About Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute
"Only
one therapy I know of reaches as deeply into the body as it does into the mind,
and by reaching for both, touches the soul ."
Ron Kurtz, Founder of the Hakomi Method
The Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Institute (SPI) is an
educational organization dedicated to the study and teaching
of a somatic approach to clinical psychotherapy practice.
Sensorimotor Psychotherapy is a body-oriented talking
therapy that integrates verbal techniques with body-centered
interventions in the treatment of trauma, attachment, and
developmental issues.
SPI offers trainings and workshops for psychotherapists
and allied professionals in Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
and courses for body therapists on somatic resources. The
courses taught by SPI are based on principles of mindfulness
and mind/body/spirit holism and informed by contemporary
research in neuroscience, attachment theory, trauma, and
related fields.
History of Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy
In the 1970's, Pat Ogden became interested in the correlation
between her clients' disconnection from their bodies, their
physical patterns and their psychological issues. As both a
psychotherapist and body therapist, she was inspired to join
somatic therapy and psychotherapy into a comprehensive
method for healing this disconnection. SPI offered its first
course in the early 1980's under the name Hakomi Bodywork.
Influenced by leaders such as Emilie Conrad, Ruth Lanius ,
Peter Levine, Peter Melchior, Ellert Nijenhuis, Stephen Porges,
Allan Schore, Dan Siegel, Martha Stark, Kathy Steele, Onno van
der Hart, Bessel van der Kolk, and Ken Wilber, Sensorimotor
Psychotherapy draws from somatic therapies, neuroscience,
attachment theory, and cognitive approaches, as well as from
the Hakomi Method, a gentle psychotherapeutic approach
pioneered by Ron Kurtz. SPI conducts trainings throughout
the world, and has gained international acclaim over the
past twenty-five years.
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