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When we speak about trauma and the body, one name immediately comes to mind: Pat Ogden.
For decades, she has shaped the field of somatic trauma therapy. As the creator of Sensorimotor Psychotherapy, she has trained therapists worldwide to work with trauma not as a text to be read, but as lived experience — expressed through the body, nervous system, and relational context.
Her approach is rigorous yet humane, grounded in neuroscience, attachment theory, and clinical wisdom. She blends clear clinical structure with deep respect for the body’s intelligence — and she teaches in a way that honors both clinical precision and human complexity.
We know how delicate embodied trauma work can be. Working with somatic activation, implicit defensive responses, and preverbal adaptation requires nuance, pacing, and relational safety.
For a long time, we wanted to offer a program that meets the concrete needs of clinicians: deep, structured, and directly applicable in practice.
When Pat agreed to record this program, we knew it would offer something rare: depth without prescription, structure without rigidity.
After working with her materials, one thing becomes clear:
The body is not the problem.
It is part of the solution.
— Florence.
P.S. When I first began working with trauma, I wish I had understood how central the body truly is. This program brings together what many of us learned only slowly over years into one coherent clinical framework.
