Somatic Exercises for Stress Relief: A Beginner's Guide
Slug: somatic-exercises-stress-reliefPillar: Health and Fitness > Mental HealthKeyword: somatic exercises for stress relief beginnersExcerpt: Somatic exercises use gentle movement to release stress held in the body. Here's how to get started with simple evidence-informed techniques.
Disclaimer: This article provides general wellness information. Somatic practices are not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you are experiencing significant anxiety, trauma, or mental health difficulties, please speak with a qualified healthcare provider.
What Are Somatic Exercises?
Somatic exercises are movement-based practices that work with the body to process and release stress, tension, and emotional states held in the nervous system. The core premise is that stress doesn't only exist in the mind — it's stored physically in muscles, posture, breathing patterns, and the nervous system's baseline state of activation.
Somatic approaches have deep roots in the work of researchers like Dr Peter Levine (Somatic Experiencing) and Dr Bessel van der Kolk, whose book The Body Keeps the Score brought the concept to mainstream awareness. In 2026, somatic practices have entered the mainstream wellness conversation significantly.
Why the Body Needs Its Own Approach to Stress
When you experience stress, your body activates the sympathetic nervous system — your fight, flight, or freeze response. Chronic modern stress keeps many people in a low-level state of activation, without the physiological completion that would come from physically resolving the stressor. Somatic exercises work directly with the body's stress response, helping the nervous system return to a regulated state from the body up.
Five Beginner Somatic Exercises to Try
1. Physiological Sigh (2-5 minutes)
Take a normal breath in, then — without exhaling — take a second, shorter sniff to fully inflate the lungs. Slowly exhale everything through the mouth. Repeat three to five times. The long exhale activates the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing heart rate and cortisol within seconds.
2. Shaking and Trembling (5-10 minutes)
Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, soften your knees slightly, and allow your legs to begin a gentle trembling. If it doesn't happen naturally, start by gently bouncing on the balls of your feet. Let the trembling spread through the body. Rest afterwards.
3. Grounding Body Scan (10 minutes)
Lie on your back or sit with both feet flat on the floor. Close your eyes and place your attention on the sensation of your body making contact with the surface beneath you. Starting at your feet, slowly move your awareness up the body, noticing areas of tension without trying to change them.
4. Butterfly Hug (3-5 minutes)
Cross your arms over your chest so each hand rests on the opposite shoulder. Slowly and alternately tap each shoulder in a slow, gentle rhythm. Breathe slowly. The bilateral stimulation appears to support emotional processing and nervous system regulation.
5. Floor-Based Orienting (5 minutes)
Sit or lie comfortably and slowly let your gaze wander around the room. Don't focus on anything in particular — just allow your eyes to move at their own pace, taking in edges, textures, and objects without analysis. This activates the ventral vagal system, telling the nervous system that the environment is safe.
Building a Regular Practice
Start with one exercise, practised consistently for two weeks, before adding more. Five to ten minutes daily produces more benefit than 30 minutes once a week. For more wellness guides, visit our Health and Fitness section.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are somatic exercises evidence-based?
The research base is growing. Somatic Experiencing has published peer-reviewed outcome studies showing effectiveness for post-traumatic stress and anxiety. The physiological mechanisms around vagal tone and nervous system regulation are well-established in neuroscience research.
Can somatic exercises replace therapy?
For everyday stress, somatic self-practices are a valuable wellness tool. For trauma, complex anxiety, or clinical conditions, work with a qualified somatic therapist alongside these practices.
How quickly will I feel a difference?
The physiological sigh produces immediate effects. Longer-term nervous system changes become apparent after two to four weeks of consistent daily practice for most people.
Is shaking safe?
For most people, yes. Avoid tremoring exercises if you have epilepsy, are in the first trimester of pregnancy, or have certain cardiovascular conditions. When in doubt, check with your GP.
Do I need to see a somatic therapist to self-practise?
Self-practice is appropriate for general stress and mild anxiety. For trauma or significant emotional dysregulation, working with a trained somatic practitioner provides important support.










