Integration and Meaning-Making is used in Somatic Experiencing to work with somatic trauma regulation through present-moment tracking, careful pacing and integration. The therapist uses the technique collaboratively, keeping attention on safety, body signals, regulation and the client's choice rather than forcing a predetermined emotional outcome.
Step-by-step guide
- Establish orientation, consent and enough present-time safety before beginning.
- Name the focus of integration and meaning-making in simple language and connect it to the current body experience.
- Track sensations, impulses, images, emotions and meanings one piece at a time.
- Move slowly between activation and resource so the client stays inside the window of tolerance.
- Notice any shift in breath, posture, impulse, emotion, meaning or contact with the room.
- Integrate the change and decide what, if anything, should be practiced or remembered between sessions.
When to use
- When somatic trauma regulation is present in the session.
- When verbal insight is not enough and the body pattern needs to be tracked directly.
- When the client can remain oriented while noticing activation in small doses.
Key phrases
Let us slow this down and notice what happens in your body as we work with integration and meaning-making.
Follow-up questions
What changes if we stay with just a small, manageable piece of it?
Alternative phrasings
We can pause at any moment and come back to the room.
Notice the body first; we do not need to explain everything immediately.
What resource or support is available while you notice this?
Warnings
- ⚠️ Do not use the technique to push the client into flooding, collapse or dissociation.
- ⚠️ Do not interpret body signals as certain evidence; treat them as material for collaborative exploration.
- ⚠️ Stop or simplify the work when orientation, consent or regulation is lost.
Source: Somatic Experiencing / Peter Levine
Materials are informational and educational and summarize publicly available scientific sources. They are not medical or psychological advice, are not intended for self-diagnosis or self-treatment, and do not replace consultation with a qualified professional.