Support community stewards and leaders in recognizing how the body holds trauma, stress, and emotion — and how to create conditions for nervous system healing without becoming therapists. Learn to read somatic signals others miss, understand why a calm presence is contagious, recognize when someone needs clinical support, and design communities where bodies feel safe. Part of the Louisoix integrating skill for community care advisors.
Somatic Approaches: Body-Based Wellbeing for Community Leaders
This skill helps you understand the somatic (body-based) dimension of community care. It's not therapy training — it's practical wisdom for leaders of at-risk communities, extended families, and intentional communities who need to recognize what bodies are communicating and respond with presence and environment, not just words.
Why the Body Matters
Your nervous system doesn't lie. When someone says they're fine but their shoulders are up at their ears, their body is telling a different story. When a person in your community moves more slowly, complains of new pain, or suddenly can't eat, those are messages worth attending to.
Here's what modern biology has revealed: trauma, chronic stress, and emotion are not just in your mind — they live in your nervous system. When someone experiences threat, loss, or overwhelming change, their nervous system remembers. The body keeps the score. This changes everything about how you support people.
Chronic stress reshapes the nervous system's baseline. Someone living in financial precarity, discrimination, or repetitive conflict is literally in a different physiological state than someone who feels secure.
相关技能
Trauma doesn't just create memories — it creates conditioned survival responses in the body. A loud noise, a certain tone of voice, or a physical sensation can trigger a nervous system response that has nothing to do with present safety.
Emotion is somatic. Grief moves through the chest and belly. Rage lives in clenched jaws and tight shoulders. Shame pulls the body inward. You can't separate feelings from how the body holds them.
Recovery is also somatic. You can't think your way out of dysregulation — you have to help the nervous system find a different state.
As a community leader, you can't diagnose or treat trauma. But you can create conditions where nervous systems can begin to settle. You can recognize what state someone is in. You can be a regulating presence. And you can know when to refer someone to professional support.
The Autonomic Nervous System: Three States
The autonomic nervous system (the part you don't consciously control) has three primary states. Understanding these is foundational. They are rooted in polyvagal theory, which explains how the vagus nerve — the longest nerve in your body, running from your brain down through your chest and belly — organizes survival responses.
Ventral Vagal: Safe and Social
This is the state you want to be in. It's characterized by:
A sense of safety and possibility
Capacity to notice and respond to others
Flexible thinking and creativity
Ability to be present, listen, and connect
A relaxed face and open posture
Steady breath and calm heart rate
Capacity to play, collaborate, and be vulnerable
When someone is in ventral vagal state, they can engage with community, hold difference, make decisions, and receive support. This is where learning, healing, and genuine connection happen.
How it appears: Alert but calm. Present. Able to make eye contact without intensity. Engaged in conversation. Moves with ease. Eats well. Sleeps. Can laugh and be playful.
Sympathetic: Fight/Flight
When the nervous system perceives threat, it shifts into sympathetic activation — the mobilized state. This is:
Elevated heart rate and faster breathing
Heightened alertness and scanning for danger
Increased muscle tension (especially in shoulders, jaw, legs)
Narrowed focus — only relevant to the threat
Difficulty hearing or processing complex information
Impulsivity, reactivity, intensity
A sense of urgency or charge
Sympathetic activation is necessary — it's how you respond to actual danger. But when someone is chronically activated (because they live in unsafe conditions, or because their nervous system learned to stay vigilant), they're exhausted and reactive. They're ready for fight, so small provocations feel like battles.
How it appears: Restlessness or agitation. Tight jaw, clenched fists, tense shoulders. Quick to anger or defensiveness. Difficulty sitting still. Rapid or pressured speech. Can't relax even when nothing is wrong. May say "I'm fine" while their body shouts otherwise.
Dorsal Vagal: Shutdown/Freeze
When threat feels inescapable, the nervous system does something counterintuitive — it collapses. This is the dorsal vagal state, the oldest survival response:
Dissociation or disconnection from the present
Numbness or flatness of affect
Extreme fatigue or immobility
Difficulty speaking or moving
Slowed heart rate and shallow breath
A sense of hopelessness or helplessness
Withdrawal from connection
This response kept our ancestors alive in situations where fighting or fleeing would mean death. But when it becomes chronic, it's dangerous. People in dorsal vagal shutdown stop showing up, stop eating, stop asking for help.
How it appears: Flatness, withdrawal, or seeming absent. Moves slowly or with effort. Hard to engage. May appear depressed or unmotivated, but underneath is disconnection, not sadness. Can't meet your eyes. Very quiet. May collapse physically or emotionally. Says things like "What's the point?" or "I can't."
Why This Matters for Community
Every interaction in your community happens within these states. When someone is in sympathetic charge, they can't truly listen or collaborate — they're protecting themselves. When someone is in dorsal shutdown, they're inaccessible. When people are in ventral vagal safety, the whole quality of engagement changes.
Your job as a leader is not to eliminate these states (they're natural), but to:
Recognize which state someone is in — their body language tells you
Notice patterns — does this person stay chronically activated? Do they withdraw? Is there a trigger?
Help them move toward ventral vagal when possible, through your presence and environment
Know when someone needs more help — when their nervous system is stuck
Recognizing Nervous System States in Your Community
Learn to read the body. Over time, you'll see patterns others miss.
In Meetings and Gatherings
Someone arrives with shoulders up, jaw clenched, breathing shallow — they're in sympathetic. They may be quick to conflict or dismissal.
Someone sits slumped, disconnected, hard to engage — possibly dorsal shutdown. They may need a different kind of support than the meeting offers.
Someone who sits forward, makes eye contact, speaks thoughtfully, listens deeply — ventral vagal. They're available for the work.
What to do: Notice it. Don't pathologize it. A person in sympathetic activation is not "bad" — they're protecting themselves. A person in shutdown is not "lazy" — they're overwhelmed. Your awareness changes how you respond.
In Conflict
High conflict often means both people are in sympathetic activation — reactive, intense, unable to really hear each other. De-escalation means helping nervous systems settle.
Someone goes silent or withdrawn during conflict — they've moved to dorsal shutdown. They're not being evasive; they're overwhelmed.
Someone stays calm and curious even in disagreement — they're holding ventral vagal, and that's a gift to the group.
In Crisis or Loss
Acute trauma can swing someone between all three states rapidly.
Some people go into sympathetic (busy, organizing, angry) as a way to not feel.
Others collapse (shutdown) immediately.
Recovery happens slowly, with nervous system support, not just practical help.
Over Time (Chronic Patterns)
Someone always "on edge" — chronic sympathetic activation, likely from ongoing stress or past trauma
Someone withdrawing, harder to reach over months — dorsal shutdown, a sign of being overwhelmed
Someone who seems to move fluidly between states, grounded — a regulated nervous system, resilience
Grounding and Regulation: Simple Tools
Grounding techniques help move a dysregulated nervous system toward ventral vagal safety. These are simple enough that any community member can offer them. But they're not one-size-fits-all — what helps one person may destabilize another.
Breath
The breath is the bridge between conscious and autonomic. You can't consciously control your heart rate, but you can control your breath, and it will calm everything downstream.
Belly breathing (diaphragmatic breathing):
Slow, deep breaths that move the belly (not the chest)
Breathing in for a count of 4, out for a count of 5 or 6
The exhale activates the parasympathetic nervous system (the calming response)
Anyone can do this; it's foundational
When it works: Someone in sympathetic activation, elevated in stress, needing to shift state.
When it can backfire: For some trauma survivors, focusing on breath or "letting go" can trigger dissociation or deeper panic if it was part of their trauma (suffocation, strangling, etc.). Ask first: "Is it okay if we focus on breathing together?" If hesitation, try something else.
Physical Contact with Environment
Grounding the nervous system through sensation — feeling the earth, the chair, the wall.
Simple grounding techniques:
Feet on the ground: take off shoes, feel grass or earth
Hand on a tree or rock: feel the solidity of something large and old
Cold water on the face or wrists: the dive reflex (mammals have this) can calm a racing heart
Holding a weighted object: the proprioceptive feedback can be settling
Pressing hands together hard: feel the pressure and strength in your own body
When it works: Someone who needs to come back to their body and present moment. Good for dissociation or overwhelm.
When it can backfire: For survivors of physical assault or restraint, physical pressure or contact might trigger. Offer choice and consent: "Would it help to feel something solid, like this tree?" Let them choose.
Sensory Anchoring
Using senses to orient to the present and safety.
Grounding through senses:
Sight: Look around and name 5 things you see. Pick objects that feel grounding or beautiful.
Sound: Listen for 3 sounds. What do you hear? (This anchors to present moment.)
Smell: A familiar scent — cedar, sage, pine, someone's cologne, bread baking — can be powerfully regulating.
Touch: Feel different textures (smooth stone, rough bark, soft fabric). What do you notice?
Taste: Salty, sour, or sweet can wake up the present (a pickle, a lemon, a mint leaf).
When it works: Anxiety, dissociation, overthinking. Brings someone into present sensation.
When it can backfire: If someone has trauma associated with a particular sense (smell of cologne tied to assault, sound of a siren to violence), that sense can trigger rather than ground. Ask: "What senses feel safe to you right now?"
Movement
The body holds stress as tension. Movement is how you metabolize threat responses.
Gentle movement:
Walking (especially barefoot on earth)
Stretching, especially the shoulders and chest
Shaking the limbs (literally tremoring) — mammals do this naturally after escaping threat
Swaying or gentle rocking
Dance or any movement that feels good
Slow tai chi or qigong movements
Why it works: Movement completes the survival response cycle. In the wild, an animal escapes the predator and shakes to discharge the adrenaline. Modern humans stay tense because we suppress this. Movement finishes what the nervous system started.
When it works: Chronic tension, activation, the feeling of being "stuck" in sympathetic.
When it can backfire: Rarely, though intense exercise can be retraumatizing if it was used as punishment. Gentle, self-directed movement is usually safe.
Co-Regulation: Your Presence as Nervous System Support
This is perhaps the most powerful tool: your own regulated nervous system helps regulate theirs.
When someone in your community is dysregulated, and you can stay calm, present, and grounded, something happens at a nervous system level. Your vagus nerve signals safety to their vagus nerve. It's not magic — it's biology.
What co-regulation looks like:
Slow, steady presence (no rushing or intensity)
Relaxed face and open posture
Calm tone of voice (pitch matters more than words)
Willingness to be quiet with someone
Eye contact that's warm, not intense
Patience with their dysregulation
Why it works: Your nervous system is contagious. When you're calm, you're teaching their nervous system that safety is possible. This is how babies regulate (through their caregivers' nervous systems) and how humans of all ages do it.
How to offer it: You don't have to say much. Sit with someone who is panicking, breathe slowly, keep your voice soft and steady. Say things like "I'm here. You're safe. Your body is doing what it's supposed to do." Presence is the medicine.
The limits: Co-regulation works for activation, but someone in deep shutdown may need more — they may need professional support or time in a safe container with consistent co-regulation.
The Body in Community: Unexamined Patterns
Most intentional communities and extended families have never explicitly discussed how physical space, touch, food, rest, and shared presence affect nervous system health. But the body is always communicating.
Physical Space and Safety
How nervous systems read space:
Openness vs. containment: A room with high ceilings feels different (more sympathetic, more activation) than a room with low ceilings (more contained, safer for some). Neither is bad; they're just different.
Light: Bright, harsh light can activate. Soft, warm light calms. Windows to the outside ground nervous systems. Closed rooms can feel claustrophobic or intimate, depending on other factors.
Sound: Quiet or soft background sound helps the nervous system relax. Constant noise or unpredictable loud sounds keep people vigilant.
Temperature: Being cold activates the nervous system slightly (shivering is a sympathetic response). Being warm and comfortable allows relaxation.
Cleanliness and order: Chaos signals danger to the nervous system. A reasonably clean, organized space signals that someone is caring for it, which is calming.
Presence of others: Crowding can be activating. Having space to move, even in a room with many people, helps.
What to do: Walk your community space with this in mind. Where do people naturally gather? Where do they seem to relax? Where is someone always tense? Small changes (softer lighting, better temperature control, clearing clutter) can shift nervous system states.
Shared Meals
Food is somatic and communal. The ritual of eating together, the sensory experience of it, affects nervous system regulation.
Why shared meals matter:
Eating activates the parasympathetic nervous system (rest and digest). It's hard to be in fight/flight while actually eating.
The smell of food cooking signals safety and care.
The rhythm of meals gives structure and predictability, which regulates nervous systems.
Cultural food connects people to belonging and history.
What to watch:
Who eats together, and who eats alone? Isolation during meals is a sign of disconnection.
Is eating rushed and functional, or slow and relational?
Are there unexamined hierarchies (who serves, who eats first, who is fed)?
Does everyone have access to food that feels safe and nourishing to them?
Is there permission to eat what you need, or is food controlled?
What to tend:
Create regular, predictable meal times
Make meals communal where possible — even simple food eaten together is powerful
Notice if someone is not eating or eating in isolation; it's a sign something's off
Honor different food needs and cultural practices around food
The act of preparing food together is regulating for nervous systems
Touch in Community
Touch is deeply somatic and deeply complicated. It's also essential — humans need appropriate touch to thrive. But touch without consent is violation.
The complexity:
Touch is healing: Appropriate touch (hand on shoulder, holding hands, a hug) can soothe a dysregulated nervous system. Humans deprived of touch suffer.
Touch is cultural: Different cultures have different norms. What's a warm greeting in one culture is invasive in another.
Touch is traumatic: For survivors of physical or sexual assault, unwanted touch can trigger trauma responses. Even well-meaning touch can harm.
Touch can be coercive: "Just let me hug you" or touch that ignores someone's stated boundary is not care — it's violation.
What to build:
Clear consent culture: Ask before touching. "Is a hug okay?" or "Can I put my hand on your shoulder?" This becomes normal and natural, not awkward.
Diverse touch norms: Some people hug, some handshake, some bow, some wave. All are valid. Honor them.
No forced touch: If someone says no to a hug, don't push. Their boundary is information — perhaps they're activated or have trauma. Respect it.
Recognition of trauma: Create space where people can be clear about their touch needs without having to explain or justify.
Non-sexual, nurturing touch: Shoulder massage, hand-holding, a hand on someone's back — these can be powerfully calming if offered and received with full consent.
What to watch:
Is there anyone who seems uncomfortable with community touch norms but is pressured anyway?
Are some people's boundaries around touch respected and others' ignored?
Is there space for people who need different things?
Somatic Signals Worth Attending To
Sometimes what someone's body is saying matters more than what their words are saying. Learn to notice.
Chronic Physical Complaints With No Clear Cause
Back pain that appears when conflict is high
Headaches that come with stress cycles
Stomach issues when someone is anxious
Fatigue that doesn't match sleep or activity
New or worsening pain during difficult periods
What it means: The body is signaling that something is not okay. This isn't imaginary — the mind-body connection is real. Stress literally creates muscle tension, inflammation, and pain.
What to do: Don't dismiss it as "just stress." Ask: "I notice you've had more pain lately. Is something happening that's hard?" Sometimes naming the connection helps. Sometimes the person needs actual medical attention. Sometimes they need to reduce their stress load, and the body is demanding it.
How Someone Holds Their Body During Conflict or Difficulty
Someone who shrinks or closes inward — likely in sympathetic shutdown or shame
Someone who becomes rigid or inflated — likely in defensive sympathetic activation
Someone whose breathing becomes shallow or held — a sign of dysregulation
Someone who can't make eye contact or look away — activation or trauma response
Someone whose face goes blank — dissociation or emotional flooding
What it means: The body reveals what someone can't say or doesn't know how to say.
What to do: Sometimes naming it helps: "I notice you're holding a lot right now. Are you okay?" Other times, slowing down helps — moving the conversation or meeting to a slower pace gives the nervous system time to settle.
What it means: The body and behavior are sending a distress signal. This person's nervous system is in shutdown or severe activation, and they're withdrawing.
What to do: Don't wait for them to ask for help. Reach out with low pressure: "I've noticed you haven't been around. I miss you. Is there something going on?" Sometimes the barrier is activation (they feel defensive or unsafe) and sometimes it's shutdown (they can't reach out). Both need a bridge from you.
Changes in Sleep, Appetite, or Energy
Someone suddenly sleeping too much or too little
Loss of appetite or sudden changes in eating
Persistent fatigue despite rest
Hyperactivity or inability to settle
What it means: The autonomic nervous system is dysregulated. Sleep and appetite are autonomic functions — when they go sideways, the nervous system is stuck.
What to do: These are signs to pay attention. Ask gentle questions. Suggest (not demand) help: "I've noticed a change. Would you be open to talking about it?" Sometimes professional support is needed. Sometimes the person needs their stress load reduced or their environment adjusted.
Rest and Rhythm: The Body's Needs vs. Capitalism's Demands
One of the greatest assaults on nervous system health in at-risk communities is the pressure to keep producing, keep pushing, keep showing up, regardless of capacity or need. The body has needs for rest, rhythm, and recovery that we've learned to override.
Why Rest Is Not Laziness
Rest is a physiological need. When the nervous system is in sympathetic activation or chronic stress, it needs rest to recover. This is not optional.
Sleep is when the nervous system consolidates safety signals and processes threat
Downtime is when the body repairs itself
Rhythm (predictable cycles of activity and rest) regulates the nervous system
Burnout is a nervous system injury, not a character flaw
What's often missed: In communities under economic pressure, rest is seen as a luxury. But people who don't rest eventually break. The cost is higher.
Community Rhythms That Support the Nervous System
What to consider:
Predictable gathering times: Knowing when the community gathers helps the nervous system anticipate and prepare. Chaos and uncertainty keep people in sympathetic activation.
Time for rest, not just productivity: If the community is always in crisis mode or task mode, the nervous system never gets to settle.
Seasonal rhythms: Many cultures understood this — times of intensity and times of rest, aligned with seasons. Modern life has flattened this.
Personal rest needs honored: Some people need more sleep, more solitude, more downtime. This is not a personal failing; it's their nervous system's requirement.
Recovery from crisis: When something hard happens (loss, conflict, external stress), the community needs a recovery period, not immediate return to normal.
Capitalism's Impact on Nervous System Health
This is specific to at-risk communities: the logic of capitalism — always producing, always available, always hustling, scarcity-driven urgency — is a nervous system assault.
Communities under economic pressure stay in sympathetic activation. Threat is real.
The pressure to be "productive" or "efficient" overrides the body's needs.
Rest becomes impossible because the pressure is constant.
Burnout, illness, and breakdown follow.
What leadership can do:
Name this explicitly: "The outside world wants us to stay in crisis mode. We can choose differently here."
Create actual rest time, not just time squeezed between tasks
Question urgency: "Does this actually need to happen right now, or are we in capitalist scarcity thinking?"
Model rest: If you as a leader can't rest, others won't either
Protect people's capacity: Don't ask people to give more than they have
Build in recovery time after intensity
When to Refer: Recognizing the Limits
You are not a therapist. This is essential. There are patterns and depths that require clinical support. Knowing when to refer is part of being responsible.
Signs Someone Needs Professional Somatic Support
Refer to somatic therapy (Somatic Experiencing, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, EMDR, Somatic Therapy, or trauma-informed therapy) when:
Trauma is active: Someone is having flashbacks, intense triggering, intrusive memories, or unable to function in daily life
PTSD symptoms: Nightmares, hypervigilance, severe dissociation, or a nervous system stuck in a state it can't exit
Repeated dysregulation: Someone whose nervous system seems unable to settle, even with co-regulation and grounding
Embodied trauma: Pain, illness, or bodily symptoms with no medical explanation and a trauma history
Dissociation: Someone frequently or persistently disconnected from their body or present moment
Severe activation: Someone in chronic sympathetic activation who can't calm down, feels constantly on edge
Somatic panic or anxiety: Physical symptoms that overwhelm (racing heart, inability to breathe, sense of impending death)
Be direct and compassionate: "I care about you, and I think you'd benefit from working with a somatic therapist. This is beyond what I can support."
Make it practical: Help find resources, therapists, funding if possible. Barrier-removal is care.
Normalize it: "Many people benefit from this. It's not a sign of weakness."
Don't make it conditional: Don't tie referral to threats or conditions. "You need therapy or you're out" is not helpful. It's: "I think this would help. Here's how to access it."
Follow up: Check in later. Did they go? What was their experience?
Resources to Know
Different modalities have different focus:
Somatic Experiencing (SE): Trauma held in the nervous system; helps complete survival responses
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy: How trauma lives in the body; body-based processing
EMDR: Trauma processing using bilateral stimulation; evidence-based for PTSD
Somatics and dance/movement therapy: Body-based expression and release
Trauma-informed therapy: Any modality practiced with trauma understanding
Acupuncture/Traditional medicine: Sometimes helpful for pain and regulation, depending on the person
Know what's available in your region. Know what's affordable or free. Be ready with options.
What You Can Still Offer
Even when someone needs professional support, you're still valuable:
Stability and consistency: Showing up, being reliable, holding the person as part of community
Practical support: Meals, help with tasks, creating safety
Non-clinical presence: You're not their therapist, but you can still be a regulating, caring presence
Accountability to boundaries: Professional support has clear boundaries; honor that
Integration support: Help them apply what they're learning to community life
Bringing This Into Your Community: Practical Steps
1. Start With Yourself
Your own nervous system is your first tool. Before you can help others:
Notice your own states: When are you activated? When do you go into shutdown? What helps you regulate?
Build your own practice: Grounding, breath, movement — these aren't just for others
Know your triggers: What situations activate your nervous system? This will tell you about your community's nervous system (we often have similar triggers)
Develop your capacity to stay calm: This is learnable. Meditation, breathwork, somatic practice — these build your regulatory capacity
2. Create Language
Talk about this openly with your community. Name the nervous system:
"It sounds like you're in activation right now. Would grounding help?"
"We're all in sympathetic charge from that conflict. Let's slow down."
"I notice I'm in shutdown and need some downtime. I'll be back."
Normalizing this language reduces shame and stigma. It becomes obvious that this is human physiology, not failure.
3. Build Structural Support
Create physical spaces where people feel safe (good lighting, temperature, cleanliness, quiet options)
Develop touch norms that honor consent and difference
Create grounding practices that anyone can offer (walking together, breathing together, sitting quietly)
4. Watch and Listen
Pay attention to the somatic signals in your community:
Who is isolated? Who is hyperactive? Who seems stuck?
What situations dysregulate people?
What helps people settle?
Where is there chronic tension or unresolved activation?
Your observations are data. They tell you what's not working.
5. Intervene With Presence, Not Force
When someone is dysregulated:
Offer, don't demand: "Would it help to go for a walk?"
Stay calm: Your regulation supports theirs
Give choices: "We could breathe together, go outside, or sit quietly. What would help?"
Follow their lead: If they say no, don't push
6. Know When to Refer
Build your referral network. Know who in your region does somatic therapy, trauma support, mental health care. Have resources ready. Be comfortable suggesting professional support.
Integration With Louisoix
This skill supports the broader Louisoix framework for community care. While Louisoix integrates multiple dimensions of community health, somatic approaches grounds that work in nervous system reality:
Conflict resolution works better when people are regulated enough to listen
Decision-making is clearer when the nervous system is not in emergency mode
Onboarding and belonging are somatic experiences — people feel safe or unsafe in their bodies, not just intellectually
Resource sharing is easier when the nervous system of scarcity (sympathetic activation) is not driving every decision
Care practices are more effective when grounded in body awareness
Invoke this skill alongside Louisoix when community challenges have a somatic dimension — which is most of them.
Core Principles
Remember these as you work:
Bodies are not optional — they're central to how humans function and heal
Dysregulation is not failure — it's a nervous system response to real conditions
You can't think your way out — nervous system regulation requires working with the body, not just the mind
Presence is powerful — a calm, grounded human presence can shift another's nervous system
Consent is foundational — in touch, in grounding practices, in referrals
You're not a therapist — you're a community leader who understands the somatic dimension
Rest is medicine — not a luxury, not laziness
Small shifts matter — changes in how your community gathers, eats, touches, and rests compound over time
References and Further Learning
If you want to deepen your understanding:
Polyvagal Theory: Stephen Porges's foundational work on the vagus nerve and nervous system states (complex, worth reading)
The Body Keeps the Score: Bessel van der Kolk — accessible overview of trauma and the body
Trauma and Recovery: Judith Herman — foundational trauma theory
Somatic Experiencing: Peter Levine's approach to completing survival responses through the body
Waking the Tiger: Peter Levine — practical approaches to releasing trauma from the body
What Happened to You?: Bruce Perry and Oprah Winfrey — trauma-informed understanding (very accessible)
Embodied Healing: Various somatic therapists have written accessible guides
Community Care Practices: Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha's Care Work — somatic justice grounded in disability justice
Using This Skill
Alone or with Louisoix:
Use this skill directly when you're exploring somatic approaches to a community challenge
Invoke it within Louisoix when the integrating skill needs to ground decisions or support in body awareness
Return to it when community members are dysregulated, isolated, or disconnected
Reference it when building or shifting community practices around space, touch, food, and rest
In conversation:
"Let's use the somatic approaches skill to understand what's happening in the body in this situation."
"I need somatic support for this community challenge."
"How would somatic approaches help us think about this?"
This skill was created for stewards and leaders of communities of care — people leading without formal authority in at-risk communities where every tool matters. Trust your body. Trust the body of your community. That wisdom is real.