The Difference Between Talk Therapy and Somatic Therapy
Maybe you've done therapy before. Maybe you've done a lot of it. You've understood your patterns, traced them back to where they came from. You know why you do what you do. And you're still stuck.
If that sounds familiar, you haven't failed therapy. You may have just hit its ceiling.
Talk therapy is powerful — but insight is a map, and knowing the map is not the same as being able to move. Your nervous system doesn't speak the language of logic. It speaks the language of sensation. And that's exactly where somatic therapy works.
Therapy for Creative Professionals in NYC:
A ceramics class was split into two groups — one graded on quantity, one on perfection. At the end of the semester, the quantity group had made more work and better work. The quality group? Many didn't finish. Some turned nothing in at all.
Perfectionism doesn't just diminish creative work. It stops it entirely. And after 20 years as a therapist working with creative professionals, I can tell you: that paralysis isn't a discipline problem or a thinking problem. It's a nervous system problem. And that distinction changes everything about how to address it.
How Perfectionism Lives in Your Nervous System
Perfectionism isn't about being detail-oriented or having high standards. It's a survival strategy — and once you understand what it's doing to your nervous system, the exhaustion finally makes sense.
For many perfectionists, the body is running a chronic threat response: always braced, always vigilant, never quite able to settle. The internal signal that says that's enough, you can stop never makes it through. And when something goes wrong — or feels like it has — the system doesn't just activate. It can collapse entirely.
This is perfectionism as a nervous system pattern. And thinking your way out of it has limits.
March Newsletter
When I was 14, a friend read my writing and told me it wasn't particularly interesting, entertaining, or well written. That was the end of my editorial career — for nearly 30 years.
The thing is, I didn't remember where the belief came from. I just stated it as fact: I'm not a good writer. It wasn't a thought I was having. It was a route my body already knew.
This is why insight alone so rarely creates change. We can know something is a limiting belief and still feel it as truth. The body needs to experience a new possibility — to sense that it's safe — before it will let us act differently. Cognition follows sensation, not the other way around.
So: think of something you've told yourself you can't do. Don't just think it — locate it. Where do you feel that certainty in your body?
Now ask yourself: is that a fact, or is it a very old feeling?
When Someone You Love Says You Hurt Them:
When someone we love tells us we hurt them, our nervous system often reacts with shame and defensiveness before our rational brain can catch up. This visceral response isn't a character flaw; it's neurobiology. Understanding what happens in our bodies during relationship ruptures is the first step toward repair.
Coupling Dynamics:
Perfectly Imperfect:

