This book contains detailed clinical descriptions of trauma, including childhood abuse and combat trauma. If you are currently in crisis, please reach out to a real person or professional rather than reading this alone right now.
Review & verdict
Is The Body Keeps the Score worth reading?
An influential, sometimes difficult clinical account of how trauma reshapes the body and brain, not just the mind, and what current research suggests can help. Read with care if trauma is a live, current part of your own life.
The Body Keeps the Score book report
An influential, sometimes difficult clinical account of how trauma reshapes the body and brain, not just the mind, and what current research suggests can help. Read with care if trauma is a live, current part of your own life.
Bessel van der Kolk, drawing on decades as a trauma researcher and clinician, argues that traumatic experience is stored in the body and nervous system in ways that talk alone often cannot fully address. The book moves through neuroscience, case studies, and a range of treatment approaches, from traditional therapy to yoga, EMDR, and neurofeedback, making the case that healing trauma often requires working with the body, not just the narrative mind.
Some of the neuroscience claims, and some of the specific treatment approaches the book is enthusiastic about, have drawn pushback from researchers who want stronger evidence before treating them as settled. The book is also emotionally heavy throughout, with detailed clinical case studies involving severe trauma. Read it as a serious, influential perspective to bring to a conversation with a professional, not as a standalone treatment plan.
Make the page useful after you close the tab.
Treat the book as a way to bring better language and options to a conversation with a therapist or doctor, not as a self-directed treatment plan.
Without self-diagnosing, pay attention to how your body responds to stress: tension, breath, posture. The book’s core claim is that these signals carry real information.
They treat every specific technique in the book as proven and final. Hold the overall framework, trauma lives in the body, with more confidence than any single intervention.
We will not answer these for you. The point is to ask better questions.
- What language does this book give me to describe something I previously only had vague words for?
- Where in my own life have I noticed my body reacting before my conscious mind caught up?
- Who is the right professional to talk to about anything this book brings up for me?
- What is the difference between understanding trauma intellectually and actually healing from it?
FAQ
The Body Keeps the Score: is it worth reading?
Is The Body Keeps the Score worth reading?
An influential, sometimes difficult clinical account of how trauma reshapes the body and brain, not just the mind, and what current research suggests can help. Read with care if trauma is a live, current part of your own life.
Who should read The Body Keeps the Score?
You want a serious, research-grounded account of trauma’s physical effects, written by a clinician with decades of experience.
Who should skip The Body Keeps the Score?
You are currently in acute crisis; this book is a companion to professional support, not a substitute for it.
What is the best way to read The Body Keeps the Score?
Read in sections over time rather than straight through
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