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If you’ve been thinking about booking a session… this might be the time!
I recently attended an advanced Myofascial Release workshop, and I came home with a deeper understanding of the pelvis than ever before. Here’s one of the fascinating things I learned: many of us are walking around with a right anterior pelvic tilt and a left posterior pelvic tilt. In simple terms, one side of the pelvis tips forward while the other tips backward. That means the foundation of the body — the very base we stand on — is twisting in two different directions. Our bodies are going to compensate for that. What might that look like?
Muscles grip. Fascia thickens. One side works harder than the other. Over time, that compensation becomes your “normal.” What might be the causes of that asymmetry? Old injuries. Falls you barely remember. Habitual ways of standing. Carrying babies on one hip, or heavy bags on one shoulder. Driving. Stress patterns. Even the way we cross our legs. The beautiful thing is this: the body wants balance. When given the right input, it unwinds. And there is so much good that can come from a consistent yoga asana practice. We truly can change our bodies for the better. If you add to that a TRE practice, you can open the soft tissue and shift the nervous system in dramatic and meaningful ways. Sometimes, though, if you have a very old injury — one that has been re-injured over the years — or a structural imbalance that has never really been addressed, the soft tissue is no longer so soft. It has adapted. It has braced. It has organized itself around protection. In those cases, it often takes consistent re-patterning and, at times, an external nudge — hands-on work that might feel like melting — to remind the tissue of another possibility. Dr. Bercelli would often say that injuries that occurred in relationship need to be healed in relationship. That’s something we experience when we gather for a yoga class or tremor together in a group. There is something regulating and reparative about not doing it alone. I never asked him exactly what he meant in strict TRE terms. But when I reflect on the harm that separation on any level causes, it suggests that much of our healing must address that sense of separateness. We heal in connection. Which is why it matters that you trust and genuinely like your doctor, your therapist (of any kind), your teacher, your partner. Healing happens best in relationships that feel safe. If you’ve been saying, “I really should come in,” consider this your gentle nudge. Sometimes the neck pain, the shoulder tightness, or the stubborn low back discomfort isn’t where the problem starts — it’s simply where the body is asking for help. And often that help needs to be offered by someone outside of your body and mind.
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