Priami Therapeutic Massage

Priami Therapeutic Massage Auto Injury Recovery. Specializing in Medical Rehabilitation Massage Therapy • Plus Therapeutic Yoga. SE MI.

Specializing in pain reduction due to auto & other injuries. We can assist you in the comfort of your own home or at our convenient Northville, MI location.

The bodies archive
12/13/2025

The bodies archive

The Body’s Archive

Understanding the science of trauma begins with recognizing that the body reacts far faster than the mind. Trauma is not only a story of what happened, but it is also a physiological imprint that alters how a person breathes, moves, feels, and processes the world. When something overwhelms the system, the body responds in ways that bypass thought entirely. These reactions live deep in the nervous system, the muscles, the fascia, and the receptors that gather and interpret sensation.

The limbic system is the body’s emotional lighthouse. It scans every environment for signs of danger and remembers the subtle details of past overwhelm long before a person is consciously aware of them. When something familiar touches that memory, even gently, the limbic system illuminates the entire internal landscape as if the original threat were happening again. It is not betraying the person. It is trying to keep them safe.

The amygdala acts as the guardian of survival. It does not differentiate between yesterday and today. It only knows what once felt threatening. When it senses a reminder, it signals the body to prepare. Your heart rate rises, breathing shifts, and muscles contract. This is why trauma responses appear instantly and powerfully. They are ancient reflexes shaped for protection.

The insula is a crucial region of the cerebral cortex that allows a person to feel themselves from within. It determines how much sensation and emotion the system can tolerate at any given moment. When danger is perceived, the insula may dim internal awareness to prevent overwhelm, creating numbness or dissociation. Or it may amplify it, making every sensation feel sharp. It is the body’s internal dimmer switch, adjusting intensity moment by moment.

The vagus nerve, which connects the brain to the heart, lungs, gut, and organs, shifts into its protective pathways during trauma. This can create shallow breathing, emotional distance, digestive shutdown, or a muted sense of connection. When safety returns, the vagus nerve slowly widens its communication again, allowing the body to reenter a state of rest, integration, and presence.

Muscles respond instantly to threat. Inside each fiber, chemical messengers activate actin and myosin, creating contraction patterns that mirror the body’s survival needs. These patterns are not random. They are survival etched into muscle memory, created by repetition and necessity.

Fascia is the body’s great storyteller, a living web that surrounds every muscle, bone, organ, and nerve. It responds to trauma by thickening, tightening, and changing its internal fluidity. Collagen fibers reorganize themselves into protective shapes. Mechanoreceptors, proprioceptors, and nociceptors within the fascia begin sending altered messages to the brain, shaped by what the body has endured. Fascia can hold emotional energy, bracing patterns, and unprocessed survival responses like a woven archive of experience. It is not just connective tissue; it is a sensory organ that records the history of what you have lived through.

Trauma imprints through every one of these systems. Neural pathways fire in practiced patterns. Breath becomes guarded. Movement becomes shaped by what once hurt, and the body protects until it believes it no longer needs to. And in many people, that protection outlives the original danger.

Understanding this science allows both clients and bodyworkers to approach the body with compassion rather than confusion. Trauma responses are intelligent adaptations, not weaknesses. The body is not malfunctioning. It is remembering. And with the right conditions of safety, warmth, steady touch, and presence, these patterns can soften and reorganize.

When we understand what is happening inside, we honor the body not as something to be corrected, but as something that, in every way it knew, has tried to protect the person carrying it. This is the foundation of trauma-informed bodywork. It is where science meets art, and where healing begins.

04/07/2025

Do you consider the neural influence of & ?

05/16/2024

Massage Therapy Role in Integrative Care & Pain Management.
Great Video with insightful information regarding MT.

03/20/2024

Maryette Saukam's mother sustained a traumatic brain injury (TBI) last year. Despite all the challenges her injury has brought, Maryette and her mother have remained optimistic and resilient. Read her story here: https://bit.ly/4ceempR

03/09/2024

From all of us at the Brain Injury Association of America, thank you to everyone who showed out for Brain Injury Awareness Day on Capitol Hill! Over 200 people from more than 30 states came together to raise awareness for brain injury and to advocate for the reauthorization of the Traumatic Brain Injury Act. Every single person who attended helped to make a difference.

If you couldn't attend or if you want to keep advocating, you can write your members of congress and tell them to reauthorize the TBI Act. Get involved: https://bit.ly/3wQYyJi

Photo taken by Phi Nguyen.

01/06/2024

Chronic pain is a frequent comorbid condition after traumatic brain injury (TBI), with up to 46 percent of individuals with moderate to severe TBI reporting chronic pain from 1 to 30 years post-injury. Our upcoming Mitch Rosenthal Research Webinar, "Chronic Pain and TBI," presented by Jeanne Hoffman, PhD, ABPP, and Risa Nakase-Richardson, PhD, FACRM, will cover the most frequent types of pain and the role of comorbidities in people with TBI and chronic pain, possible barriers and facilitators for engagement in pain treatment for people with TBI, and more. Register here: https://bit.ly/3S6hcVQ

04/25/2023

Personality changes, memory and judgement deficits, lack of impulse control, and poor concentration are all common issues following brain injury. Behavioral changes can be stressful for families and caregivers who must learn to adapt their communication techniques, reestablish relationships, and change expectations of what the impaired person can or cannot do. Learn more about behavior changes after brain injuries here: http://bit.ly/40YkeNl

10/21/2022

Andary v. USAA Michigan Court of Appeals ruling means that changes to the No-Fault in 2019 do not apply retroactively to car accident victims

Please educate yourself, your family and friends. This is so important.The Difference  - PLPD VS FULL COVERAGE
12/24/2021

Please educate yourself, your family and friends. This is so important.

The Difference - PLPD VS FULL COVERAGE

Learn the major differences when comparing PLPD insurance vs. full coverage in Michigan to ensure you are protected in the event of a crash.

06/28/2019

"I have had many, many conversations I don’t remember..."

Many do not know that they DO NOT have to USE their AUTO INSURANCE company CASE MANAGER when they’ve been injured in a m...
02/15/2019

Many do not know that they DO NOT have to USE their AUTO INSURANCE company CASE MANAGER when they’ve been injured in a motor vehicle accident. Please read this informative information and knowledge yourself. A well stated read...

Under the no-fault law, persons who are injured in motor vehicle collisions can use the services of an auto accident case manager. Basically, a case manager helps injured individuals coordinate their medical care during their recovery. It’s crucial that Michigan car accident victims understand the...

Address

37663 Pembroke Avenue
Livonia, MI
48152

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Priami Therapeutic Massage posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram