Holistic Eleanor

Holistic Eleanor Massage, Energy Work & Workshops, In-Studio & In-Home 🙌 Body, Mind & Soul 🌟 Empower, Embody & Evolve 💖 I believe in you!

To facilitate healing and healthy boundaries is my life mission. I invite your engagement by creating a safe space for you to reflect and share, then offer simple yet empowering teachings and tools, plus intuitive guidance to serve your highest good. Your journey of inner self growth is an adventure, and all of your feelings are valid along the path of wellness. In providing Holistic Healing services and personal development SOULutions for your dynamic balance of body, mind and spirit, I am fulfilled. Either privately or in beautiful community, your needs are my priority. Integrity is an important value of mine, along with compassion, vulnerability and non-judgement.

01/14/2026
12/28/2025

Holiday Studio Closures 🤍

As we move through the holiday season, Be Yoga & Wellness will be taking a few intentional pauses to rest, reset, and be with loved ones.

📅 Please note our upcoming schedule changes:

Wednesday, Dec 24, 2025
Evening classes cancelled

Thursday, Dec 25, 2025
Christmas Day — Studio Closed

Friday, Dec 26, 2025
Boxing Day — Studio Closed

Wednesday, Dec 31, 2025
Evening classes cancelled

Thursday, Jan 1, 2026
New Year’s Day — Studio Closed

Thank you for your understanding and for being part of our beautiful community 💛

We can’t wait to welcome you back on the mat soon.

✨ Wishing you rest, joy, and presence this season ✨

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.

12/14/2025

Strengthen Your Bond

Nurture the spark in your relationship 🌟

Through the power of touch, discover how to connect on a deeper level with your partner and at ☮

Learn simple, effective Swedish massage techniques to relieve stress and foster intimacy.

A memorable experience for couples to connect 💞

See link for details or to reserve your spot 📅

https://www.beyogawellness.com/holistic-massage

12/13/2025

An RMT in British Columbia recently created a new federal petition to gather further support for HST/GST exemption for massage therapy in Canada.

This petition is sponsored by MP Brad Vis, who has previously championed similar exemption petitions directed towards the previous federal government.

A related petition, recently presented in the House of Commons by Newfoundland MP Jonathan Rowe, has already mandated a government response. Every new petition presented with maximum signatures further amplifies our collective voice and compels the government to act on this crucial issue.

We strongly encourage all RMTs, massage therapy students, and members of the public to sign this petition before it expires on December 25, 2025: https://www.ourcommons.ca/petitions/en/Petition/Details?Petition=e-6753

12/10/2025
12/09/2025

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.

It’s a joy teaching couples gentle & relaxing touch for relationship wellness at Be Yoga & Wellness 💚🙌 https://www.beyog...
12/08/2025

It’s a joy teaching couples gentle & relaxing touch for relationship wellness at Be Yoga & Wellness 💚🙌

https://www.beyogawellness.com/holistic-massage

Build Skills That Last a Lifetime

Learn, connect, and love 🌟

This workshop isn’t just a one-time experience—it’s an opportunity to build skills you’ll use forever!

Swedish massage techniques, communication tools, and time to nurture your relationship? Yes, please!

Give the gift of connection 💞

See link for details or to reserve your spot 📅

https://www.beyogawellness.com/holistic-massage

Address

4031 Fairview Street #103
Burlington, ON
L7L2A4

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 9pm
Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 10am - 8pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 10am - 8pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm

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