · July 2026

Trauma has an irritating habit of overstaying its welcome in the body long after your mind has technically moved on. You can understand exactly what happened, why it happened, and even make peace with it intellectually, and your shoulders will still tense the moment something remotely similar shows up again. That's not you failing to heal properly. That's just where trauma actually lives — in the nervous system, not in the story about it. Here's how to work with that directly.

Why Trauma Gets Stored in the Body

A stress response is designed to activate, do its job, and then discharge once the threat passes. Trauma happens when that cycle doesn't get to complete — the activation happens, but the release never does, so your body files it away as unfinished business. Years later, a smell, a tone of voice, or a situation with the faintest resemblance can trigger the same physical response, because your nervous system isn't working off your calendar, it's working off unfinished sensation.

The practicethink of one reaction that feels bigger than the current situation warrants. That gap is often exactly where old, stored activation is still living.

Start With Titration, Not Intensity

Titration means approaching stored material in small, manageable doses rather than diving in headfirst, and it's the single most important principle in trauma-focused somatic work. Going too fast, too intense, too soon tends to overwhelm rather than heal, which is the opposite of the goal. Small and slow isn't a lesser approach here. It's the actual method.

The practiceif any exercise below starts to feel like too much, stop or slow down immediately. That's not failure, that's the practice working correctly.

Pendulation: Moving Between Activation and Ease

Pendulation is the practice of gently moving your attention between a place of tension in your body and a place of relative ease, back and forth, rather than staying fixed on the difficult sensation the whole time. This teaches your nervous system that it can visit activation and return to safety, which is exactly the flexibility trauma tends to erode.

The practicenotice one tense area and one relatively neutral area in your body. Move your attention slowly between them, several times, staying longer with the neutral spot.

Discharge Through Shaking

Animals shake to discharge activation after a threat passes, an involuntary tremor response humans mostly suppress through social conditioning. Deliberately allowing your body to shake — hands, arms, legs — in a private, safe space can help release activation that's been stored for a long time, sometimes since well before you consciously remember it starting.

The practicein a private space, let your hands and arms shake freely for thirty seconds, without trying to control or perform it.

Resourcing: Building a Felt Sense of Safety First

Before working with difficult material directly, somatic practitioners often build a "resource" — a place, memory, or sensation that reliably brings a felt sense of calm or safety. Having this established gives your nervous system somewhere to return to if things get too intense, which makes the harder work considerably safer to approach.

The practiceidentify one memory, place, or sensation that reliably makes you feel calm or safe. Practice bringing that feeling into your body before attempting any of the exercises above.

When to Bring in Professional Support

Significant trauma, especially anything involving major life threat, abuse, or repeated harm, often benefits from working with a trained trauma-informed somatic therapist rather than self-guided practice alone. This isn't a failure of the exercises above, it's simply that some material carries enough weight to need a skilled professional holding the space alongside you.

The practiceif you notice these exercises consistently bring up more than you can manage alone, that's a clear, valid signal to seek out professional support, not a sign you're doing this wrong.

Releasing stored trauma isn't a single dramatic breakthrough. It's small, repeated, careful contact with the body, built slowly enough that safety comes first every time.

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

Somatic Healing · 10 min Somatic Exercises: A Full Guide Everything in one place — from grounding basics to daily embodiment. Nervous System · 6 min How to Regulate Your Nervous System (Naturally) Small, repeatable practices for calming a stress response — no apps required. 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.
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