InvestNyou

InvestNyou Jennifer Adele LMT #9229

Love my clients.
02/16/2026

Love my clients.

Therapeutic professional space located inside Heart of the Sacred Wellness Center. 575-425-9261
02/12/2026

Therapeutic professional space located inside Heart of the Sacred Wellness Center. 575-425-9261

Valentine sheet set up.
01/27/2026

Valentine sheet set up.

Excited to offer the only FDA approved red light face and neck treatment for custom massage options. What a nice treat w...
01/16/2026

Excited to offer the only FDA approved red light face and neck treatment for custom massage options. What a nice treat while your legs and feet get pampered.

01/02/2026

Lately, the word somatic seems to be everywhere. It’s being used in captions, course titles, and conversations so often that it can feel like just another passing trend in the wellness world. But somatic work is not new, and it is certainly not a buzzword. For me, it is a remembering. Long before it had a name, the body already knew how to communicate through sensation, rhythm, and response. Somatic work brings us back to that language, inviting us to listen beneath the noise and honor the intelligence that has always lived within the body itself.

So, if you will indulge me with a few moments of your precious time, I would love to share the meaning behind this word.

Somatic work is the art of listening with the hands. It is an invitation for the body to speak in its own language, one that lives beneath words and stories. Rather than asking the body to perform or correct itself, somatic work creates a space where sensation becomes the guide and awareness becomes the medicine. We slow down enough to feel the subtle tides beneath the skin, the places where the body learned to brace, adapt, or go quiet in order to survive.

In this work, nothing is forced. The nervous system is met with patience, curiosity, and respect. As safety is reintroduced, tissues soften, breath deepens, and the body begins to remember its own rhythm. Movement returns not because it was demanded, but because it was invited.

Somatic work honors the body as an intelligent, living landscape. Every sensation is information. Every pause is meaningful. Healing unfolds not by fixing what is broken, but by restoring relationships, helping the body feel seen, heard, and safe enough to release what it has been holding.

Somatic awareness is what transforms technique into art. When we weave somatic principles into bodywork, our hands stop leading and begin listening. Each stroke, hold, and pause becomes a conversation with the nervous system, guided by breath, sensation, and subtle shifts rather than force or expectation. It is where skill meets presence, where science meets intuition, and where the body is given the space it needs to reorganize, release, and remember its own capacity for healing.

Fresh off the press.. Custom holiday gift certificates 🎁 now available for your loved ones. Passed all inspection and do...
12/19/2025

Fresh off the press.. Custom holiday gift certificates 🎁 now available for your loved ones. Passed all inspection and doors open January 2026.

12/15/2025

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.

12/15/2025

I once heard a doctor refer to fascia as nothing more than packing peanuts, a kind of filler material with little significance beyond holding things in place. For a long time, that belief shaped how fascia was taught and understood. It was treated as background material, passive and forgettable. Yet science, when given the chance to look closely, has a way of revealing quiet miracles hiding in plain sight.

As imaging technology improved and researchers began to study fascia in greater detail, an entirely different picture emerged. Through the work of scientists such as Robert Schleip, Carla Stecco, Helene Langevin, and others, fascia revealed itself not as inert wrapping, but as living, responsive tissue deeply integrated with the nervous system. Under the microscope, fascia appeared less like packing material and more like a finely tuned communication network. In some regions, it was found to be even more richly innervated than the muscle itself, filled with sensory nerve endings constantly reporting back to the brain.

Rather than sitting neatly around muscles, fascia behaves more like a three-dimensional spiderweb or a continuous fabric woven throughout the body. Tug on one corner, and the tension is felt elsewhere. Stretch one area and the entire system responds. Fascia blends into muscle fibers, connects across joints, and wraps organs, transmitting force, sensation, and information in every direction. It senses pressure, stretch, and movement the way a musical instrument senses vibration, responding instantly to changes in tone and tension.

This understanding transformed how we view the mind–body connection. Fascia does not simply move the body; it informs it. When emotional stress or trauma occurs, fascia adapts alongside the nervous system. Like a seatbelt locking during sudden braking, it tightens to protect. Like fabric repeatedly folded the same way, it begins to hold familiar creases. These changes are intelligent, protective responses shaped by survival, even when they persist long after the original danger has passed.

Research helped clarify why this happens. Helene Langevin demonstrated that fascia responds to mechanical input and hydration, showing that gentle, sustained touch can influence its structure, much like warm wax can then be reshaped. Carla Stecco’s anatomical mapping revealed the continuity and precision of fascial planes, helping us understand why pain often follows predictable pathways rather than remaining in a single isolated spot. Robert Schleip’s work highlighted fascia’s role as a sensory organ, deeply involved in proprioception and autonomic regulation, explaining why changes in fascia can influence how safe, grounded, or connected a person feels.

Within the Body Artisan approach, this science feels less mechanical and more poetic. Working with fascia is like learning the language of a living landscape. Touch becomes a conversation rather than a command. Pressure is an invitation, not a demand. When safety is present, fascia responds the way frozen ground responds to spring, slowly thawing, rehydrating, and allowing movement where there was once rigidity. Breath deepens, awareness settles, and patterns that felt permanent begin to loosen.

Seeing fascia for what it truly is invites both humility and wonder. The body is not a machine padded with filler. It is a living system of extraordinary intelligence, where structure, sensation, and emotion are woven together like threads in a tapestry. Fascia is one of the primary fibers holding that tapestry intact, carrying both strength and memory.

When we honor this, healing shifts from fixing something broken to supporting something profoundly wise. Given the right conditions, the body does not need to be forced to change. It already knows how to soften, adapt, and return toward balance. Our role is to listen, to support, and to trust the design that has been there all along.

12/03/2025

The Hidden Ecosystem Under Your Skin

There is a reason people look at the branching currents of fascia and think of mycelium, the great underground network that carries information through the forest floor. They feel similar long before you know the science. Both look like living constellations. Both listen. Both respond. Both exist not as separate parts, but as unified systems devoted to connection.

Inside the human body, fascia forms a continuous web of collagen and fluid that wraps every muscle fiber, every organ, every vessel, every nerve. It is the only system that touches everything. When you zoom in under a microscope, fascia reveals delicate branching fibers that look astonishingly like fungal hyphae. When you zoom out, it behaves like a communication network, transmitting mechanical, electrical, and chemical signals across the entire body.

Beneath the earth, mycelium creates the “Wood Wide Web,” an underground communication system that allows forests to behave like a single, intelligent organism. Mycelium can transfer nutrients to weaker trees, warn neighbors of pests, regulate moisture, and maintain the health of the entire ecosystem. The network thrives on conductivity, hydration, and collaboration. It is not simply fungal tissue. It is a relationship embodied.

This is where science and metaphor meet.

Fascia conducts electrical signals via mechanotransduction, converting pressure and stretch into cellular signals that ripple outward. Mycelium transmits electrochemical pulses across long distances. Both systems coordinate responses faster than conscious processing. Both store memory. Both change their density and responsiveness in response to stress, environment, and hydration.

Fascia thickens and stiffens under emotional load, exactly the way a forest mycelial network becomes denser under threat. Fascia softens when safety returns, just as fungal networks increase nutrient sharing when a forest is thriving. Fascia maps experience, trauma, and recovery in its matrix. Mycelium maps seasons, storms, and regeneration across its vast web.

Humans are not separate from nature; we are built with its patterns.

When we touch fascia, we are not just altering tissue. We are restoring communication within an internal ecosystem. We are helping a body remember that its parts belong to each other. Through slow pressure, traction, breath, and presence, we help the signals move again. This is why fascial work can shift emotional states, restore fluid movement, and awaken tissues that have gone silent. We are rehydrating the network. We are clearing blocked pathways. We are giving the body back its forest-like clarity.

The deeper science is even more beautiful. Fascia contains more sensory nerve endings than muscles or joints. It senses vibration like a tuning fork. It transmits mechanical forces like an internal tide. It carries subtle electrical currents that influence how cells behave. In many ways, it behaves like biological mycelium, a distributed intelligence that monitors and adjusts the whole.

And just as a forest thrives when every tree is connected, the human body thrives when fascia glides freely, breath moves fully, and the nervous system feels safe enough to soften its grip.

As bodyworkers, we are the caretakers of this inner landscape. We listen for places where the network has gone quiet. We hydrate the dry fascial riverbeds with movement, warmth, and mindful pressure. We help reconnect the body’s communication pathways so the person lying on the table can feel themselves again, not just physically, but emotionally and intuitively.

The body is not a machine. It is a living ecosystem. A forest of sensation. A mycelial web of memory and meaning. A world that speaks through its fascia the way the earth speaks through its roots.

And when we honor it this way, with curiosity, science, artistry, and reverence, the whole system begins to heal.

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Taos, NM
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