A Somatic Perspective on Emotions (and Why Therapists “Love” Them)

by | Nov 24, 2025

Have you ever felt a surge of irritation when your counsellor asks, “How are you feeling right now? Where do you feel that in your body?” If so, you’re not alone. Many people feel frustrated when therapy seems to focus on emotion instead of quickly “fixing the problem.” But from a somatic therapy perspective, emotions are not a distraction: they’re often the most direct pathway to healing, clarity, and lasting change.

Although focusing on emotion may feel like a detour, it’s often the fastest way to understand why your feelings feel so distressing and what they are actually trying to communicate.

Uh Oh. An Emotion — Now What?

Emotions can feel confusing, intense, and unwanted. Many of us grow up believing they’re the cause of our problems. However, emotions themselves are rarely the issue. The real challenge lies in how we relate to them.

Cultural and family conditioning often teaches us that emotions are disruptive, “too much,” unprofessional, or even shameful. As children, expressing emotion may have led to rejection, punishment, or being labelled “too sensitive.” Over time, we learn that hiding our emotions feels safer than expressing them.

The truth is, most of us inherited a flawed emotional road map. We learned to avoid uncomfortable emotions, suppress them, or numb them, all of which ultimately increases our distress and emotional overwhelm.

What Is an Emotion, Exactly?

We often confuse emotions with thoughts. For example, you might feel sadness and then tell yourself, “I’m always going to be sad and alone.” This thought amplifies the emotion, creating a self-reinforcing loop. We then label the whole experience as “sadness.”

Therapists differentiate between thoughts and emotions because they function differently. They are like two species sharing the same habitat: you. Recognizing this distinction is central to effective emotional regulation.

Somatic Therapy: How the Body Processes Emotion

From a somatic perspective, emotions are physical sensations in the body that signal the brain to pay attention. For example:

  • Sadness might feel like tightness in the throat
  • Anxiety might feel like queasiness in the stomach
  • Anger might feel like heat or pressure in the chest

Not everyone is aware of these bodily signals. Emotional suppression, trauma, or mental health challenges like depression can reduce awareness of bodily sensations, disconnecting us from important emotional information.

Why Uncomfortable Emotions Exist

Emotions are your evolutionary alarm system. Long before humans had language or analytical thought, the body sensed threat through instinctive systems operating below conscious awareness.

Today, emotions still serve this role. They help:

  • Alert us to potential danger
  • Prepare the body to act
  • Anxiety primes the body for performance and safety. Anger prepares the body for defence. Discomfort is not a design flaw — it is a survival feature.

The Role of Positive Emotions

As humans evolved, emotions also became social signals that:

  • Strengthened bonds with caregivers
  • Reinforced group connection
  • Supported safety through belonging

Emotions like love, joy, affection, and desire promoted cooperation, trust, and attachment — all essential for survival.

Why Emotions Feel Like They “Misbehave”

Like weather, emotions follow a natural arc: they arise, intensify, and pass. When allowed to move freely, emotional cycles resolve relatively quickly.

Research suggests emotional episodes last on average:

  • Positive emotions: ~1.25 hours
  • Negative emotions: ~1.5 hours
  • Sadness and grief: often a day or more (Fan et al., 2019)

Emotions feel prolonged when we resist, suppress, or ruminate on them.

How We Get Stuck in Emotions

  1. Fighting Emotion. Attempting to suppress or push away emotions intensifies them, keeping the nervous system activated.
  2. Merging With Emotion. When identity becomes fused with emotion (“I am anxious” vs. “I feel anxious”), the emotional arc stops flowing.
  3. Rumination. Replaying events, catastrophizing, or rehearsing future fears feeds the emotion instead of resolving it.

Why Therapists Focus on Emotions

Therapists focus on emotions because how you relate to them directly impacts your nervous system, relationships, decision-making, and mental health. Emotional patterns are difficult to change because they often operate beneath conscious awareness — showing up in the body before the mind can interpret them.

By bringing gentle awareness to emotion, therapy helps you complete emotional cycles instead of remaining trapped inside them. Emotional regulation leads to greater clarity, resilience, and connection.

Understanding and working with your emotional “weather system” is one of the most powerful tools you have for real, lasting change.

Ready to Understand Your Emotions at a Deeper Level?

Stop fighting your feelings and start learning what they’re really telling you. At Quoin Counselling, our therapists — Tanya Schecter, Brooke Patterson, and Tiffany Wainwright — guide you to connect with your body, navigate emotional patterns, and find clarity and resilience. Begin your journey to emotional freedom today.

Take the first step today: Book your free 15-minute consultation and start transforming your life.

Sources

Fan, R., Xu, K., Zhao, J., & Zhao, Y. (2019). From “I love you” to “leave me alone”: Romantic relationship breakups on Twitter. Journal of Computational Social Science, 2, 75–92.

Verduyn, P., Delaveau, J., Rotgé, J.-Y., Fossati, P., & Van Mechelen, I. (2013). The relationship between self-distancing and the duration of negative and positive emotional experiences in daily life. Emotion, 13(5), 924–930.

Sign up for our Relational Wisdom Newsletter

Get thoughtful insights, practical tools, and gentle guidance to help you navigate relationships with more clarity, compassion, and confidence.

Name

Archives