Jenni Rawlings Yoga & Movement Blog

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[Updated] A Brief Primer on Fascia and Why It's Cool

**Update November 2015: When I wrote this article, it was based on the best information I had at the time, but I have learned more about the actual science of connective tissue (of which fascia is one component) since that time, and much of what I have learned makes a lot of what I wrote in this piece quite outdated. In this article I wrote that fascia was "aware" and "communicating constantly with your brain". It would be more accurate to say that fascia is an insensate tissue which houses our peripheral nerves, and that those nerves are what do the actual communicating with the brain.

I also wrote that one's fascia can become unhealthy, dried out, and brittle, and that we should use tools like self-massage balls to re-hydrate it, keep it supple, and heal its restrictions. This is what I had learned about fascia then (and it's still pretty much the dominant paradigm today), but I now believe that claims like these are not supported by the evidence.

Pain is complex and it's hard to truly pinpoint why we might experience pain in our body in the first place (unless it's acute pain from a recent injury). We also can't actually know what tissues we're affecting underneath our skin when we give or receive massage. Even though we might *feel* like our fascia is being hydrated or our fascial restrictions are being "broken up", there is no real way to know that because there are many layers of tissue in the body and the only tissue that we physically touch through massage is our skin.

Additionally, there is no known mechanism for how rolling on balls could actually physically re-hydrate our tissues (if they are even de-hydrated to begin with, which also seems physiologically implausible). The relationship between water and our fascia simply doesn't work like that inside our body.

The science is also strongly suggesting that we can't truly manipulate and change our fascia on a structural level through massage anyway, or at least through one single massage session - any actual change to the connective tissue must be the result of many, many repeated inputs over a long time. Yes, people can absolutely feel better after rolling or a massage, but the reason *why* they feel better is not because their fascia was changed.

I absolutely think that massage is a wonderful tool that can help people alleviate pain, but I don't think it necessarily works for the structural, tissue-based reasons that the current explanatory model claims. Instead, any reduction in pain that we experience after a massage is most likely due to a change in nervous system output - which is an entirely different system of the body than the connective tissue system. (The nervous system is amazing!)

One more point I'd like to make is that if we believe that our fascia becomes unhealthy and dehydrated inside of us, and if we believe that rolling on balls or receiving massage from a massage therapist helps "heal" our fascia, which then results in a healthier, better-functioning body, then we can begin to treat and approach rolling and massage as essential tools for health. We can easily start to believe that if we don't use these tools (or if our yoga students or clients don't use these tools) that we are doomed to a dehydrated body that doesn't function well and is prone to pain. I find this to be an inaccurate, structurally-based view of the body that can also encourage us to overlook other more effective means for actually improving our connective tissue's health, like movement and exercise.

Let's learn about our connective tissue and our fascia because it helps us to understand and embody our body better, and let's utilize rolling and massage because they are awesome tools, but let's not inflate their importance and relevance to keeping our bodies healthy. Rolling and massage doesn't "treat" our fascia. We're not better off because we roll on balls or foam rollers or receive massage and we're not worse-off if we don't - these are just some tools among the plethora of tools and practices available to help us embody our body better and possibly reduce pain.

In any case, I just wanted to add this commentary here for the record and as a helpful example of how one's perspective can change over time based on new information. Thanks so much for reading! ///

 

Hi Everybody! Many of you have been asking about the 2-day course with fascial anatomy researcher Robert Schleip that I attended the other week in Culver City, and I thought I’d write up a summary of some of the most interesting things I learned about fascia to share with you. These insights are combined with some of the posture/alignment studies I’ve been doing over the past year with amazing biomechanist Katy Bowman. Have fun reading this write-up, and feel free to let me know if you have any questions (you can comment here on the blog or email or FB me) and I’ll do my best to answer them for you!
 

Previously thought to be nothing more than an inconsequential “space-filler” inside of us, fascia (pronounced “FAH-sha”) is only recently being appreciated by science for the major, big-picture role that it plays in our long-term health and well-being. The newest research on fascia tells us that is a multi-layered, body-wide web of connective tissue that is literally everywhere inside of us. It surrounds and suspends all of our “parts” (bones, muscles, organs, nerves, blood and lymph vessels) together into one cohesive, completely-connected fascial network that utilizes tensional forces to keep everything happy and in its proper place. This means that no one “part” of us is really separate from any other, and what happens in one localized area (tension, injury, healing massage, etc.) directly affects our body as a whole.

And one of the coolest things about fascia (especially for yogis) is that it is so much more than just an intricate tensional support system for your body (although that in and of itself is enough to make fascia seriously rad!) Fascia is also extremely “alive” and “aware” inside of you, communicating constantly with your brain. We’re all familiar with the human body’s 5 senses of sight, smell, touch, taste, and sound, each of which are informed by their own specialized sensory receptors in the eyes, nose, skin, etc. Fascinatingly, fascia is said to house the sensory receptors for our very real “sixth sense”. We’re not talking ESP, telepathy, or crystal balls here :) - our “sixth sense” is our body’s ability to sense its position in space, otherwise known as proprioception. While proprioception may sound like an unfamiliar word and a potentially unexciting sense, it is actually an extremely important element of our daily functioning - without it, we wouldn’t be able to walk or move ourselves through space in a coordinated way, and we would instead exist as a helpless heap on the floor (saaad!)
 

Nearly all of us have enough connection to our proprioception to “get by” in life, but some people have a higher level of proprioception than others. As yogis, we all want to inhabit, feel, and be present inside our bodies, and it is proprioception via the gateway of our fascia that provides this for us. If our fascia is healthy and hydrated, we will truly embody our body to the fullest extent - we’ll move and walk through our life with the grace of a cat or that ninja I like to reference in class sometimes :), and most importantly, our body will thrive rather than degenerate as we age.

But here’s the deal. Fascia isn’t necessarily 100% healthy in all of us - in fact, almost everyone who lives in this modern life has at least some unhealthy fascia, which we experience as tightness, “aches and pains”, injury, and if left long enough (like for years), results in joint degeneration, osteoarthritis, cardio-vascular disease, and more. ***Big important point right here (don’t miss it!): The immobility, stiffness, and chronic pain that most of us chalk up to as “the natural process of aging” is actually just our fascia that has become dried out, brittle, and inflexible. We can actually age quite beautifully and gracefully in our bodies, maintaining a high level of mobility and the ability to take care of ourselves, if we simply keep our fascia supple and hydrated.
 

And if your fascia is already on the dried-out side, which you would know if you have any stiffness in your body at all (hamstrings, anyone?), just know that this is completely reversible - you aren’t “stuck” with a body that will continue to stiffen and immobilize as you age. But bringing your fascia back to health and your body back to suppleness will take real dedication and time - Robert Schleip says that it takes fascia anywhere from 6 months to 2 years to fully remodel itself in response to your efforts. Our unhealthy, stiff fascia is the result of our own posture and body-use habits over a lifetime, so it takes time to un-do the effects those patterns have had.  There is no quick-fix to healing your fascial restrictions, but the steps you take toward this end, starting now :), will be so worth it in the big picture!

So how do we keep our fascia hydrated?

Unfortunately, drinking water won’t do the trick. While drinking water will definitely hydrate your already-healthy fascia, it is sadly unable to make its way to your unhealthy fascia. The only ways to hydrate dried-out fascia are whole body movementstretching, and massage. The dried-out tissues basically just need to be moved and manipulated to bring circulation, flow, and lymph (that’s your waste-removal system - super important!) back to the area.
 

But this is easier said than done. None of the "exercise" that we usually think of (running, biking, swimming, etc.) qualifies as whole-body movement because we use only some of our muscles to move only a few of our joints in repetitive ways during these activities, rather than utilizing our whole body. Even the amazing practice of yoga, which offers us so many benefits, doesn’t target the body in a whole-body way. We use some muscles more than others in the practice and stretch certain areas, but not others. As awesome as it is, yoga isn’t a neuromyofascially- (to use the anatomical term!) balanced practice. (Although in my class, I do my best to teach and sequence in a way that is as balanced as I can manage with the best of my knowledge - even though that means that some of what we do might not be so “traditional”. I’m not really concerned with tradition as much as with our long-term health and wellness, which is why I teach the way that I do.) Additionally, yoga tends to focus on stretching and strengthening, but there is no “massage” to our tissues that happens in the practice.

-the magic balls (heh heh...)

This is the whole reason that I started my new Total Alignment Reset class. In this class, we use magic massage balls to give ourselves deep tissue massage to relieve the chronic tension patterns that we carry in our body, as well as to hydrate our stiff, dried-out fascia, so that we can live healthier and happier in our bodies. It’s really the perfect complement to your yoga practice or to any other activity you do. The work we do in Total Alignment Reset is meant as awesome self-care and “pre-hab” - so that we can reset our out-of-balance tissues BEFORE they get injured and we then need “re-hab”. (Get it? Heh hehhhh.) If I had my way, you would all take this class once a week to balance out your yoga practice, to keep your muscles and fascia healthy, and to live in your body in a more embodied way (read: proprioception! The coolest word you might have learned today!)

-my fascia-hydrating class at Yoga Soup: Thursday evenings 6:45-7:45 and only $12! (click to enlarge flyer)-

Anyway, there’s lots more to say about fascia and the body, but I’ll save it for another write-up for you guys. In the meantime, feel free again to ask me if you have any questions, and I'm so happy that you're interested in learning more about the body so you can live better inside of it!

Related: Redefining Self-Myofascial Release: What Does it Do? And What Doesn’t it Do?