The Spiritually Curious Therapist
The Spiritually Curious Therapist is a podcast exploring the intersection of nervous system science, mental health, spirituality, and healing.
Hosted by Jodi Silverman, LCSW, this show is for therapists, healers, and curious humans who sense that true healing happens below the level of insight alone. Through thoughtful conversations and solo reflections, we explore trauma, chronic pain and illness, altered states, regulation, meaning-making, and what it really takes to help the nervous system feel safe enough to change.
This is a space for grounded mysticism, where evidence-based practice meets soul-level wisdom, and where healing is approached with curiosity, compassion, and respect for the body’s innate intelligence.
Whether you’re a clinician expanding beyond talk therapy or someone on your own healing path, this podcast invites you to listen differently — to symptoms, to stories, and to what’s asking to be integrated.
The Spiritually Curious Therapist
When Movement Becomes Healing: Trauma-Informed Embodiment with Emily Young, LCSW-C
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In this episode of The Spiritually Curious Therapist, I sit down with Emily Young, a trauma-informed personal trainer, somatic therapist, and founder of The Embodied Trainer, for a conversation about movement, embodiment, trauma, and the nervous system.
This conversation explores something that feels increasingly important to me:
the idea that healing cannot happen through the mind alone.
Emily shares her own journey of integrating the worlds of therapy and personal training after experiencing burnout, chronic pain, and a growing realization that many people are deeply disconnected from their bodies, even while actively exercising them.
Together, we talk about:
- what it actually means to be embodied
- the relationship between trauma and movement
- nervous system-informed fitness
- chronic stress, chronic pain, and overtraining
- why “pushing harder” can disconnect us further from ourselves
- mind-muscle connection and interoception
- movement as relationship rather than punishment
- co-regulation, safety, and sustainable healing
- how slowing down can actually expand capacity
Emily also shares insights from her newly released book, Trauma-Informed Bodywork, co-authored with Chelsea Haverly, which explores trauma-responsive approaches to movement and body-based healing practices.
One of the things I appreciated most about this conversation was the reminder that our bodies are not obstacles to overcome and that they are constantly communicating with us.
If you’ve ever struggled with burnout, disconnection from your body, chronic symptoms, or a complicated relationship with exercise and performance, I think this episode will resonate deeply.
You can connect with Emily at:
- TheEmbodiedTrainer.com
- Instagram: @theembodiedtrainer
And if this conversation speaks to you, Emily encourages listeners to consider purchasing Trauma-Informed Bodywork through a local independent bookstore whenever possible.
As always, thank you for listening, sharing, and being part of these conversations exploring the intersection of nervous system healing, embodiment, spirituality, and human experience.
Thank you for listening to the Spiritually Curious Therapist Podcast. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, share, and leave a review - it helps us grow and reach more listeners!
You can find Jodi Silverman, LCSW at
www.therachihealing.com
www.journeywithkindredsouls.com
Follow me on Socials:
TikTok @spiritcurioustherapist
Instagram @therachihealing
Facebook @TheraChi Healing
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