Kimbal McMahon Remedial Therapy

Kimbal McMahon Remedial Therapy Remedial Massage, Remedial Energy Therapy and Craniosacral Therapy. Enhancing your body’s resources to encourage an internal environment n which you can thrive.

Sharing new ideas, techniques and discoveries to enhance your wellbeing and life experience. Functional Energy Therapist

16/12/2025

Today I want to bring you into the quiet interior world of the body, a place where science and sensation coexist, and where even the smallest structures hold stories. Before we explore the deeper art of myofascial trigger point therapy in my next post, I want to lay a foundation that feels both beautiful and true.

Many bodyworkers were never entirely taught the science behind trigger points, and many clients know them only as “knots.” But the truth is far more elegant, far more human, and far more poetic than that. When we understand them correctly, the body's whole landscape begins to make sense.

Inside every muscle are tiny contractile threads called sarcomeres. I often imagine them as thousands of delicate accordion folds lined up end to end, expanding and contracting in a rhythm that mirrors breath. In a healthy state, these folds open and close with ease, like the petals of a flower responding to light. But life doesn’t always keep its softness. A moment of stress, a pattern of overuse, a season of guarding, or the quiet residue of something emotionally overwhelming can cause a cluster of these little folds to clamp down and refuse to release. They hold tight, far tighter than the body ever intended. This is the beginning of a trigger point, a small place in the body's fabric where movement stops, and holding begins.

When these sarcomeres remain contracted, blood flow cannot fully enter the area. The tissue becomes a tiny pocket of drought. The body calls this ischemia, but you can imagine it as a river narrowing until only a trickle can pass through. Without fresh blood, oxygen cannot arrive, nourishment cannot circulate, and the natural byproducts of muscle activity begin to collect instead of being washed away.

These metabolites, harmless in motion, become irritating when trapped. They gather like stagnant water behind a dam, slowly altering the tissue's chemistry until the nerves around them begin to react. This is why a trigger point aches, burns, radiates, or surprises us with sharpness. It is not just tension; it is nature trying to move again.

Fascia, the body’s great communicator, becomes part of this story too. Because fascia is one continuous web, a single small obstruction can create distant echoes. A trigger point in the neck might send pain into the jaw or temple. A trigger point in the glute might imitate sciatica. A point in the diaphragm might reshape breath and ripple into the lower back. These are not accidents. These are the fascial lines speaking their language, sending signals through the body’s interconnected map. What happens in one place is felt everywhere.

And hidden beneath all of this is something more subtle, something more tender. Trigger points often form not only from physical strain but also from emotional tightening. The jaw clenches around unspoken words. The diaphragm holds back tears. The belly tightens around fear. The hips brace for imagined impact. Over time, these emotional reflexes crystallize into physical ones. The body remembers its history in the places where it stops moving.

This is why understanding trigger points is so important. They are not random knots; they are small dams in a river that longs to flow. When we release a trigger point, we are not just softening tension; we are restoring circulation to a starved pocket of tissue. We are dissolving chemical stagnation. We are freeing a section of fascia so the whole body can move with more grace. We are interrupting a protective pattern the nervous system has been holding onto, sometimes for years.

In the next post, we will step into the artistry of how I approach myofascial trigger point work, the breaking of the dam, and the waves of release that can change an entire region of the body. For now, let this be your gateway.

Trigger points are small, but the story they tell is vast. And once you understand them, you begin to understand the deep intelligence of the body that carries them.

16/12/2025

Confessions of a Myofascial Trigger Point

I was never meant to be permanent. I began as a moment, a response, a slight tightening when holding felt safer than releasing. At first, it was subtle, just a brief pause in the tissue's rhythm. But the body asked me to stay. So I did. I shortened my fibers, thickened my layers, and held the chemistry still. I became a place where the river slowed and gathered its weight.

The body learned to move around me. Fascia stiffened along familiar lines, rerouting tension and sensation elsewhere. Pain drifted outward, tracing old pathways through the shoulder, jaw, back, or breath. I wasn’t creating chaos. I was containing it. I held pressure because something inside wasn’t ready to let go.

Then the hands came, not hurried, not demanding. They rested with warmth and attention, and I felt the first change before I understood it. Compression softened the alarm. The nervous system quieted its vigilance. Hyaluronic layers warmed and began to slide. A gentle current brushed past me as the fascial wave moved through the body, reminding the tissue of motion I thought had been lost.

When the wave reached me, it paused. I was seen. The hands didn’t press me deeper into holding. Instead, they slipped beneath me, lifting me gently toward the bone. The pressure shifted in different directions, changing the shape of everything I had been holding together. My fibers lengthened. Blood returned. Chemistry softened. I felt warmth where there had been tightness and a trembling where there had been certainty.

I tried to stay. Old patterns don’t dissolve easily. But time was offered instead of force. Breath moved. Electrical chatter quieted. The nervous system loosened its grip on the story I had been carrying. Slowly, and with only a little drama on my part, I melted. The dam cracked, and the water I had been holding found its way forward again.

As I released, the river surged outward, carrying the change through the fascial lines that connect the whole body. Where I once stood, there was space, warmth, and movement.

I was never the enemy; I was the pause that kept the body safe until it was ready. And when it was finally met with patience, presence, and understanding of a healer like you, I let go. The river remembered itself, and so did I.

16/09/2025

Thanks for your patience and support!
Recovery process is going well.
My online diary is active again.
Slight change to availability and times.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Kimbal
🙏🏼

03/06/2025

🌌 Fascia: The Listening Thread

In the silence beneath the skin,
a silver web listens—
not just to movement,
but to memory, mystery, and meaning.

Fascia, the tender filament,
does not merely connect—

it composes:
a symphony of tension, release,
a choreography of form cradling the formless.

Some say it slows light,
others say it sings with it.

In its watery weft,
our bodies become instruments
of the unseen field—
feeling what science has yet to name.

So, when you touch,
touch as if touching a prayer
spoken by the stars—
translated by the body
into breath, into being.

Enjoy!🙏🏼
13/05/2025

Enjoy!🙏🏼

Welcome to my Relaxation Series. Each month I will share with you a New Moon & Full Moon Relaxation practice.May these practices help you to return to your d...

19/11/2024
To read later.
14/03/2024

To read later.

It's always wonderful to reread articles by Dr. Upledger. Enjoy this Article: https://bit.ly/43a1uNj or Upledger.com Searchable Article Database

14/09/2023

It’s R U OK? Day today.
My door is always open and my phone is always on if anyone needs to talk… Be kind, ALWAYS!

If someone tells you they’re struggling, or not feeling ok, take it seriously! It takes a huge amount of strength and courage to say those words.
Go easy on yourself and others. Everyone is struggling in some way.
Be brave. Talk if you need to. Be a caring ear for someone.
Pay attention and read between the lines, maybe they just need a little kindness to feel comfortable enough to open up.
Be the person you’d like someone to be for you.

Life is hard, we don’t need to make it harder..

02/09/2023

Starting Spring with a Clinic move.
I am now next door in the newly renovated QV Tower.
My clinic is in Room 2D right at the end of the ground floor hallway ( beside the cafe).
Spacious and quiet with lovely trees out the south facing windows.
Really excited by this new chapter and looking forward to seeing you there. 😃🙏🏼

05/08/2023

Address

Room 2D, QV Tower, 11 High Street
Launceston, TAS
7250

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