Well+Being Holistic Mental Health
Emotional Health & Wellness Tips From The Therapy Couch And Other Places
The information provided on this website is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a trusted qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical or mental health-related concerns.
Heal the Mind Through the Body with Somatic Therapy: Insights from a NYC Therapist
In New York City, the fast pace of life can leave both mind and body stressed, anxious, or burdened by unresolved trauma. Somatic therapy in NYC offers a revolutionary approach to mental health, combining traditional psychotherapy with body-centered techniques to promote holistic healing. At Holistic Therapy, EMDR & Wellness NYC, I specialize in somatic therapy, including EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), helping clients release stored trauma, manage stress, and improve emotional well-being.
What Is Somatic Therapy?
Somatic therapy is a form of psychotherapy that focuses on the connection between the mind and body. Trauma, stress, and emotional pain are often stored physically in the body, leading to tension, chronic pain, or behavioral patterns. By observing and working with bodily sensations, therapists help clients process these experiences safely and effectively. The result is whole-body healing, addressing both mental and physical symptoms. If you’ve ever felt that traditional talk therapy only works with your mind and not your body, somatic therapy offers a holistic approach that engages your whole self.
When Everything Shifts: Therapy for Women in Perimenopause and Menopause in New York City
Midlife therapy isn’t about symptom management—it’s about reintegration. At my Holistic Psychotherapy & Wellness practice, I combine psychotherapy, EMDR, somatic, and attachment-based work, and mind-body coaching to help women reinhabit themselves—body, mind, and spirit.
“It feels like I’m running on a different operating system than I used to.”
If you’re a woman somewhere in your forties, fifties—or even sixties—you may have noticed that the ground beneath your life has started to tremble in subtle, disorienting ways. Your mind doesn’t feel as sharp. Your skin feels dry and thin, your sleep unsteady. You love your partner, but your libido has disappeared. You find yourself looking at your reflection, wondering where the old “you” has gone. And perhaps, for the first time in a long time, you feel… fragile. Not in the weak sense of the word, but in the way that things feel closer to the surface. The emotions. The memories. The longing. The grief for what used to feel easy.
As a psychotherapist in New York City and midlife coach supporting women through perimenopause and menopause, I see this every day. Women who are strong, intuitive, successful—and utterly bewildered by how unfamiliar their inner world feels. This time of life is not just hormonal. It’s existential. It’s spiritual. It’s about identity, power, and the question that begins to echo through everything:

