By John Schewe, Basic Rolfing® Instructor and Russell Stolzoff, Basic and Advanced Rolfing Instructor
More than 30 percent of adults in the U.s. are living with chronic or severe pain. If you’re part of that statistic you know how devastating living with severe or daily pain can be.
Climbers know all about gravity. We fight it to stay attached to crimpers, and when we drag ourselves up ice flows and snowy peaks. But gravity doesn’t stop when the day’s climbing is done. Over time, it takes advantage of the body’s plasticity, changing the way we stand, sit, and move. Like water dripping on a block of granite, gravity wears us down.Rolfing aims to undo the harm … see full article
When Duane Knudson, a professor of kinesiology at California State University, Chico, looks around campus at athletes warming up before practice, he sees one dangerous mistake after another. “They’re stretching, touching their toes. . . . ” He sighs. “It’s discouraging.”If you’re like most of us, you were taught the importance of warm-up exercises back in grade school, … see full article
ll soft tissues, and in particular the fascia, derive originally from the same embryonic layer, the meoderm, which is actually at the origin of all bodily tissues apart from the skin and the mucosae. The mesoderm gives rise not only to those elements conventionally defined as fascia, but also to cartilage and bone, which in reality are no more than … see full article