You might not remember the accident, the childhood room, or the words that were spoken. But your shoulders still brace. Your stomach still clenches. Your breath still shortens in the same situations decades later. Your body remembers what your mind has tried to forget.

What Is Somatic Memory?

The word "somatic" comes from the Greek sลma, meaning body. Somatic memory refers to the way emotional and traumatic experiences are encoded not primarily in the cortex โ€” where our narrative, autobiographical memories live โ€” but in the body's tissues, muscles, autonomic nervous system patterns, and subcortical brain structures.

Unlike remembering a fact or a story (explicit, declarative memory), somatic memory is implicit โ€” it operates below conscious awareness. You don't decide to feel your chest tighten when someone raises their voice; it happens before thought. That is somatic memory activating: the body's stored record of a previous time when a raised voice meant danger.

Trauma researcher Bessel van der Kolk crystallized this concept in his landmark book The Body Keeps the Score (2014), which synthesized decades of clinical and neuroimaging research to demonstrate that trauma is fundamentally a somatic โ€” not merely psychological โ€” phenomenon.

The Neuroscience: Why the Body "Remembers"

To understand somatic memory, you need to understand how traumatic memory differs from ordinary memory formation:

Ordinary memory is processed through the hippocampus (which places the experience in a time and context โ€” "this happened then, and it's over") and then stored in the cortex as a coherent narrative. Crucially, the hippocampus dates the memory โ€” marking it as past.

Traumatic memory bypasses this sequential processing because high cortisol levels during extreme stress impair hippocampal function. The experience is encoded without proper temporal context. Instead, it is stored as:

This is why traumatic memories feel like they are happening now โ€” because they were never properly filed as then. The body's threat response reactivates intact, as if the danger is present, any time a sensory fragment of the original experience recurs (a smell, a tone of voice, a physical position).

Common Manifestations of Somatic Memory

Somatic memory manifests in patterns that can seem disconnected from their origins:

Somatic Therapies: Healing Through the Body

Because somatic memory is stored below verbal consciousness, exclusively talk-based therapies (while valuable) often cannot fully access it. This is why the field of somatic psychotherapy has developed approaches that work directly with the body's stored patterns:

Somatic Experiencing (Peter Levine)

Based on the observation that wild animals โ€” who regularly experience life-threatening events โ€” rarely develop PTSD because they physically discharge the survival activation through shaking and trembling after the threat passes. Somatic Experiencing guides clients to track body sensations and allow the nervous system to complete interrupted survival responses that were "frozen" at the moment of trauma.

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)

Developed by Francine Shapiro in the late 1980s, EMDR uses bilateral stimulation (eye movements, tapping, or sound) to facilitate the reprocessing of traumatic memories by activating both hemispheres of the brain simultaneously. It is one of the most extensively researched trauma therapies, with over 30 randomized controlled trials supporting its efficacy for PTSD.

TRE โ€” Trauma Release Exercises

A body-based practice developed by David Berceli that uses a sequence of exercises to fatigue specific muscle groups and trigger the body's natural neurogenic tremor mechanism โ€” the same shaking response seen in animals after a threat โ€” allowing stored tension to discharge through the nervous system.

๐Ÿ”‘ Key Takeaway

Your body is not betraying you when it tenses, recoils, or shuts down in response to memories it was never meant to hold consciously. It is doing exactly what it was designed to do: protect you. Healing somatic memory requires working with the body's intelligence โ€” not overriding it or talking it out of existence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is somatic memory?

Somatic memory refers to the storage of emotional and traumatic experiences as physical sensations, muscle tension, posture, and autonomic nervous system states within the body. Unlike explicit (narrative) memory, somatic memory is stored implicitly โ€” below conscious awareness โ€” in the body's tissues and nervous system patterns.

Can trauma be stored in the body?

Yes. This is one of the most well-supported findings in trauma research. Bessel van der Kolk's landmark work demonstrated that traumatic memory is encoded in the brainstem, limbic system, and body โ€” not primarily in the cortex where narrative memory lives. This is why trauma survivors can experience physical symptoms (tension, pain, hyperarousal) without conscious memory of the traumatic event.

How do you release somatic memory?

Somatic memory can be released through body-based therapeutic approaches including Somatic Experiencing (Peter Levine), EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), sensorimotor psychotherapy, yoga therapy, and TRE (Trauma Release Exercises). These approaches work directly with the body's stored patterns rather than primarily through verbal processing.

๐Ÿ“š References & Further Reading

All claims are grounded in peer-reviewed research. Sources are publicly accessible.

  • van der Kolk BA. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking. [View Source]
  • Levine PA. (2010). In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness. North Atlantic Books. [View Source]
  • Van der Kolk BA. (1994). The body keeps the score: Memory and the evolving psychobiology of posttraumatic stress. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 1(5), 253โ€“265. [View Source]
  • Shapiro F. (2018). Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Therapy (3rd ed.). Guilford Press. [View Source]

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Dr. Maya Ariston PhD - Mind Balance Editor

Dr. Maya Ariston, PhD

Clinical psychologist with 12 years of research experience at the intersection of cognitive behavioral therapy and behavioral neuroscience. Editor-in-Chief at Mind & Balance. Read full bio โ†’

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