What is Soma?
Soma occupies two distinct but conceptually linked territories in spiritual and consciousness work. Historically, soma designates the sacred plant-drink central to Vedic ritual practice in ancient India, described extensively in the Rigveda (circa 1500–1200 BCE) as a divine intoxicant that granted visions, immortality, and communion with the gods. The exact botanical identity of this substance remains one of the great unsolved mysteries of religious history.
In contemporary contexts, “soma” (often lowercase) refers to the living body as a site of wisdom and healing—the root of “somatic” practices including Somatic Experiencing, somatic movement, and various body-centered therapeutic modalities. This modern usage emphasizes the Greek soma (body) while carrying echoes of the Vedic conception of an enlivening, consciousness-altering substance that resides within rather than outside the self.
Origins & Lineage
The Vedic Soma appears in over 120 hymns of the Rigveda, where it is both deity and sacrament. Priests would crush the soma plant’s stalks between stones, filter the juice through wool, mix it with milk or water, and consume it during elaborate fire rituals. The Ninth Mandala of the Rigveda is devoted entirely to soma, describing its golden color, exhilarating effects, and role in sustaining both gods and humans. The ritual was central to Brahmanical religion between roughly 1500 and 500 BCE.
By the time of the later Vedic period, knowledge of soma’s botanical identity had begun to fade. Scholars have proposed dozens of candidates: Ephedra species, Amanita muscaria (fly agaric mushroom), cannabis, opium poppy, Sarcostemma vines, and Syrian rue among them. R. Gordon Wasson’s 1968 theory identifying soma as Amanita muscaria gained popular attention but remains contested. No scholarly consensus exists.
The contemporary somatic field emerged from different roots. The term “somatics” was coined by philosopher Thomas Hanna in 1976 to describe first-person experience of the body from within, contrasting with third-person clinical observation. Key lineages include F.M. Alexander’s technique (1890s), Moshe Feldenkrais’s Method (1940s–70s), Ida Rolf’s Structural Integration (1950s), and Peter Levine’s Somatic Experiencing (1970s–80s), which specifically addresses trauma through body awareness.
How It’s Practiced
The ancient soma ritual is no longer performed in its original form. Archaeological and textual evidence describes a multi-day ceremony involving fire altars, chanted hymns, precise measurements of ingredients, and consumption by priests and participants seeking divine intoxication, poetic inspiration, or healing. The ritual was exclusive to trained Brahmins and required extensive memorization of Vedic verses.
Contemporary somatic practices vary widely. Somatic Experiencing sessions typically involve a trained practitioner guiding a client to notice subtle body sensations—temperature changes, tension, trembling—as a way to release stored trauma. Somatic movement classes encourage exploratory, non-choreographed motion. Breathwork facilitators may invoke “soma” to describe the body’s own capacity to generate altered states through hyperventilation or specific breathing patterns (notably Soma Breath, a trademarked technique combining breathwork, music, and visualization developed by Niraj Naik).
Soma Today
Seekers encounter Vedic soma primarily through scholarly study, comparative religion courses, or psychedelic discourse communities debating entheogen use in ancient traditions. Some neo-pagan and reconstructionist groups attempt soma rituals using speculative plant substitutes, though these lack historical continuity.
Somatic practices have entered mainstream wellness and therapeutic contexts. Somatic Experiencing is now taught in trauma therapy training programs worldwide. Yoga studios offer “somatic yoga” emphasizing internal sensation over postural achievement. Retreat centers feature somatic dance, somatic breathwork, and somatic meditation. The term “embodiment” has become nearly synonymous with somatic awareness in conscious community spaces.
Common Misconceptions
Soma is not a known, reproducible recipe. Despite confident claims in some esoteric circles, no contemporary preparation can claim direct lineage to the Vedic substance. The botanical mystery remains unsolved, and any modern “soma” drink is speculative reconstruction.
Somatic practices are not simply “being in your body.” The field comprises specific methodologies with distinct training standards, theoretical frameworks, and safety protocols—particularly crucial in trauma work. Calling any body-awareness activity “somatic” without recognizing these lineages flattens important distinctions.
The connection between Vedic soma and modern somatics is etymological and metaphorical, not historical. They share a recognition that altered consciousness and healing can arise through deliberate engagement with embodied experience, but they developed independently across millennia and cultures.
How to Begin
For the historical soma, begin with Wendy Doniger’s translation The Rig Veda (Penguin Classics, 1981), particularly the Ninth Mandala, or David Frawley’s Soma in Yoga and Ayurveda (2012) for an Ayurvedic perspective. R. Gordon Wasson’s Soma: Divine Mushroom of Immortality (1968) remains the most famous—if controversial—investigation.
For somatic practices, Peter Levine’s Waking the Tiger (1997) introduces Somatic Experiencing’s trauma-resolution framework. Thomas Hanna’s Somatics (1988) provides philosophical grounding. To experience the work directly, seek a Certified Somatic Experiencing Practitioner (directory at traumahealing.org) or explore Feldenkrais Awareness Through Movement classes. Many practitioners now offer online sessions, making embodied learning accessible beyond urban centers.