
The Body Keeps the Score
Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma
by Bessel van der Kolk
Editorial review
Van der Kolk's book changed mainstream conversation about trauma. Its central claim — that traumatic memory is stored bodily and behaviorally, not just narratively — has reshaped clinical practice and informed everything from yoga therapy to EMDR. Some sections are graphic; most readers find it worth it.
AI-generated summary
Drawing on three decades of clinical work and brain imaging research, the psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk explains how trauma reorganizes the nervous system and surveys the evidence-based therapies — somatic, cognitive, pharmacological, relational — that can help people recover.
Key takeaways
- 1
Trauma is encoded in the body and the autonomic nervous system, not just memory.
- 2
Talk therapy alone is often insufficient; somatic and relational approaches are necessary.
- 3
Safety, agency, and connection are preconditions for any healing.
- 4
Children's developing brains are especially shaped by chronic stress.
The right reader
Therapists, social workers, teachers, parents, and anyone living with the long aftermath of difficult experiences.
What it touches
How it reads
Compassionate, clinical, urgent.
Reading difficulty: Moderate