Today, we live in a time where many of us are stuck in our mental world, instead of listening to our bodies. There is a disconnect between what our body is experiencing and our ability to notice, listen, and pay attention. Over time, we can lose the ability to ‘check-in’ with our bodies, and may not have the words to describe what we’re noticing (or not noticing).
It’s one of the main reasons many people struggle to stay ‘in the moment’ during sex. They might find their thoughts wandering, thinking about something else entirely. They might get caught up worrying about how they’re performing, what they look like, what their partner is thinking, or whether they’ll be able to reach orgasm, stay hard, or build arousal.
Sound familiar?
Somatic awareness helps people bring their attention back into their body and stay present. This has an incredible impact on sex, intimacy, and our ability to feel pleasure.
Somatics is any practice that develops and strengthens the mind-body connection. Somatic practices teach you how to mindfully scan and listen to your body, survey your internal self, and pick up signals that your body is sending. These signals could be areas of pain, anxiety, numbness, emotional dysregulation, discomfort, pleasure, arousal, imbalance or blockages.
Everyone feels and interprets these ‘signals’ differently, but they can be felt as tension, tightness, vibrations, heat, tingles, shivers, emotions, feelings, colours, visualisations or even memories.
Somatic Sexology takes somatic practices and adapts them to teach people how to have better sex. Some common sexual concerns that benefit from somatic awareness are:
Similarly, many people rely on their brain to turn them on, through internal fantasies or porn. Although these are useful erotic tools, if we become overly reliant on them, we risk losing the ability to rely on the sensations in our bodies to build our arousal. These people may feel ‘desensitised’, and find it hard to stay present with the sensations or connection they’re experiencing in the present moment without the addition of porn or fantasy.
As a Somatic Sexologist, I help people get out of their head and into their bodies.
Our bodies are not separate entities from our minds, and they are so much more than a collection of body parts and organs designed to ‘obey’ and carry out the desires of the brain. They carry wisdom, intuition, emotion, and our personal history.
Just like stress can show up physically in different parts of the body—like a tight chest or a knot in the stomach—we also carry emotions and experiences in the way we feel and express ourselves through our bodies. This can be particularly powerful for people who have experienced sexual, physical or emotional trauma.
Somatic practices teach you to recognise the ways your body holds on to past experiences. With this knowledge, we can mindfully create new pathways using somatic awareness and embodiment practices.
Somatic practices, like any ongoing practice with the mind or body, take time and repetition. Just like a single session of meditation, yoga, physio, or martial arts won’t lead to ongoing change, somatic practices also take time and regular practice to become familiar.
Here are some simple practices I teach my clients to help them get out of their heads and into their bodies:
Each day, do something that brings your body pleasure.
For personalised guidance in reconnecting with your body and pleasure, book in a session with me.