top of page

Somatic Exercises: When the Body Knows What the Mind Hasn’t Admitted

  • Writer: John Winston
    John Winston
  • Jun 25
  • 4 min read

There’s a moment many of us are familiar with yet struggle to describe. A gut feeling. A sudden tightness before walking into a room. A sense of fatigue that doesn’t match the training load. Nothing’s wrong on paper, but something still feels off.


This isn't a weakness. It’s wisdom. The body often registers the truth before the mind is willing to, and it does so through what neuroscience calls interoception—our internal sense of what’s happening inside us.


Over time, learning to read that somatic signal becomes one of the most important performance skills we have. Not just to avoid burnout, but to align with clarity, purpose, and long-term consistency.

Silhouette of a person with a glowing smaller figure inside, featuring a target on the chest. Warm gradient background, conveying focus.

Beyond Instinct: The Science of Internal Sensation


The somatic compass isn’t mystical. It’s mechanical. The brain and body are in constant communication through a feedback loop of nerves, hormones, and electrical impulses. At the center of this is the interoceptive network, which includes the insula, anterior cingulate cortex, and brainstem—all areas that process signals like heart rate, breathing, tension, and gut activity.


These aren’t just background systems. They shape emotion, decision-making, and awareness. When our heart skips at a moment of risk or our stomach churns before a choice, we’re not imagining it. We’re receiving live biological input.


In fact, many researchers now believe interoception forms the foundation of emotional intelligence. The more attuned we are to our body’s signals, the faster we can identify subtle stress, dissonance, or overexertion before it becomes a full-blown derailment.


The Discomfort of Dissonance


People often feel tension not because they’re doing something hard, but because they’re doing something misaligned. That misalignment might be subtle, such as a project we’ve outgrown, a relationship that drains more than supports, or a goal that no longer excites us.


The mind, especially one trained to push through, will rationalize. “I just need to focus more.” “I’m being soft.” “Other people would kill for this opportunity.” Meanwhile, the body registers the truth. Posture shifts. Breathing shortens. Workouts feel heavier than usual.


This is dissonance, and it matters because the nervous system doesn’t compartmentalize. The same system that regulates our stress response is regulating our movement, our digestion, and our recovery. When one area is out of sync, the rest eventually feel it.


Over time, this creates what many high performers describe as a “low hum of resistance.” It’s not quite burnout but definitely not flow either. Days start to feel full of friction. The body isn’t broken. It’s just not aligned.


Suppression Has a Cost


Most high performers are rewarded for ignoring internal signals. Push through. Stay focused. Keep moving. While this mindset has value in the short term, long-term suppression carries consequences.


When somatic cues are ignored repeatedly, the interoceptive system becomes dull. People lose sensitivity to early warning signs. Fatigue gets mislabeled as laziness. Anxiety gets buried under busyness. Even pleasure– joy, excitement, contentment– can start to feel muted.


This isn’t just psychological. Studies show that poor interoceptive awareness is linked with dysregulated stress responses, slower recovery, increased injury risk, and higher rates of emotional exhaustion.


The body doesn’t stop talking. We just get worse at listening.


When Insight Arrives in the Body First


Some of the most critical decisions in life, such as leaving a team, pivoting a business, or setting a boundary, don’t begin with clarity. They begin with discomfort. Something begins to feel heavy, or something that used to excite us now seems to be a drain on our energy.


Often, by the time the mind can articulate what’s wrong, the body has been signaling it for weeks. This is not a flaw in logic. It’s an advantage of evolution. The somatic system processes information faster than conscious reasoning. It’s not that the body is always right, but it’s often first.


This is why learning to feel, without immediately fixing, can be a strategic tool. A tight chest doesn’t always mean danger, but it might mean something’s demanding our attention. Pausing long enough to feel it without judgment can unlock insights that no spreadsheet or strategy session ever will.


Somatic Exercises and Recalibrating the Compass


The good news is that the somatic compass is trainable. Just as strength and mobility can be improved through repetition so can sensitivity to internal signals through somatic exercises.


One of the most effective methods is interoceptive training, which is guided attention to physical sensations without trying to change them. This could look like simply noticing breath, heartbeat, or tension patterns for a few minutes a day. Studies show this practice increases activity in the insula, improves emotional regulation, and sharpens decision-making under stress.


Another tool is journaling physical states alongside emotions. Instead of just logging what happened in a day, we log how our body responded as well. Over time, this builds pattern recognition. We begin to see when certain situations, people, or habits consistently shift us out of balance. This gives us something rare: leverage.


The goal isn’t hypervigilance. It’s fluency. We learn to speak the body’s language so it doesn’t have to scream to get our attention.


Listening as a Competitive Edge


In the world of performance, silence is often undervalued, but inside that silence lives a map. A map drawn not in thoughts or plans but in sensations. When we learn to follow that map, not blindly but curiously, we move differently. We respond faster. We waste less energy second-guessing.


The somatic compass doesn’t tell us what to do. It tells us when something matters. It brings friction to the surface so we can make decisions before breakdowns happen.

In a world that moves fast and rewards output, this ability to feel is not just resilience. It’s intelligence.


References


  1. Craig, A. D. (2002). How do you feel? Interoception: the sense of the physiological condition of the body. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 3(8), 655–666.

  2. Critchley, H. D., Wiens, S., Rotshtein, P., Öhman, A., & Dolan, R. J. (2004). Neural systems supporting interoceptive awareness. Nature Neuroscience, 7(2), 189–195.

  3. Mehling, W. E., Price, C., Daubenmier, J. J., Acree, M., Bartmess, E., & Stewart, A. (2012). The Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA). PLoS ONE, 7(11), e48230.

  4. Füstös, J., Gramann, K., Herbert, B. M., & Pollatos, O. (2013). On the embodiment of emotion regulation: Interoceptive awareness facilitates reappraisal. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 8(8), 911–917.

  5. Schandry, R. (1981). Heartbeat perception and emotional experience. Psychophysiology, 18(4), 483–488.


 
 
bottom of page