16 February 2026 4 min

Pace Recovery Centre Integrates Body-Based Trauma Release for Comprehensive Addiction Treatment

Written by: Jayce Casiano Save to Instapaper
Pace Recovery Centre Integrates Body-Based Trauma Release for Comprehensive Addiction Treatment

Mpumalanga, South Africa -- Traditional talk therapy addresses the cognitive and emotional dimensions of trauma, but many individuals in addiction recovery continue struggling with physical manifestations of stress that verbal processing cannot resolve. Pace Recovery Centre offers Trauma and Tension Release Exercises (TRE), a body-based therapeutic approach that addresses chronic muscular tension and nervous system dysregulation underlying many substance use patterns.

Understanding Somatic Trauma StorageDuring traumatic experiences, the nervous system prepares for survival through fight or flight responses that mobilise the entire body. When these responses cannot complete, when individuals couldn't fight back or escape, the mobilised energy remains trapped in the muscular system.

"Years later, the body maintains defensive postures established during trauma," explains the treatment team at Pace Recovery Centre. "Shoulders stay raised as if bracing for impact, core muscles remain contracted as if protecting vital organs, and jaw muscles clench as if biting back words that couldn't be safely spoken. These aren't conscious choices; they're neurological patterns reinforced through years of hypervigilance."

Traditional talk therapy operates primarily at the mental level. Individuals process memories, reframe narratives, understand triggers, and develop healthier thought patterns. This work is valuable and necessary, but the body continues holding the original trauma response, unchanged by new intellectual understanding.

The Physical Cost of Unresolved TraumaChronic muscular tension creates cascading problems beyond physical discomfort. Tight muscles restrict blood flow, reducing oxygen delivery to tissues and creating persistent pain. Shallow breathing, a common compensation for chest tension, limits oxygen intake and triggers anxiety responses. Contracted core muscles compromise digestive function.

Sleep becomes nearly impossible when the body cannot release its defensive posture. This chronic activation depletes energy reserves, leaving individuals exhausted despite adequate rest time. The fatigue then reduces capacity for emotional regulation, making recovery work feel overwhelming.

For professionals and students who've maintained external success despite carrying this burden, substances often provided the only reliable method for achieving physical relaxation. Sobriety removes these chemical solutions without addressing the underlying physical patterns that made them feel necessary.

How TRE Activates Natural Healing MechanismsTrauma and Tension Release Exercises activate a neurological mechanism most people don't realise they possess: the body's natural tremor response for discharging stress. The practice involves simple exercises that gently fatigue specific muscle groups, primarily those in the legs and psoas. As these muscles tire, they begin tremoring involuntarily.

This isn't weakness or loss of control; it's the nervous system finally completing stress responses that were interrupted during traumatic experiences. The tremors travel through the body, releasing chronic holding patterns and allowing deep muscular relaxation.

What makes TRE particularly valuable for individuals in addiction recovery is its non-verbal nature. The body does the work whilst the conscious mind simply observes, bypassing the cognitive defences and verbal limitations that often obstruct traditional trauma processing.

The Practice and Recovery BenefitsSessions typically last between 45 minutes and an hour, with participants remaining fully conscious and in control throughout. If tremoring becomes too intense, simple position adjustments reduce it. The goal isn't forcing release but creating conditions where the nervous system feels safe enough to let go of protective holding patterns maintained for years.

Whilst TRE directly addresses muscular tension, the benefits extend throughout the recovery process. Physical relaxation improves capacity for emotional regulation. Therapy sessions become more productive because individuals aren't fighting through physical hyperarousal to engage with emotional material. The practice also builds body awareness, helping recognise when tension is accumulating before it becomes chronic.

Integration Into Comprehensive TreatmentPace Recovery Centre schedules TRE sessions weekly as part of complete recovery approaches, allowing nervous systems time to integrate each release. Facilitators coordinate with treatment teams to ensure physical releases surface material for verbal processing in individual therapy, whilst difficult therapy sessions that increase muscular tension indicate the need for additional TRE work.

Those interested in learning more about releasing trauma through physical approaches can explore body-based therapies that address the missing dimension in traditional talk therapy.

Pace Recovery Centre provides comprehensive drug, alcohol, and behavioural addiction rehabilitation services at 3 Raamsaag Street, Sabie, Mpumalanga, South Africa. For more information about trauma-informed treatment approaches that address both psychological and physical dimensions of healing, contact our team.

Total Words: 704
Published in Health and Medicine

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