Author: Blossom Young

  • About Fascia

    Fascia is densely woven tissue in a more or less fluid ground substance. It covers and penetrates every cell, nerve, muscle bone and organ throughout the body. Fascia is the stuff that holds the body together, gives shape to the whole, and all the parts. Trauma, inflammation or over use can cause a binding down of the fascia, resulting in restriction and pressure on the underlying structures, nerves, muscles joints etc.

    • Supports and stabilizes the support system of the body, in fact more accurately, it is the support system!
    • Is vitally involved in all aspects of movement, and shock absorption
    • Assists with circulation, especially the lymphatics.
    • Major area of inflammatory processes and chronic passive congestion, leading to an increase in fibrosis and limitation

    Normal fascia is relaxed and has a wavy pattern in the fibres, much like fine merino wool has a crimp. This allows the tissue to stretch and rebound, without high energy use. Lack of use, slumping on the couch for example, leads to the fascia losing that crimp, and therefore it’s elasticity. Over time, the fascia becomes a sort of hard mush, losing fibre direction and resilience.

     

  • Rolfing: Notes On Sports

    “The Olympic athletes wouldn’t have as many injuries if they had appropriate soft tissue therapy. Rolfing is valuable for athletes in high level competition to address the build up of scar tissue and disarrangement of myofascial tissue that occurs from training, competition and injury.” Dr Karl Ullis ( U.S. team physician, 1992 Olympics)

    A Rolfer wants to change the structure of your body to correct the sources of tension, so that the tension is unnecessary.

    Rolfers can discern patterns of tension across the whole body. The entire musculature can be involved in accommodating one localized spot of great tension. If the rest of the body is released, it will decrease that tension.

    Body Structure is the solidified result of repetitive movements and postural patterns.

    Work is holistic in nature, an approach towards health maintenance and personal evolution.

  • Rolfing: Posture Patterns and the Effort of Being Upright

    What Is It?

    Rolfing is a method of Bodywork designed to bring the body back into alignment in Gravity. The basic premise is that we are designed to be upright, at ease, flexible and supported in the field of gravity, that this is our natural state. This natural state gets disrupted by injury, repetitive movement patterns, even old emotional trauma as the body attempts to compensate for the strain caused by these events. As the body takes on the strain, the Connective Tissue, or fascia, thickens and toughens to manage being out of alignment. Thus, the fascia is the place where all these old patterns lodge, causing reduced mobility, and increased effort and pain.

    Connective Tissue is the stuff that makes up the ligaments and tendons. It also includes the fine filaments and membranes that surround all of the bones, organs, muscles and compartments of the body. This is also where the nerves and blood vessels travel through the body.  It is like a single, really complex web of tissue, providing support and spacing for all of the other specialized organs of the body.

    By dealing with the holding patterns in this tissue, caused by repetitive movements, holding or old injuries, Rolfing seeks to bring the body back towards its optimal function and position.

    The body is often regarded as a machine, like the stiff articulated robot of Arnie Schwarzennegger’s Terminator. Instead we have the potential to move more like a fluid, mobile creature, sliding through space gracefully and efficiently.

    Where Does It Come From?

    Dr Ida P Rolf PhD, an American biochemist, first recognized the link between Connective Tissue and structure back in the 1930’s. She spent many years studying different disciplines, including Osteopathy, Reflexology and Yoga and indeed that research continued for the rest of her life as she continued to refine and develop her work.

    She began working with people who had found no relief from their pain and postural problems and soon gained a reputation as someone who could solve seemingly intractable issues in the body. She began teaching her work in the 50’s and founded the Rolf Institute in 1971. Today, there are practitioners around the world, dedicated to continuing her research and working to help people lead pain free and ‘normal’ lives.

    How Does It Work?

    Practitioners of Rolfing delve into the Connective Tissue, easing the thickened and shortened tissue back into its normal position, thus allowing improved range of motion and posture to return. As the body finds a place of more ease, it becomes more natural to stay there. Most practitioners use slow, sometimes deep pressure to encourage a shift in the fascia.

    Recognizing the role that the Nervous System has to play in reorganizing old patterns, educational strategies are used to help the client find a simpler, more efficient,  often more sophisticated way of moving . This is a careful, organized strategy of dealing with the imbalances in the posture, and the far reaching effects of trauma and misalignment throughout the body. Rolfers work through a series of ten sessions. This process has been designed so that the body is able to develop a new awareness and adapt to change in a progressive way, helping to support long term change.

    What happens in a Session of Rolfing?

    First the Rolfer will take a history, and have a look at your structure.  How do you stand and walk? What areas are out of alignment? Where do you feel discomfort, limitation or pain? Some may take photos, to assess your current posture and to see changes as they manifest throughout the series. Then they will have you lie on a table or sit, while they slowly feel for those limitations and begin to stretch and ease the tissue back to its correct position. Using different positions on the table, and a variety of hands on techniques and educational strategies, the practitioner will help you to discover where your optimal position and movement can be. You may be asked to move or stretch in particular directions, to find your limits, and to explore that specific holding pattern.

    The sessions are focused on finding the best function and mobility for your particular structure. The work progresses from the superficial fascia to the deeper structures in the body, and from the ground up, gradually building a freer, easier, more supported body.

    Why Ten Sessions?

    Each of the sessions in Rolfing has a specific anatomical focus, gradually building a whole.

    1. Looking at the breath, the first session deals with the ribcage and the muscular apparatus involved with normal breathing, the diaphragm and the deeper muscles of the neck. This also begins working with the alignment of the pelvis, how it sits on the hip joints and legs, and the relationship to the spine.
    2.  Support is the next issue. How do the feet and legs function in their role of reaching the ground, connecting to the earth, and moving you through space? Whether you have high arches or flat feet, the work is aimed at normalizing function, mobilizing the joints and tissues to allow free contact and movement on the ground. The knees and hips and the muscles that move them are also worked here.
    3. The lateral line of the body is the focus now. What is in front of the gravitational vertical through the body, and what is behind? How does the shoulder girdle relate to the torso, how too does the pelvic girdle match to the torso. Is there enough space between the ribs and the pelvis to allow the spine length at that critical lower back?
    4. Support again. How does weight reach the ground? From the arches, up the inside line of the leg to the pelvic floor, is your knee tracking in a straight line? Can you relax into your support? What is your way of walking? Do you tend more towards Charlie Chaplin, or John Cleese?
    5. The front of the body. Finding spaciousness and openness in the ribs and diaphragm, and delving into the deep structural and movement muscles, psoas and iliacus as they cross the front of the hip and affect that funny walk.
    6. The back. Often a long session, the terrirory here reaches all the way from the hamstrings and back of the knee, up to the upper spine. Looking for ease and relationship across the hip joint, as well as the specifics of spinal movement and structure.
    7. Putting the head on top. This is about the upper spine and its relationship to the head. How does the head balance on top of the cervical vertebrae? Is there normal range of motion? Can you reverse your car easily, for example?  TMJ problems, headaches, balance and orientation are all considered here
    8. 9 and 10 These are the integrating sessions. Rolfing was termed Structural Integration by Dr Rolf, and a very important focus of this work is how it all fits together, how the whole body manages in gravity. Integration work is done in every session, but here it is the main event. Linking longer lines of connection through the whole structure, relating all of the parts to the whole. How walking comes from the whole body, the spine and head intimately involved as the flow of natural movement reaches right through the body.

    Who Can It Help?

    This is a method that can be applied at any age, and for many conditions. People come from all sorts of backgrounds and occupations to find an easier way to live in their bodies. From the professional dancer or sportsman to people with sedentary computer jobs, or those doing hard physical work.  Many people come to deal with postural or pain issues, as a result of old injuries or trauma that have not been resolved. Neck pain, back pain, shoulders, knees and hips, are often symptomatic of an underlying misalignment. Something that happened years ago, that threw the body off centre, and it began bracing from there. This is the stuff Rolfers love to work with, that hidden or held place that is now having consequences through the whole person. This is the exciting part, where someone rediscovers a way of being in the world they thought was lost to them.

    How Long Does It Last?

    Rolfing aims for long lasting results, where the client takes on responsibility for their wellbeing and mobility. Where it is easier to be upright than to either hold yourself up, or collapse.  CT is more like a plastic medium, rather than the elastic muscles, so it can be reformed at almost any age. There is an advanced series of sessions, designed to continue the process of finding the best alignment possible. Rolfers also commonly do tune up sessions on previous clients, helping with older long standing issues, or dealing with the ongoing effects of daily life. This can include injuries, or the painful effects of repetitive strain such as continuous work at the computer, or the heavy lifting done by the landscape gardener.

     

  • Posture, Gravity and Rolfing

    How well do you manage being upright? Does everything feel like it is in the right place? Do you stand easily?
    The common belief seems to be that we must hold ourselves up, and yet in an architectural sense, we cannot do this. There is no skyhook to suspend ourselves from. Support comes from below, as in any building. Weight falls, that’s just gravity in action. Everything is designed to live in gravity.

    Even our language reflects this.

    We feel up / or down
    high / low
    uplifted / heavy
    light / a drag

    Rolfing is a method of bodywork designed to address our imbalance and struggle with gravity.
    We are designed to be at ease in gravity, efficient, upright, mobile and supported. Rolfing aims to bring the body back towards our natural state of balance and mobility, a feeling of being properly aligned.

    When a body gets out of alignment in gravity, it must manage that strain. It does that by bracing, laying down more tissue along the path of the strain. This tissue, specifically, is the connective tissue, or fascia. Fascia can be seen in the body as the ligaments and tendons, and is also the fine filaments and membranes wrapped around every bone organ and muscle in the body. Connective tissue (CT) is a continuous fabric throughout the body, from layers around the spinal cord and brain, right out to the superficial fascia under the skin.

    Much as a callous develops from continuous rubbing or pressure on the skin, so the fascia thickens and toughens to handle the constant effort of dealing with misalignment in gravity. Your tight shoulders may be able to relax the muscular effort, but the fascia is still holding the older pattern of repeated holding.

    Posture can be seen as the verb in this, it is the doing. Structure is the long term effect of that doing. As we repeat the posture over and over, the fascia braces, taking over where the muscles cannot continue the effort. Of course the nervous system is involved, learning and reinforcing patterns of behavior and movement, and even physically, as it too travels in that web of fascia.

    Running with poor posture can lead to strain in the hips, knees and ankles, indeed any activity repeated often without the proper alignment will lead to strain and perhaps even injury. Sitting slumped in front of the computer shows a lack of support and a corresponding need to brace and hold. The head forward posture of so many at the computer demands the 3 kilos or so of the head be managed, usually by the musculature and fascia of the back and neck.

    Rolfing is a method of working with these old strain patterns to realign the body. It is a scientific and systematic approach to the whole body and our relationship to gravity. Each of the series of ten sessions has a specific anatomical focus, breathing, feet and legs, shoulder girdle etc. The process is carefully designed to meet the needs of each individual, so whether you have high arches or low, the second session is about organizing the feet and lower legs, beginning the task of finding support from below.

    Rolfers work directly with that connective tissue, feeling for the holding patterns and slowly easing the strain. This is hands on work, with a strong educational component, bringing the client back into their body, heightening awareness of both the older pattern and the difference as it releases, the possibility of being a different way, one without effort and strain. Your Rolfer will look at how you stand walk and sit, even at your preferred sport or recreation, be it yoga or running, cycling or weights. Working from the outside in, and from the ground up, the whole body is brought back towards alignment and ease in gravity.

    Part of the bigger goal of Rolfing is to restore our adaptability, our ability to swing between appropriate responses to our environment, which of course includes other people. When we compare some of our language, we can see how linked to gravity it is.

    bent / graceful
    twisted / open
    stuck / spacious
    held / balanced
    off centre / grounded
    unbalanced / centered
    tight / flexible

    Recognize some of these states? See also how they have an emotional as well as physical? Could it be that they are in fact the same thing? That when the body is organized in the gravitational field, that you in turn feel uplifted, balanced and open emotionally?
    When we talk of our emotions we talk of feeling, as if it were a sensation. It is! A physiological shift happens as part of emotional response. Maybe the belly, the jaw or the eyes tighten in fear or anger, or we expand and relax in joy and safety.
    From weekend athletes to professional sportsmen, people with chronic pain, poor posture and…………., many different people come to Rolfing for relief of pain, improved energy levels and performance, and for the opportunity to feel ‘normal’ in their bodies. This is a place defined by lift, ease, and a lack of restriction and pain.