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Asana Tribe Yoga Spain Lotus Flower

ASANA TRIBE YOGA BLOG

Learn more about yoga, wellness, and healing


Have you ever started moving slowly, mindfully — maybe in yoga, breathwork, or somatic exercise — and suddenly felt tears rise for no obvious reason?

Nothing “happened.”

No memory appeared.

No story explained it.

And yet… something released.


This is not weakness.

It’s not imagination.

It’s not random.

It’s the body doing what it has always known how to do — release what it has been holding.


The Body Remembers What the Mind Learns to Forget


In The Body Keeps the Score, psychiatrist and trauma researcher Dr. Bessel van der Kolk explains that experiences — especially overwhelming or stressful ones — are not only stored as memories in the brain, but as sensations, tension patterns, and nervous system responses in the body.


When emotions cannot be safely felt at the time — grief, fear, anger, shock — the body adapts. Muscles tighten. Breath shortens. The nervous system shifts into survival.

This isn’t a failure.

It’s intelligence.


But what was once protection can later become pain, anxiety, numbness, or chronic tension.

Somatic exercise offers a way back — not through analysis, but through felt experience.


Why Somatic Exercise Works Where Talk Sometimes Can’t


Somatic practices work bottom-up, meaning they begin with sensation rather than thought.

Instead of asking “Why do I feel this way?”, we ask:

  • What do I notice in my body right now?

  • Where is there tension, heaviness, warmth, or movement?

  • What happens if I breathe with this instead of away from it?


This is important because trauma and suppressed emotion often live below conscious thought.


Dr. Gabor Maté speaks often about this, explaining that the body expresses what the mind has learned to suppress in order to survive. When emotions are not allowed expression, the body often carries them on our behalf — sometimes for years.


Somatic exercise gently invites those held responses to complete themselves.


Emotions Are Sensations Before They Are Stories


We tend to think of emotions as thoughts — but biologically, emotions begin as sensations in the body.

A tight chest.

A knot in the stomach.

A clenched jaw.


When we move slowly and mindfully, especially with breath, we begin to feel these sensations without immediately trying to fix or explain them.


And when the body feels safe enough — supported, unforced, unjudged — emotions may naturally surface.


This can look like:

  • Tears during gentle movement or rest

  • Shaking or trembling

  • Spontaneous sighing or deep breaths

  • Waves of sadness, relief, or calm


This is not catharsis for the sake of release. It’s completion.


Safety Is the Key to Emotional Release


Emotions don’t release because we push them out.They release because the nervous system finally senses safety.


Somatic exercise emphasises:

  • Slow, controlled movement

  • Choice and agency

  • Inner awareness rather than external performance

  • Rest and integration


Unlike high-intensity or purely goal-oriented exercise, somatic practices tell the body:You’re not being chased. You don’t need to brace. You can soften now.

And when the body softens, what has been held can gently move.


Why Yoga and Somatic Movement Are So Powerful Together


In trauma-informed yoga and somatic movement, the focus is not on stretching deeper or achieving shapes — it’s on staying present with sensation.


This is why emotions often surface in:

  • Hip openers

  • Slow spinal movements

  • Long exhalations

  • Stillness or Savasana


These practices access areas where the body commonly stores protective tension.

At Asana Tribe Yoga Spain, emotional release is never forced, analysed, or rushed. It is welcomed as a natural response — and equally welcomed if it doesn’t happen at all.

There is no expectation.

Only permission.


You Don’t Need to Relive the Past to Heal It


One of the most important things to understand is this:You do not need to remember or relive trauma for the body to heal.

Somatic exercise allows healing to happen through sensation, breath, and nervous system regulation — not storytelling.

Sometimes the body releases without explanation.And that is enough.


When the Body Leads, Healing Follows


Somatic exercise teaches us something deeply compassionate:Your body has never been against you.It has always been protecting you.

And when given the right conditions — safety, slowness, presence — it knows exactly how to let go.

Yoga then becomes more than movement.It becomes a conversation.

A remembering.

A homecoming.

 
 
 

There was a time in my life when I practiced yoga purely from the outside in. I focused on alignment, flexibility, and strength — believing that if my body looked a certain way, I was “doing it right.” But something was missing. My body was moving, yet parts of me still felt unheard.

That’s when I discovered somatic healing — and everything changed.


Somatic healing is not about fixing the body. It’s about listening to it. In yoga, this means turning our attention inward and allowing sensation to guide the practice. Instead of asking, How does this pose look?, we ask, How does this feel inside my body?

Our bodies store experiences — emotional, physical, and energetic. Stress, trauma, grief, and even long-term habits leave imprints in the nervous system and tissues. Through slow, mindful movement and conscious breathing, somatic yoga invites these stored patterns to gently release.


In my own practice and teaching, I’ve seen how powerful this approach can be. A tight hip can soften when we stop forcing it open. A held breath can deepen once we feel safe enough to exhale. Healing happens when the nervous system senses safety — not pressure.

Somatic yoga is especially supportive if you feel disconnected from your body, overwhelmed, or stuck in cycles of pain or tension. It offers a way back to yourself — one breath, one sensation at a time.


At Asana Tribe Yoga Spain, this is the heart of the practice: movement that listens, breath that soothes, and space to feel without judgment.


 
 
 
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