Emotion-Focused Therapy vs Hakomi

A side-by-side comparison: mechanism, evidence, the conditions each treats, philosophical roots, and where they actually disagree clinically.

At a glance

Emotion-Focused Therapy

Tradition
Humanistic
Founder
Leslie Greenberg (1990)
Evidence
Guideline-recommended
Focus
Experiential
Format
Individual
Duration
Short-medium

Hakomi

Tradition
Somatic
Founder
Ron Kurtz (1980)
Evidence
Emerging evidence
Focus
Experiential + Somatic
Format
Individual
Duration
Open-ended

How they work

Emotion-Focused Therapy

Core mechanism: Accessing and processing primary adaptive emotions transforms maladaptive emotion schemes

Ontology: Maladaptive emotion schemes formed in relational experience that need emotional re-processing

Hakomi

Core mechanism: Mindful self-study reveals core organizing beliefs; experiments in mindfulness create corrective experiences at implicit level

Ontology: Core material (implicit beliefs, habits, memories) organizes present experience outside awareness

Conditions treated

1 shared · 4 Emotion-Focused Therapy-only · 2 Hakomi-only

What each assumes — and misses

Emotion-Focused Therapy

Philosophical roots: Merleau-Ponty (embodied meaning); Buber (dialogical encounter); Gendlin (felt sense, focusing); Rogers (experiencing); James (emotion as bodily process)

Blind spots: Can be overwhelming for clients who lack basic emotion regulation; may underemphasize cognitive and behavioral dimensions

Therapeutic voice: Stay with that feeling for a moment. What does that sadness need to say?

Hakomi

Philosophical roots: Buddhism (mindfulness, non-violence); Merleau-Ponty (body-subject); Taoism (yielding, wu wei); Rogers (organismic wisdom); Reich (body-mind unity)

Blind spots: Minimal controlled research; may be too subtle and slow for clients needing direct intervention or crisis stabilization

Therapeutic voice: Just notice what happens inside when I say: you don't have to hold it all together.

Choosing between them

Emotion-Focused Therapy (Humanistic) and Hakomi (Somatic) come from different traditions, which means they assume different things about what a person is, what causes suffering, and what the therapeutic relationship is for. The choice between them is often less about "which works better" and more about which set of assumptions fits the client and the therapist.

For deeper coverage: see the full Emotion-Focused Therapy and Hakomi pages, or use the interactive comparison tool to add more modalities to this comparison.