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What Does Holding Space Mean (for Others and Yourself?)

Therapist-Reviewed

Holding space is more than just being there for someone. It’s a powerful act of presence, empathy, and trust offering someone room to feel without fixing, judging, or interrupting. Whether you’re a friend, partner, therapist, or simply human, learning how to hold space is one of the most profound gifts you can give. In this guide, we’ll break down what it really means, why it matters, and how to do it in everyday life.
Table of Contents

What Does It Mean to Hold Space? Holding Space Meaning

Holding space means making room for what’s real without trying to change it.

At its heart, it’s the act of being fully present with someone else or with yourself in a way that feels safe, steady, and open. It’s the kind of presence that says: “I’m here. I’m not going anywhere. And I’m not trying to make you be anything other than what you are right now.”

This kind of space doesn’t have edges or pressure. It doesn’t rush or reach for solutions. It allows emotions, stories, silence, and confusion to exist without being interrupted or corrected.

In everyday terms, holding space might look like sitting with a friend who’s crying and not trying to cheer them up. It might sound like saying, “That makes sense,” instead of “Look on the bright side.” It might feel like a quiet breath you take before reacting to your own pain with self-judgment.

We often think of emotional support as doing something. Giving advice. Offering a solution. Making someone feel better. But holding space is the opposite of doing…it’s about being.

Being grounded.
Being still.
Being able to stay present with discomfort, both yours and theirs.

You don’t offer holding space with words alone. You offer it with your nervous system. With your willingness to stay even when things get messy or uncomfortable.

And here’s something many people don’t realize:
The most powerful form of holding space doesn’t start with others.
It starts with yourself.

Because if you haven’t practiced staying with your own fear, your own grief, your own vulnerability, it’s almost impossible to sit calmly with someone else’s. You’ll want to fix it. Or change the subject. Or talk them out of their pain—not because you don’t care, but because you haven’t yet learned to stay with your own.

Learning to hold space for yourself means creating a new relationship with discomfort. It means listening to your inner world with curiosity instead of criticism. It means being able to say to the hurt, tender parts of you:

“You’re allowed to be here. I won’t abandon you.”

And when you’ve practiced that enough, something changes. You stop needing to control other people’s pain. You stop rushing to solve things. You start being able to offer real presence—not just to others, but to yourself.

That’s what holding space means.
It’s a form of love. Of maturity. Of emotional wisdom.

It’s a quiet, powerful way of saying:
“You’re safe to be as you are. I will stay with you through this.”

Where Did the Term Come From?

The phrase holding space became more popular through the fields of coaching, therapy, midwifery, trauma healing, and spiritual care. It reflects something humans have always needed: compassionate witnessing, emotional presence, and safe containers for difficult or tender experiences.

It echoes practices from ancient wisdom traditions like ceremony, storytelling, and communal grief rituals where people gathered not to fix each other, but to witness and support the human experience in its fullness.

Today, it has become part of our modern vocabulary around emotional intelligence, nervous system safety, and trauma-informed connection.

What Does Holding Space Look Look Like?

This is what it can look like when you hold space for someone else:

  • Sitting with them in silence when they’re overwhelmed
  • Saying, “I’m here with you,” instead of offering a solution
  • Listening deeply, without interrupting or analyzing
  • Allowing tears, anger, or confusion without needing to change the subject
  • Holding their hand or making soft eye contact when they’re unraveling
  • Letting them take their time to find their words or not speak at all

And here’s what it can look like when you hold space for yourself:

  • Breathing through anxiety without rushing to escape it
  • Saying to yourself, “This is hard. And I’m staying with myself through it.”
  • Journaling honestly, without editing or self-judgment
  • Taking a walk without trying to find answers
  • Letting yourself cry without needing to explain why
  • Allowing joy or excitement without downplaying it

Holding space doesn’t always mean doing something. Often, it’s what you don’t do: you don’t interrupt, dismiss, distract, perform, or pressure. You just stay present.

What Does Holding Space Feel Like?

When someone holds space for you, it might feel like:

  • You can finally exhale
  • Your body softens
  • You don’t feel the need to hide, perform, or be strong
  • You’re seen not for your potential or progress, but for your humanity
  • You’re allowed to feel without apology

When you hold space for yourself, it might feel like:

  • A quiet inner companion is sitting beside your pain
  • Less urgency to fix or run
  • More capacity to stay with what’s uncomfortable
  • A deeper sense of inner safety
  • A flicker of trust that you can meet yourself as you are

The feeling of being held (inwardly or by another) isn’t always dramatic. Sometimes it’s subtle, but unmistakable. Like something inside you sighs with relief because, for once, nothing needs to be different.

Why Holding Space Matters (Especially Now)

In a world that encourages productivity over presence, and performance over honesty, holding space is a quiet rebellion.

It matters because:

Our nervous systems need safety to soften.
When someone offers calm, grounded presence, our body begins to regulate. When we do that for ourselves, our stress cycle begins to complete.

It helps dissolve shame.
Shame thrives in silence and secrecy. When someone meets us with compassion without rushing us to be “better” that shame starts to loosen its grip.

It deepens trust.
We begin to trust those who stay when we’re not easy, not cheerful, not okay. That includes learning to trust ourselves in those moments too.

It creates space for real transformation.
Ironically, the more we allow ourselves (or others) to simply be, the more room there is for organic insight, healing, and change to emerge without force.

What Does It Mean to Hold Space for Yourself?

Holding space for yourself means staying with your own inner experience. Especially when it’s uncomfortable—without trying to push it away, rationalize it, or make it prettier than it is. It’s the practice of meeting yourself exactly where you are, without judgment, without pressure, and without abandonment.

Most of us have been conditioned to treat our inner world like a problem to solve. When we feel sadness, we try to cheer ourselves up. When we feel anger, we shame ourselves into silence. When we feel anxiety, we rush into productivity or numbness to override it. We’ve learned to manage our emotions by ignoring them, overriding them, or talking ourselves out of them.

But holding space for yourself is the opposite of managing. It’s about witnessing. It’s sitting with your fear or confusion or grief and saying, “You don’t have to go away for me to be okay.” It’s allowing your sadness to exist without demanding that it justify itself. It’s letting your anger rise without punishing yourself for being “too much.” It’s noticing your anxiety and choosing to slow down rather than speed up.

To hold space for yourself is to cultivate a relationship with your inner world where nothing gets exiled.

It’s saying to every part of you (the tired part, the hopeful part, the insecure part, the tender part)“You’re welcome here. I won’t leave you just because you’re hard to feel.”

It means checking in with yourself gently rather than policing your emotions.
It means slowing down when your body says “I’m overwhelmed” rather than pushing through.
It means asking yourself, “What do I need right now?”and actually listening.

This kind of inner presence is not about being calm or enlightened all the time. It’s not about becoming immune to emotion. It’s about building the capacity to stay. To remain curious. To feel without fleeing.

And here’s the truth: the more we practice holding space for ourselves, the more naturally we become able to hold space for others. Because we’re no longer afraid of what’s raw or unresolved. We’ve built the muscles to sit with discomfort, to honor it, to let it move through.

When you can stay with your own truth without shutting it down, you begin to unlearn the reflex of abandoning yourself. You stop needing to be fixed. You stop apologizing for your pain. You begin to trust that you are a safe place to land. Even when life doesn’t feel safe.

That’s what it means to hold space for yourself.
To stay.
To soften.
To listen.
To belong to yourself even in the hardest moments.

What Does It Mean to Hold Space for Someone Else?

We’ll explore the how in a separate guide, but before we get into techniques or steps, we need to understand why this matters so deeply. Why is holding space one of the most powerful things you can offer someone?

Because when someone is hurting—when they’re unraveling, doubting themselves, processing loss, or even just sitting in uncertainty. What they need most isn’t a solution.

They need a witness.
Someone who doesn’t look away.
Someone who doesn’t rush them to be okay.
Someone who says with their presence, “You are not too much. I can stay with you here.”

Holding space for someone else means offering a kind of emotional permission: the permission to be seen as they are without pressure to shift, perform, or protect you from their truth.

It’s saying:
“You can fall apart and I’ll stay.”
“You can feel anger or grief and I won’t shame you.”
“You don’t need to explain or justify your emotions to be worthy of care.”

It’s not passive.
It’s not distant.
It’s active presence. It’s emotional bravery. It’s nervous system steadiness.

Common Misunderstandings About Holding Space

A few things holding space is not:

  • It’s not being silent the whole time
  • It’s not emotionally absorbing someone else’s pain
  • It’s not fixing or offering solutions unless asked
  • It’s not bypassing emotions with positivity or perspective
  • It’s not something only trained therapists can do

Holding space is a human skill. And it gets easier the more we practice it with ourselves.

Examples of Holding Space

1. When My Friend Didn’t Try to Cheer Me Up

After a breakup that hit harder than I expected, I was sitting on the floor of my apartment surrounded by tissues, scrolling through old messages I couldn’t stop rereading. I didn’t even know what I needed, but I texted my friend anyway. She came over and sat next to me.

She didn’t give advice. She didn’t tell me it was going to be okay. She just sat there. Quiet. Present. At one point I said, “I feel like I ruined everything.” And all she said was, “That makes sense.”

It was such a small thing, but it broke something open in me. She didn’t try to fix it. She just made it safe for me to feel how I was actually feeling. And somehow, that was enough.

2. The Morning I Let Myself Feel

I woke up feeling heavy. Anxious for no clear reason. My first instinct was to push through it, grab coffee, and dive into my to-do list like nothing was wrong. But something in me paused.

I turned off my phone, made tea, and sat by the window. I just let myself be there. I didn’t try to figure it out or make it go away. I just breathed and noticed.

It wasn’t dramatic. But it felt new. Normally I’d try to escape that kind of feeling, but this time I stayed with it. And in that staying, something softened. It felt like I was telling myself, “You don’t have to be okay to be worthy of care.”

3. When Someone Just Listened

I was dating someone new, and I decided to share a story I’d never told anyone before. Something from childhood that still brought up a lot of shame. My heart was racing the whole time. I kept thinking, what if he pulls away? What if this is too much?

But when I finished, he didn’t try to give me advice or explain it away. He just looked at me and said, “Thank you for telling me. That must’ve been really hard.” Then he held my hand.

That moment stuck with me. Not because he said something perfect, but because he didn’t look away. He stayed with me. And that changed something inside me.

4. When I Didn’t Need to Make Sense

One time in therapy, I spent most of the session rambling. I was jumping between stories, emotions, and half-formed thoughts. I kept apologizing, saying things like, “Sorry, this is probably all over the place.”

But my therapist didn’t try to organize it for me. She didn’t rush me to a conclusion. She just listened, with full attention.

At the end she said, “It sounds like you’re processing a lot, and you’re doing it beautifully.”

I didn’t realize how much I needed to hear that. She trusted me to find my way through. And her trust gave me permission to trust myself too.

Jordan Buchan
Written by
Jordan Buchan

Neuro-Somatic Educator • Founder, Conscious Cues

Jordan Buchan is the founder of Conscious Cues and a Neuro-Somatic Educator whose work focuses on the process of turning insight into lived experience. She helps people move beyond simply understanding themselves and into embodying real change so what they know begins to shape how they feel, respond, and live.

Lisbon, Portugal Embodiment • Integration • Authentic Relating

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional advice. If you’re experiencing emotional or mental health challenges, please consult a licensed healthcare provider.

Interactive Connection Deck

The Depth
of Us

A guided conversation experience for people who want to slow down, feel more, and share more honestly. This is not about performing vulnerability or coming up with the “best” answer. It is about noticing what is true for you and letting that be enough.

01

Create the Container

The quality of the conversation depends on the quality of the space. Before anyone draws a card, take a moment to create a shared agreement around presence, honesty, and care.

  • Add everyone’s names so the game can rotate turns clearly.
  • Choose a share time that fits the group. Two minutes keeps things lighter and more fluid. Four minutes allows for deeper reflection and more room to settle into what is real.
  • Use prompt delay if you want the word to land first. This gives people a few seconds before they can reveal a prompt, so they have a chance to notice their own inner response before being guided outward.
  • Keep the space device-free and interruption-free. No side conversations. No multitasking. No reacting while someone is sharing.
  • Let this be a no-fixing space. No advice, no analysis, no rescuing, no trying to make someone’s experience cleaner or easier than it is.
  • Confidentiality matters. What is shared here stays here unless someone explicitly says otherwise.
  • Passing is allowed. No one is required to answer every word or every prompt. Choice helps create safety.

A safe space does not mean everyone will feel perfectly relaxed. It means people know they do not have to perform, defend, impress, or explain themselves away. It means they can share honestly and trust they will be met with respect.

02

Let the Word Land

When a card is drawn, the word appears first. This part matters. Do not rush past it. The word itself is the doorway.

Before you speak, pause for a moment and notice what happens inside you when you read the word. You are not trying to come up with something profound. You are simply noticing your first real response.

  • Notice your body. Do you feel openness, tightness, warmth, resistance, numbness, tenderness, or nothing at all?
  • Notice your mind. Does a memory come up? A person? A recent conversation? A story you tell yourself?
  • Notice your emotional response. Do you feel curiosity, discomfort, grief, relief, longing, irritation, confusion, or surprise?
  • Notice your impulse. Do you want to share immediately? Shut down? Make a joke? Change the subject? Those reactions are information too.

Sometimes the word hits instantly. Sometimes it feels blank at first. Both are valid.

If nothing obvious comes up, that does not mean you are doing it wrong. You can simply begin with something honest and simple:

  • “At first I do not feel much, but when I stay with it I notice...”
  • “This word makes me think of...”
  • “My first reaction is resistance because...”
  • “I do not know exactly why, but this word makes my chest feel...”
  • “The person I immediately think of is...”

The goal is not to be impressive. The goal is to be real.

03

Share What Is True

Once the word has landed, share whatever feels true for you in that moment.

  • You can share a memory.
  • You can share a feeling.
  • You can share a body sensation.
  • You can share a question you are still sitting with.
  • You can share a contradiction.
  • You can share that you are confused or unsure.
04

Use the Prompts as Support, Not Pressure

If you want more guidance, reveal a prompt. Prompts are there to help deepen the reflection, not to force it.

  • The word always comes first. Start with your own reaction if you can.
  • Prompts are optional. You do not need to use them if the word already opened something real.
  • You do not need to answer every prompt. Choose the one that actually stirs something in you.
  • If none of the prompts fit, ignore them. Your real response matters more than following the structure perfectly.

Think of prompts as gentle support. Not a test. Not homework. Not a demand.

Sometimes a prompt will give language to something you were already feeling but could not name. Sometimes it will open a completely different doorway. Sometimes it will do nothing. That is okay too.

05

Respect the Rhythm of the Turn

Each person has their own turn. The timer is there to create rhythm, not pressure.

  • The timer starts on the first card draw of the turn.
  • You can draw a different card during your turn if the word truly is not the one.
  • You can pause the timer if the group needs a breath or the moment needs a little more space.
  • A soft bell sounds near the end so the speaker can begin to close naturally.
  • When time ends, the next person’s turn begins.
  • If someone does not want to share, skip the turn. The card clears and the next person takes over.

Silence is allowed. In fact, silence is often part of the depth.

If someone finishes speaking before the timer ends, let there be a pause. Do not rush to fill the space. Some of the most meaningful moments happen after the words.

06

Listen Like It Matters

This game is not only about sharing. It is about how we receive each other.

  • Listen without interrupting.
  • Listen without planning what you will say when it is your turn.
  • Listen without comparing their experience to yours.
  • Listen without trying to fix, soothe, teach, correct, or improve what they shared.
  • Let their words land before moving on.

Good listening creates the safety that allows honesty to deepen.

If you are facilitating, remind the group that this is not a debate, not a therapy session, and not a place to give unsolicited advice. It is a space to witness, reflect, and let people be fully human without editing them into something easier to hold.

07

A Few Reminders Before You Begin

  • You do not need to be profound. Honest is enough.
  • You do not need to force vulnerability. Go at the pace that feels real.
  • You do not need to explain yourself perfectly. Unfinished truth still counts.
  • You do not need to share the biggest thing. Sometimes a small truth is the real one.
  • You are allowed to pass.
  • You are allowed to be surprised by your own answer.

This experience works best when people stop trying to do it “well” and start letting themselves actually be in it.

Agreements

  • The Right to Pass: Depth cannot be forced. You always have the right to skip a card or prompt.
  • Confidentiality: Everything shared in this space stays in this space.
  • No Fixing: We listen to understand, not to offer advice or solve each other's experiences.
  • Integration: We allow a moment of silence after a share to let the words land.
03

Live Practice
Circles

The library and workshops give you the map. The Practice Circle is where you actually drive. This is a guided, real-time space to turn new behaviors into second nature.

Real-Time Prep Settle your nervous system so you can show up clearly and calmly.
Witnessed Practice Try out new ways of speaking and setting boundaries in low-pressure settings.
Stay Centered Learn how to keep your cool, even when a conversation gets intense.
Integration Bridge the gap between "the lab" and your real-world relationships.
Live Practice Agenda
90 MIN SESSION

Practice Session

1Somatic Grounding & Regulation
2Exercise Demo & Modeling
3Active Practice Breakout Rooms
4Sharing Circles & Peer Feedback
5Somatic Reflection & Integration
6Weekly "Homework" Assignment
7Closing Connection & Checkout

Safe Space Protocol Active

02

Skill-Building
Workshops

Before stepping into live practice, you get the technical tools. Our workshops provide the behavioral frameworks and internal blueprints required to navigate tough moments with confidence.

Behavioral Frameworks Move beyond theory with word-for-word scripts and structured communication blueprints.
Internal Safety Learn physical tools to manage your system so you can stay present during conflict.
Foundation Prep The core instruction that prepares you for real-world application in our Practice Circles.
Skill-Building Syllabus

Workshops

From Victim to Empowerment Breaking the cycle of feeling powerlessness
Live
Building Internal Safety Blueprints for remaining calm & focused
On-Demand
Stop Abandoning Yourself Breaking the people-pleasing mechanics
On-Demand
Conflict & Repair Word-for-word templates for connection
Live
01

Therapist-Backed
Resources

This is where your awareness begins. Everything in The Resource Center is neuroscience-informed and designed to help you gain the perspective needed to stop the spiral before it starts.

Deep-Dive Guides Comprehensive, exercise-rich walkthroughs on real-life challenges.
Somatic Practices Integrated body-based exercises to move theory into physical regulation.
Relational Scripts Word-for-word communication templates for boundaries and conflict.
Worksheets & PDFs Actionable downloads to work through specific challenges.
The Resource Center
TOOL
The Interactive Feelings Wheel Explore and work through your emotions
MP3
12-Min "Emergency Landing" Somatic Regulation Audio
GUIDE
Rewiring Negative Self-Talk Video Guide & Worksheet
PDF
High-Conflict Script Communication Template
ABOUT SOFIA

I am an Intern Somatic Body Psychotherapist, Neuroscientist, Dancer, and Dance Teacher. My passion for mental health began at age 14, sparked by a natural ability to attune to people’s emotional landscapes.

Over the past 15 years, I’ve travelled the world exploring the human psyche — a journey that shaped my integrated approach, rooted in neuroscience (brain), psychology (mind), philosophy (spirit), and somatic practices like dance (body).

This embedded with my empirical experience has made it a personal and interpersonal discovery – in line with my essence and natural tendency to help those around me deal with various aspects of mental well-being.

It is this multidimensional understanding of what it means to be human that is at the heart of my work.

My work as a somatic body psychotherapist draws on the concept that life is a continuous unfolding process, from the first cell in the womb to the present moment. All aspects of our being need to be considered when navigating mental health issues.

I support each client’s unique process with openness and curiosity of all these aspects, helping transform scattered energy into a coherent source of well-being and vitality, reshaping life in ways that often exceed expectations.

Through my Neuroscience of Dance project and Dance Integrated Healing Method, I offer neurocognitive and movement-based tools for healing.

For the past six years, I’ve supported dancers and educators worldwide through sessions and workshops, focusing on injury recovery, neurological rehabilitation, memory and balance, mental health, and the therapeutic potential of dance. This integration of dance, neuroscience, and psychology began during my postgraduate research on the brain mechanisms behind dance, in collaboration with a leading researcher in the field.

My research has been published in Dance Data, Cognition, and Multimodal Communication and presented at the International Association for Dance Medicine & Science (IADMS) conference. I was honoured when this project was nominated for the IADMS Dance Educator Award (2022) and the Applied Dance Science Award (2021) from One Dance UK, which also recognised me as a Healthier Dancer Practitioner.

Personally, advocate for neurodiversity as a proud dyslexic. I love cats, cute cafes, cats, long walks, writing, cats, poetry.

Did I say cats?

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