Laurel Relief

Laurel Relief Licensed massage and bodywork therapist in NC with 20+ years experience. Holistic, Caring, and Perso

Licensed massage and bodywork therapist in FL and NC with 15 years experience. Holistic, Caring, and Personalized approach that is competitively priced.

11/30/2025

The River and the Riverbed: The Lymphatic Myofascial Relationship.

The body is not made of separate parts, no matter how many textbooks try to divide it. It is one continuous conversation. One river system. One woven landscape of structure, fluid, memory, and sensation. Nowhere is this more beautifully seen than in the relationship between the fascia and the lymphatic system.

Fascia is not simply connective tissue. It is the body’s inner forest floor, the soft earth through which everything grows and travels. It holds more sensory nerve endings than the muscles themselves. It houses the interstitium, a vast fluid reservoir now recognized as one of the largest “organs” by volume. It creates the very terrain through which lymph must move.

Lymph is the traveler, the cleansing tide, the quiet river that removes waste, regulates immunity, transports nutrients, and responds instantly to inflammation or injury. But lymph does not move on its own. It depends on movement, breath, pressure changes, and the softness of the tissues it flows through. Its vessels sit embedded inside the fascial layers, anchored to the very fibers that bodyworkers stretch, melt, warm, and free.

This is why these systems cannot be separated. This is why fascial lymphatic flow works. The Long Method is my favorite technique taught by Katrina Gubler Long.

When fascia becomes dense or dehydrated, the interstitial fluid thickens, pressure gradients collapse, and lymphatic capillaries cannot properly open and close. Imagine trying to push water through a dry, compacted sponge. The lymph has nowhere to go. Post-surgical clients feel this acutely. Trauma, inflammation, surgical scarring, or immobility cause the fascial planes to lose their slide, which in turn traps swelling, slows immune function, and increases pain.

But when we touch fascia with slow, intentional, directional work, something extraordinary happens. Mechanotransduction, the cells' response to mechanical pressure, shifts the behavior of fibroblasts and immune cells. Collagen fibers begin to reorganize. Hyaluronic acid changes viscosity. The interstitial fluid becomes less stagnant. The tissue warms, hydrates, and begins to breathe again. And the lymphatic system, finally uncompressed, begins to move with ease.

You cannot restore lymph flow without changing the landscape it flows through. You cannot free swelling without freeing the structures that hold it. You cannot separate the river from the riverbank.

This is not guesswork. It is anatomy.

The superficial lymphatic system lives in the loose areolar fascia, a layer designed to glide. The deep lymphatic system lies within the deep fascia surrounding muscle compartments. When these gliding surfaces stiffen, every lymph vessel tethered to them loses its ability to pump. This is why many clients feel more relief with fascial lymphatic flow than with lymphatic work alone. We are restoring the architecture that lymph depends on.

In post-surgical care, this becomes especially profound. Scar tissue alters glide. Protective guarding increases fascial tension and non-pitting edema forms when fluid becomes trapped in thickened interstitium. Traditional lymph work is essential, but fascia must also be addressed for complete restoration. A gentle fascial approach honors the lymphatic system's delicacy while creating the space it needs to travel.

This is not breaking tradition. This completes the picture.

Some may challenge this perspective, but the body does not argue. It responds. It softens. It drains. It heals. Thousands of therapists have seen swelling reduce, pain decrease, and mobility return when these systems are treated together. Because fascia and lymph are not separate entities. They are partners; two halves of one healing intelligence.

To work the fascia is to prepare the riverbed. To work the lymph is to free the river. Together, they create a landscape where healing becomes possible again.

For the bodyworkers who feel this truth in your hands, keep listening. The body is always teaching us how interconnected it really is.

05/06/2025

INSPIRATION

A Posture of Care


Every small adjustment we make can help us nurture our joints, prevent pain and injuries, and allow us feel lighter, energized, and more connected.
It’s so easy to spend our days looking down — at our phones, our computers, and even just the ground beneath our feet. Little by little, we start to slump without noticing, rounding our shoulders or sinking into our chairs. Over time, these small habits can quietly wear on our posture and leave us feeling a little more tired, a little more achy, and sometimes even a little more weighed down by the day.

But the wonderful thing is, we can begin again — at any moment. Simply sitting up a little taller, softening your shoulders, and taking small steps to improve your posture can make a big difference. Every small adjustment is a way of saying to your body, “I care about you.” With a little more space to breathe and a little more ease in your movements, you’ll nurture your joints, muscles, and bones, helping to prevent pain and injuries. You might even notice you feel lighter, more energized, and more connected to yourself.

Think of good posture as a gift you give yourself every day. It’s a simple yet profound way to embody strength, openness, and grace — and to walk through life with your head held high and your heart open, shining from the inside out.

I have a lot of appreciation of how Dr. Andrew Weil can present things with such clarity.
04/19/2023

I have a lot of appreciation of how Dr. Andrew Weil can present things with such clarity.

Psychedelics, Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy, Plant Medicine, Breathwork, Meditation, Shamanism and more…

Spa life in the time of Covid ~ At this time Riverwalk Spa and Laurel Relief are only serving clients with in Deerfield ...
08/11/2020

Spa life in the time of Covid ~ At this time Riverwalk Spa and Laurel Relief are only serving clients with in Deerfield Retirement Community to uphold the safest standards and protection to residents. All clients wear a mask. And if you do not have one.. I sold out first case but got back on the sewing machine and quickly restocked the retail cabinet.

Mandatory closure due to Covid-19. All the orchids came home today. Good thing the weather is warming up.
03/20/2020

Mandatory closure due to Covid-19. All the orchids came home today. Good thing the weather is warming up.

A luxurious hideaway spa with competitive pricing.
11/10/2019

A luxurious hideaway spa with competitive pricing.

Looking at Busbee Mountain from Riverwalk Spa's Lounge chairs... or enjoy browsing our books.
09/24/2018

Looking at Busbee Mountain from Riverwalk Spa's Lounge chairs... or enjoy browsing our books.

09/24/2018

I just spent the weekend in a wonderful integrative myofascial massage workshop with Pete Whitridge.

We had a JAM(Just Adding Movement) with the bodywork and spent a lot of time sharing L*D! (Lengthening,Spreading,Defining ~ fascial & muscle tissue).

I feel great and am looking forward to sharing what I have learned this weekend with all my clients! :-)

Pansy Orchid
06/06/2018

Pansy Orchid

01/17/2018

Certain kinds of exercise may mitigate the effects of aging at the cellular level.

Address

1617 Hendersonville Road
Asheville, NC
28803

Telephone

+18284841879

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