The other day, I was doing some research for my website and randomly came across a Reddit thread that made me pause. Someone asked:
โIs somatic yoga a specific style, or more of a teaching approach?โ
That simple question made me realize something. For years, Iโve been teaching yoga in a way that blends movement, mindfulness, emotions, and body awareness. I guide my students to notice how they feelโnot how they look. I donโt focus much on perfect poses. Instead, I offer gentle suggestions and let people move in a way that feels right for them.
Itโs about creating space and trusting the body to speak.
And apparentlyโฆ thatโs what somatic yoga is.
The funny part? I didnโt even know there was a name for what Iโve been doing. I wasnโt calling myself a โsomatic yoga teacher.โ But now I see that, in my own way, I already am.
- Soโฆ What is somatic yoga?
- Is it branding? Is it legal?
- My journey into the somatic space (without realizing it)
- Final thoughts: A somatic approach to yoga is a return to wholeness
Soโฆ What is somatic yoga?
So what exactly is somatic yoga?
Itโs not a set style like Hatha, Vinyasa or Ashtanga. Itโs more like a way of teachingโan approach that helps people connect with how they feel on the inside and how they move through space.
In somatic yoga, we slow things down. We stop pushing. We stop performing.
Instead, we listen. To the breath, to sensation, and to emotion. We learn to trust what the body needs in each moment.
Yoga Journal said it well:
โA somatic yoga practice is more intuitive than a standard yoga class, which often asks you to move mechanicallyโflex this way, stretch that way, hold, push.โ
In other words, itโs not about nailing a pose. Itโs about tuning in. Being present. And letting the practice meet you where you are.
Is it branding? Is it legal?
This is where things get a little tricky.
Right now, thereโs no official โSomatic Yogaโ certification through Yoga Alliance. Somatic therapy is its own kind of training, and yoga has its own world of rules and guidelines. Sometimes they overlap, but often they donโt.
That got me wondering:
Can I even use the word โsomaticโ on my website or in my class descriptions?
Iโm still researching the legalities and trademarks surrounding this word. If you have any insight, please leave a comment. I have come across some sources that suggest itโs fair use as long as itโs not misrepresented as a therapy or specific licensed modality. Others argue itโs become a marketing buzzword. And honestly? It can be bothโa meaningful healing practice and a term thatโs occasionally overused or misunderstood.
What truly matters to me is clarity, integrity, and safety. While Iโm not claiming to be a somatic therapist, I do believe in honoring the bodyโs natural wisdom, which is a big part of living a holistic lifestyle. As a yoga teacher, I guide others through a somatic lensโwith deep respect for the nervous system, trauma recovery, and the inner signals that help us heal. Ultimately, itโs not about trends or titles. Instead, itโs about staying honest, being clear in our intentions, and creating safe, supportive spaces where people can reconnect with themselves.
My journey into the somatic space (without realizing it)

When I became a 500-hour yoga teacher, I didnโt stop there. I felt called to go deeperโinto trauma-informed yoga, grief and emotional body work, Ayurveda, and movement therapy. It wasnโt just techniques I was learning; I was actually healing myself in the process. In mind, body, and spiritual growth.
Years of living with chronic illness, unprocessed emotions, identity shifts, and deep inner work shaped how I showed upโnot just for myself, but for my students too.
As time went on, my classes naturally began to change. They became less rigid and more intuitive. I started weaving in emotional check-ins, breath-led stretches, spontaneous movement, and stillness that didnโt need to be rushed or filled. There was more room for feeling and being.
Slowly, students started sharing how they felt safe, seen, and truly at home in their bodies. Thatโs when it clickedโฆ
This is somatic yoga.
And I didnโt need a special certificate to tell me I was already teaching it from the heart.
Final thoughts: A somatic approach to yoga is a return to wholeness
You might not always see โSomatic Yogaโ listed on a studio scheduleโbut that doesnโt mean it isnโt happening.
In fact, if you look a little closer, youโll find teachers creating spaces that feel different. These are the classes where the body, emotions, intuition, and lived experiences are all welcomed. Instead of chasing perfect alignment, the focus is on how the practice feelsโnot how it looks.
Thatโs the beauty of it. Returning to wholeness is holistic living. And honestly, thatโs what somatic yoga is all about.
So, even though I didnโt always have the words for it, I now understand:
Yes, I am a somatic yoga teacher.
And maybeโฆ you are too.
If this way of teaching speaks to you, or if youโre wondering how to use somatic language in your yoga or wellness work, Iโd love to hear from you.
Letโs connect! Keep this conversation going, keep learning from one another, and continue expanding what yoga can beโboth on and off the mat.