Somatic yoga approaches the skeletal system not as a fixed structural framework but as a living, sensing, adaptive system. Bones provide stability and leverage, but they also transmit force, respond to load, and shape the body’s kinesthetic experience. From a somatic perspective, skeletal alignment is explored through internal sensing, functional movement patterns, and the relationship between structure and emotional tone.
- Functional Joint Movements
In somatics, joints are understood not merely as mechanical hinges but as sensory junctions where movement, stability, and neural feedback converge.
Principles
- Joints thrive on smooth, low-effort motion (pandiculation rather than stretching).
- Sensory awareness of joint space reduces unnecessary muscular guarding.
- Movement quality (ease, fluidity) is more important than range. Somatic View of Key Joints
- Shoulders: Rather than forcing ROM, somatics focuses on the scapulohumeral rhythm—how the shoulder blade, collarbone, spine, and arm collaborate.
- Hips: Somatic practice emphasizes release of habitual hip flexor/rotator contractions that restrict gait and sitting posture.
- Knees: Viewed as tracking joints influenced by foot, hip, and pelvis patterns—not isolated hinges.
- Spine/vertebral joints: Movements explore segmental articulation instead of block-style bending. Functional Patterns Addressed
- Flexion/extension through the kinetic chain
- Rotational spirals
- Lateral shifting without collapsing
- Weight transfer and grounding
Somatic work recognizes that joints often lose mobility not because of the joint itself but because of chronically contracted muscles in the sensory-motor loop.
- Spinal Curves & Neutral Spine
Somatically, the spine is understood as a dynamic, breathing column rather than a rigid vertical rod. Natural Spinal Curves
- Cervical lordosis
- Thoracic kyphosis
- Lumbar lordosis
- Sacral curve
Instead of idealizing a “perfect posture,” somatics teaches that these curves should be alive and responsive. The curves change during breathing, walking, sitting, and emotional expression.
Neutral Spine Through a Somatic Lens
Neutral spine is not a fixed position but a felt sense of:
- Balanced muscular tone
- Unrestricted diaphragmatic movement
- Even distribution of load across vertebrae
- Minimal bracing or over-correction
Somatic practice helps students release habitual holding patterns (e.g., tucked pelvis, flared ribs, rigid thoracic spine) so the spine can self-organize into neutral.
Benefits
- Efficient force transfer
- Reduced compressive load
- Enhanced breath efficiency
- Improved proprioceptive feedback
- Emotional regulation (since the spine influences vagal tone)
- Pelvic Orientation and Movement
The pelvis is the central structure connecting the upper and lower body. Somatically, its orientation is essential for restoring functional movement.
Types of Pelvic Tilt
- Anterior tilt
- Posterior tilt
- Lateral tilt
- Rotation
But rather than teaching these anatomically alone, somatics focuses on the habitual neuromuscular patterns that create them.
Key Somatic Concepts
- The pelvis moves with the spine—not separately.
- Hip joints glide smoothly when pelvic muscles are not braced.
- The diaphragm, psoas, and pelvic floor form a functional unit: the “core cylinder.” Somatic Assessment of Pelvic Patterns
- Pelvis locked in anterior tilt due to chronic back extensor contraction.
- Posterior tilt caused by chronically contracted hamstrings/abdominals.
- Asymmetrical tilts from one-sided habits (carrying bags, standing on one leg). Movement Practices
- Pelvic clocks
- Somatic cat-cow with emphasis on sensing
- Slow hip joint rotations
- Breath-led pelvic ripple
Restoring pelvic mobility also restores a sense of grounding, safety, and fluidity.
- Relationship Between Posture and Emotional Tone
Somatics recognizes posture as an embodied expression of one’s emotional history, safety state, and nervous system patterns.
Key Concepts
- Posture is not merely mechanical; it reflects felt experience.
- Chronic emotional states create habitual muscular patterns (e.g., fear → tight psoas, sadness →
collapsed chest).
- The nervous system uses posture as a protective strategy. Common Postural–Emotional Patterns
- Slumped chest + forward head → withdrawal, fatigue, sadness
- Lifted chest + rigid spine → vigilance, control, hyper-arousal
- Tucked pelvis + locked knees → guarding, bracing, fear
- Slow, fluid posture → calm parasympathetic tone
Somatic Inquiry Students are guided to:
- Sense emotional responses to structural alignment.
- Notice how breath changes with posture.
- Uncouple posture from old emotional reflexes.
- Develop agency in choosing a posture that supports well-being. Why This Matters
- Changing posture alters autonomic state.
- Emotional resilience improves as muscular armor softens.
- Movement becomes more expressive, authentic, and integrated.