Zen Canyon Massage by Shannon Helquist LMT

Zen Canyon Massage by Shannon Helquist LMT Shannon Helquist Massage Therapy located at East 24th Street, Vancouver, WA

This one is for any of you out there who may have chronic foot problems. This page is great at explaining what's happeni...
03/11/2026

This one is for any of you out there who may have chronic foot problems. This page is great at explaining what's happening as well as giving you solutions for healing. 🙂

👣 The Lymph in Your Feet: Why Your Toes Might Be More Important Than You Think
When we think about circulation and detox, most of us picture the heart, the liver, or the kidneys. But here’s an underrated truth: your feet are lymphatic powerhouses, silently working to detox your body, regulate inflammation, and support immune function—all while you walk, stand, or even wiggle your toes.
Yes, your feet do far more than take you places—they help keep you alive, clean, and balanced.

🧬 What Is the Lymphatic System?
The lymphatic system is your body’s second circulatory system, consisting of:
* Lymphatic vessels (similar to veins)
* Lymph nodes
* Lymph fluid
* Immune cells (lymphocytes)
Its key roles include:
* Clearing waste and cellular debris
* Transporting fats from the digestive system
* Regulating inflammation
* Carrying immune signals
Unlike the cardiovascular system, the lymphatic system doesn’t have a central pump (like the heart). It relies on muscle contractions, gravity, and movement to circulate lymph.

👣 The Lymphatic System in Your Feet
Your feet contain a dense network of superficial and deep lymphatic vessels, all designed to transport lymph upward against gravity. These vessels drain into larger lymphatic trunks in the ankles and calves, then continue their journey toward inguinal lymph nodes in the groin, iliac nodes in the pelvis, and ultimately into the thoracic duct, where lymph rejoins the bloodstream.
Key lymphatic components in the feet include:
* Dorsal digital lymphatics (between the toes)
* Plantar lymphatics (bottom of the foot)
* Posterior tibial lymphatics (deep inside the ankle)
* Superficial lymph capillaries (just under the skin)

🔄 How Lymph Moves Through Your Feet
Because gravity pulls lymph downward, the feet are particularly prone to lymphatic congestion. Movement is essential to drive fluid back up the body.
Lymphatic flow in the feet depends on:
* Walking or toe flexion (muscle pumps)
* Ankle movement (activates venous-lymphatic synergy)
* Proper footwear and posture (restrictive shoes may impede lymph flow)
* Manual stimulation or dry brushing (boosts superficial lymph movement)

🧪 What Happens When Lymph Doesn’t Flow?
When lymph becomes stagnant in the feet, you may experience:
* Pitting edema (swelling that leaves an indentation)
* Heavy, tired legs
* Cold toes or poor circulation
* Skin changes (hyperkeratosis, dryness, thickening)
* Increased susceptibility to infections (e.g. cellulitis)
Lymphatic stagnation in the lower extremities can result from:
* Sedentary lifestyle
* Prolonged standing or sitting
* Post-surgical trauma (especially orthopedic procedures)
* Venous insufficiency
* Chronic inflammation or autoimmune disease

💃 Fun Facts About Foot Lymphatics
* 🧦 Compression socks support both venous and lymphatic return—your lymph loves them!
* 🌙 Lymphatic drainage is slower at night, which is why many people wake with puffy feet or ankles.
* 🔄 The plantar fascia (thick tissue in the sole of your foot) influences lymphatic flow by stimulating movement when walking barefoot.
* 🌿 Foot reflexology points correlate with major lymphatic pathways in the body.

🌿 How to Support Lymph Flow in the Feet
1. Move often! Rebounding, walking, and calf raises are your lymph’s best friends.
2. Hydrate well. Lymph is 95% water—thicker lymph = slower drainage.
3. Use a massage ball. Rolling the soles stimulates deep plantar lymphatics.
4. Manual Lymphatic Drainage (MLD). Gentle hands-on therapy can mobilize stagnant fluid.
5. Elevate your feet. A few minutes of elevation each day helps reverse gravitational pull.
6. Reflexology Lymph Drainage (RLD)

🧠 Final Thought
Your feet might be the furthest thing from your head, but when it comes to immune function, inflammation regulation, and fluid balance, they’re front and center. A healthy lymphatic system starts from the ground up—and that includes your soles, toes, and ankles.
So next time you stretch your feet or walk barefoot in the grass, remember: you’re doing your whole lymphatic system a big favor. 👣💚

Disclaimer:�This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider before beginning any new wellness or therapeutic routine.

©️

Hello friends, here is the link for my booking page in Vancouver, WAYou'll see the name Miley Stanton Flowers because sh...
03/10/2026

Hello friends, here is the link for my booking page in Vancouver, WA
You'll see the name Miley Stanton Flowers because she is the lovely massage therapist who's practice I'm working from at Flourish: A Space for Dimensional Healing where our facilities are located. If you are in the area, please look us up, we would love to accommodate you.

Shannon Helquist in Vancouver, WA offers Massage, Massage, Massage Therapy, Head Massage services. Shannon has been a licensed massage therapist since

Hey friends, I am now back in Vancouver, WA starting a massage practice here and loving it. I share a beautiful space wi...
03/03/2026

Hey friends, I am now back in Vancouver, WA starting a massage practice here and loving it. I share a beautiful space with amazing, kind, acupuncturists, other massage therapists and a mental health counselor at Flourish. My number will remain the same. If you're in the hood, which is a beautiful, hip, fun hood with lots of quaint cafe's, coffee shops, etc, please come visit me.
(435) 262-0545

Sometimes I get to meet really cool down to Earth, humble, kind, amazing humans. Today I got to meet Drey (Andrea)Lee, o...
02/28/2026

Sometimes I get to meet really cool down to Earth, humble, kind, amazing humans. Today I got to meet Drey (Andrea)Lee, owner of Zion Zen Massage and Skincare in Southern Utah. I've actually met her before way back when. Drey's little brother Zack Lee (another super awesome, humble, kind human who trimmed my trees about a year ago with his lovely wife. They own and operate The Arborist LLC.)Zack was a friend of mine and our little hoodrat gang of feral teens when we used to run around Kanab finding all sorts of fun and adventure to partake in. Their mom was my 8th grade drama teacher at the old Kanab Middle School. Their dad maintained vehicles including my work van for Best Friend's Animal Sanctuary for years. Anyway, Drey is an exceptionally cool cat who runs a decent sized successful and amazing business where people go for healing, relaxation, skin care, nervous system reset, etc, etc....
If you are ever in the Hurricane, LA Verkin area of Southern Utah, please consider visiting her beautiful spa, it's conveniently located right across the street from the Zion Canyon Hot Springs where these two businesses are partnered to provide you with amazing spa packages. Drey specializes in Lomi Lomi massage from Hawaii. If you stop in, tell her I said hi. 🙂

Nestled near beautiful Zion National Park, ZionZen offers massage therapy, energy work, & head to toe Eminence Organics skin care to refresh your mind, body and spirit.

After several years of practicing massage, you start to notice important patterns in your repeat clients. Whenever I com...
02/26/2026

After several years of practicing massage, you start to notice important patterns in your repeat clients.
Whenever I come across a body that is chronically very, very stiff, like much more tense than your average body, without a doubt, this person has likely suffered severe trauma. Often these folks have had not just one isolated incident but several traumatic events that caused their body to go into fight, flight, freeze, or fawn mode and it stayed that way. Even though the event was over,(except in some cases such as persons who are still victims of abuse), their body and their brain didn't get the memo that they are now physically safe. They are stuck in a physical and mental state of crises. Tensing is protection, if they don't feel safe, they cannot relax.
These are people with chronic migraines, chronic neck/shoulder pain. Chronic muscle stiffness, cramping, twitching, highly anxious or depressed persons, etc.
I am not a licensed trained mental health therapist so I do not vebally deep dive into what happened to my clients to cause their physical symptoms. I do not initiate those conversations or ask any questions that I think may distress them further or that are none of my business that is not a question specific to what I need to know as their massage therapist, that's called ethics and staying in your scope of practice. That information is never pressed for but sometimes people volunteer this on their own which I always allow them to do. If they are ready to talk about it, they are likely ready to process it which can be incredibly effective while also getting physical body work done like trigger point therapy or a more relaxing swedish or shiatsu style to soothe the nervous system enough to feel safe again even if only temporarily.
Healing is like peeling layers of an onion, each session peels another layer. Talking peels a layer, massage peels a layer.
What I can and do ask intentionally with every client is to find out about anything physical such as accidents, injuries or illnesses that I need to know about in order to figure out any contraindications or to adjust to their specific physical need.
I have had people open up to me about incredibly sad, horrific and tragic events in their lives. These cases are always handled with deep compassionate empathy, it's a huge honor for me to serve them to the best of my ability, to hold space and to do my best to reduce their physical symptoms related to trauma.
The moment they voluntarily told me their deep pain, it ALL MADE SENSE.....
Before they told me, they would come in weekly but only experience very short term relief for maybe 2 to 3 days and then they were back where they started with a very stiff body from head to toe. This is because their mind/nervous system still hadn't processed their traumatic event that may have happened even 20 years or more prior.
Once I figured out that my clients needed more than just physical nervous system relief through massage, which is crazy helpful btw especially for trauma survivors, I let them know that they might want to also look into mental health therapy to get to the parts and pieces that I am not trained or licensed to address.
To make this long story a little shorter, our body, mind and spirit are all deeply interconnected, if you have an imbalance/trauma in one, you will see signs, symptoms in the others and vice versa.
This can be tricky for massage therapist's, we work in the medical field but technically we don't but technically we do. We are not doctors or RN's, we cannot diagnose or prescribe but we definitely get a much better picture of a large portion of your body by physically touching it. We pretty much do a much more in depth on hands physical exam than an actual doctor does.
Does your doc run his/her hands over 80% of your body looking for tight tendons, tight muscles, swollen joints, swollen lymph nodes, irregularities on your skin, etc?
We work in the mental health field but technically we don't but technically we do.
Does your mental health therapist run their hands over 80% of your body to see how your mental well-being or lack thereof effects your physical body?
See what I mean?
It's like we're the bridge between these two incredibly important fields of a body's medical needs and mental/emotional needs.
Being a massage therapist or medical practitioner or mental health counselor or any other closely related field practitioner is a HUGE honor.
Every individual is unique and EVERY individual deserves dignity, respect and healing. We are all trained in various ways to help you find healing and peace in your bodies and minds.
Happy healing......

🥺 How Did Your Body Change After Surviving Trauma?

No one prepares you for this part.

They celebrate that you survived.
They call you strong.
They say, “You handled that so well.”

But no one talks about how your body changed after.

And maybe you’ve stood in front of the mirror and thought:

“I don’t feel like myself anymore.”

Let’s talk about that. 🌿

🧠 Trauma Doesn’t Just Live in Memory

It Lives in the Body

Trauma isn’t only what happened.

It’s what your nervous system did to survive it.

When something overwhelming happens — emotional, medical, relational, financial, spiritual — your body shifts into survival mode:

🔥 Fight
🏃 Flight
❄️ Freeze
🧍 Fawn

And if that state lasts too long… your body adapts.

Adaptation changes physiology.

🌊 What Many Women Notice After Trauma

Let’s gently name them.

💤 1️⃣ The Exhaustion That Sleep Doesn’t Fix

You wake up tired.
Even after 8 hours.

Why?

Because your body has been running on:
• Cortisol
• Adrenaline
• Hyper-vigilance

Eventually, your system crashes.

Your mitochondria slow.
Your nervous system becomes dysregulated.
Your deep sleep phases shorten.

It’s not laziness.
It’s survival fatigue.

💧 2️⃣ Puffiness & Fluid Retention

Face.
Eyes.
Collarbones.
Abdomen.
Legs.

Chronic stress increases:
• Cortisol
• Inflammatory cytokines
• Sodium retention
• Lymphatic stagnation

And the body holds onto fluid as protection.

Especially in women.

The lymphatic system slows when breath shortens and fascia tightens.

You didn’t “gain weight overnight.”
Your body shifted into protection.

🔥 3️⃣ Inflammation Everywhere

• Stiff mornings
• Achy joints
• Gut bloating
• Skin flare-ups
• Head pressure
• Hormonal swings

Trauma activates the immune system.

And when the immune system stays “on,” inflammation becomes the background noise of your life.

🫁 4️⃣ You Stopped Breathing Fully

Trauma tightens:
• The diaphragm
• The rib cage
• The psoas
• The jaw
• The pelvic floor
• The fascia around the heart

You begin shallow chest breathing.

And without deep diaphragmatic breathing…

💛 The thoracic duct drains poorly
💛 Liver detox slows
💛 Vagus nerve tone drops
💛 Lymph stagnates

Breath is medicine.
And trauma steals it quietly.

🍽 5️⃣ Digestive Changes

• IBS
• Reflux
• Food sensitivities
• Constipation or urgency
• Bloating after meals

The gut and brain are directly connected via the vagus nerve.

If the nervous system feels unsafe — digestion downregulates.

You can’t heal in fight-or-flight.

⚖️ 6️⃣ Weight Redistribution

This one hurts women deeply.

Cortisol shifts fat storage to:
• Abdomen
• Lower back
• Upper arms
• Face

It’s protective biology — not failure.

Your body chose survival over aesthetics.

🦴 7️⃣ Fascia Tightened

Trauma lives in connective tissue.

You might notice:
• Frozen shoulders
• Neck tension
• Jaw clenching
• Tight hips
• Pelvic floor tension
• Collarbone congestion

Fascia contracts under stress — and may stay contracted.

That affects:
• Lymphatic drainage
• Circulation
• Organ mobility
• Nerve signaling

The body braces long after the danger is gone.

🌙 8️⃣ Sleep Changed

• Waking at 2–4am
• Night sweats
• Early morning anxiety
• Light fragmented sleep

Trauma alters:
• REM cycles
• Deep sleep duration
• Night cortisol rhythm

Many women think:

“I’m just a bad sleeper.”

No.
Your nervous system hasn’t learned safety yet.

🪞 9️⃣ The Identity Shift

This is the quiet grief.

After trauma, you might feel:

• Less confident
• Less expressive
• Less spontaneous
• More guarded
• More tired in your spirit

Your voice may soften.
Your shoulders round forward.
Your chest collapses protectively.

The body shrinks itself to stay safe.

And that changes how you experience yourself.

🧬 The Hormone Layer Most People Miss

After prolonged stress we often see:

• Elevated cortisol
• Lower progesterone
• Estrogen imbalance
• Thyroid conversion issues (low T3)
• Insulin resistance

Which explains:

• Hair thinning
• Dry skin
• PMS changes
• Brain fog
• Cold intolerance
• Slower metabolism

It’s not aging.
It’s survival chemistry.

🩷 And Then There’s the Strong Woman Syndrome

Some women don’t collapse.

They over-function.

They:
• Build businesses
• Care for everyone
• Keep smiling
• Keep performing
• Keep leading

But internally:
• Adrenals deplete
• Lymph stagnates
• Inflammation builds
• Minerals drain
• The nervous system trembles quietly

Strong women are often just tired women who never got to fall apart.

🌿 Why Your Body Feels “Different”

Because it is.

It is protective.
It is vigilant.
It is braced.
It is wiser.

It carried you through something enormous.

And survival physiology is not the same as healing physiology.

🩺 The Science Behind It

Psychoneuroimmunology shows that chronic stress:

• Alters immune regulation
• Increases inflammatory cytokines
• Impacts thyroid signaling
• Increases gut permeability
• Lowers heart rate variability
• Changes collagen & fascial tone

The body remembers what the mind tries to forget.

🌸 The Good News

The nervous system is plastic.
The lymphatic system can be stimulated.
Breath can be restored.
Inflammation can calm.
Safety can be relearned.

Healing is not forcing your body to “go back.”

Healing is teaching it the war is over.

✨ Gentle Signs You’re Healing

• You sigh again
• Your hands feel warm
• You digest without fear
• You sleep deeper
• You cry and feel relief
• You rest without guilt

These are nervous system victories.

🩷 If This Is You…

You are not broken.
You are not weak.
You are not dramatic.
You are not lazy.

Your body did what it needed to do.

Maybe tonight, instead of criticizing her…

You whisper:

“Thank you for keeping me alive.”

And then you begin teaching her softness again.

🌿 Start Here

• Slow diaphragmatic breathing
• Gentle lymphatic movement
• Mineral replenishment
• Protein support
• Warmth over the chest & abdomen
• Nervous system regulation
• Emotional processing
• Spiritual grounding

Healing trauma is not only emotional work.

It is physiological work.

And it is sacred work. 🩷

🌷 Reflection Question

What changed most in your body after surviving something hard?

Your sleep?
Your weight?
Your energy?
Your digestion?
Your confidence?

You are not alone at this table.

Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your diet, exercise, or health regimen.

Oooh.....this is a good one. I hope all my super awesome clients out there read this. All. Of. You.Also, keep in mind, i...
02/26/2026

Oooh.....this is a good one. I hope all my super awesome clients out there read this.
All. Of. You.
Also, keep in mind, if you take a melatonin supplement, check with your doc. Melatonin should only be taken temporarily to stimulate your natural melatonin cycles. You can naturally stimulate your body to produce melatonin without supplementation by exercising daily and getting adequate but safe exposure to sunlight which also helps to regulate your circadian rhythm. How do I know this? I took Dr. Lynn White's Psychology of Stress and Pain class at SUU. Super cool stuff. 🤓

🌊 What Is the Glymphatic System?

The glymphatic system is the brain’s unique waste clearance network, functioning similarly to the lymphatic system in the body—but with a twist. It was only discovered in 2012 by Dr. Maiken Nedergaard, and it has since changed how we understand neurodegeneration and brain inflammation.
This system relies on cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to flush out waste products from brain tissue through perivascular pathways, facilitated by a type of glial cell called astrocytes. These cells regulate the flow of interstitial fluid and act as a conduit for metabolic clearance during deep sleep, especially in slow-wave sleep cycles.

🔥 When the Glymphatic System Is Inhibited: The Inflammatory Storm

When the glymphatic system is impaired, neurotoxic proteins—like beta-amyloid, tau proteins, and inflammatory cytokines—begin to accumulate in the brain's interstitial spaces. This accumulation triggers:
* Microglial activation, leading to chronic low-grade neuroinflammation
* Increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines like IL-6, TNF-α, and IL-1β
* Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction within neurons
* Blood-brain barrier permeability ("leaky brain") and further immune dysregulation

Over time, this chronic inflammatory state can manifest as:
* Brain fog, memory issues, and cognitive decline
* Mood disorders such as anxiety and depression
* Increased risk of neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s
* Worsened systemic inflammation due to vagus nerve signaling disruption

🛌 Sleep, the Glymphatic Switch, and Circadian Health

The glymphatic system is most active during deep sleep, particularly during non-REM slow-wave phases. When sleep is disrupted—whether due to stress, screen exposure, sleep apnea, or erratic sleep cycles—the brain cannot engage in glymphatic flushing.
Sleep deprivation has been shown to:
* Increase extracellular beta-amyloid by up to 43% in a single night
* Decrease the expression of aquaporin-4 (AQP4) water channels in astrocytes, impairing fluid transport
* Heighten markers of neuroinflammation, including NF-κB signaling and glial activation

🧬 Systemic Inflammation and Glymphatic Dysfunction: A Two-Way Street

Interestingly, inflammation itself suppresses glymphatic flow. Research shows that systemic infections, autoimmune flares, and even gut dysbiosis can produce pro-inflammatory cytokines that reduce CSF dynamics and glymphatic activity.
Conversely, poor glymphatic clearance can worsen systemic inflammation by:
* Disrupting hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis signaling
* Altering vagal tone and the gut-brain-liver immune axis
* Impairing clearance of immune-modulating neurotransmitters like glutamate

🌿 How to Support Glymphatic Health

1. Prioritize Deep Sleep
* Aim for 7–9 hours of uninterrupted sleep in total darkness
* Use magnesium, L-theanine, or glycine to support non-REM sleep
* Avoid screens and caffeine 3+ hours before bedtime
2. Rebound, Stretch, and Move Your Spine
* Movement of the spine and neck enhances CSF circulation
* Manual lymphatic drainage may also indirectly stimulate glymphatic function
3. Hydration & Electrolyte Balance
* CSF production is heavily dependent on fluid status
* Add trace minerals or electrolytes to water to support fluid dynamics
4. Nutraceutical Support
* Resveratrol, turmeric (curcumin), omega-3s, and NAC reduce neuroinflammation
* Melatonin not only promotes deep sleep but enhances glymphatic activity
5. Cranial and Cervical Lymphatic Drainage
* Facial and neck MLD can relieve interstitial congestion
* Techniques like craniosacral therapy or vagal nerve stimulation may further support this network

🧠 Final Thought

The glymphatic system is a vital yet vulnerable detox engine for the brain. When impaired, it doesn’t just affect cognition—it can unleash a cascade of inflammatory dysfunction that spreads throughout the entire body.

By supporting this system through sleep hygiene, lymphatic stimulation, and anti-inflammatory practices, we lay the foundation for resilient mental, neurological, and immune health.

©️

02/23/2026

Quick reminder, I'm in Utah until this weekend taking appts in both Parowan and Brian Head. Text if you'd like to book a massage appt with me in Southern UT this week. (435) 262-0545

Hey friends! I'll be in Parowan, Utah taking massage appts from Monday, February 23rd to Friday, February  27th. I'll ha...
02/14/2026

Hey friends! I'll be in Parowan, Utah taking massage appts from Monday, February 23rd to Friday, February 27th. I'll have morning, afternoon and evening available. Please text me if you'd like to book an appt.
(435) 262-0545

Hey Iron County locals, I have moved to Vancouver, WA to get started in my new role at Flourish, a collective of acupunc...
02/12/2026

Hey Iron County locals, I have moved to Vancouver, WA to get started in my new role at Flourish, a collective of acupuncturists and massage therapists. I will occasionally be back in UT taking massage appts and will let you know when I will be in the area. In the meantime, here is a list of amazing local massage therapists I highly recommend for their quality and work ethic. I have personally received bodywork from all of them; they are each incredibly talented in their own unique way. Please contact them individually for rates and specialties.
Thank you all for your continued support. I will miss you all, and I hope to see you soon. Happy healing!!!

Paragonah: Megan Wood (435) 896-7172

Parowan: Angie Salveson (435) 531-0699

Brian Head: Celestial Being Spa (909) 524-7777
www.celestialbeing.love

Cedar City: Lisa Decker (435) 559-4734
www.lisaleistlmt.setmore.com

Cedar City: Maranda with Journey to Health at Southern Utah Wellness Group 435-267-0133

This is my favorite page to learn about the lymph system. I've been telling a bunch of my clients about it. These guys e...
02/07/2026

This is my favorite page to learn about the lymph system. I've been telling a bunch of my clients about it. These guys explain it so much better than I do. 🙂

Happening in Brian Head, love the one you're with!
02/07/2026

Happening in Brian Head, love the one you're with!

Address

300 E 24th Street
Vancouver, WA
98663

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 12pm - 4pm

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