Massage by Wanda

Massage by Wanda My name is Wanda Simerly, and I’ve been a Licensed Massage Therapist for since 2013. I’m here to help hurting people through therapeutic massage.

You don’t have to live in pain! I offer several different modalities. My name is Wanda Simerly, and I’ve been a Licensed Massage Therapist for over 9 years.

Perfectly defined!
11/28/2025

Perfectly defined!

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.

This is interesting..🤔🧐From birth, your tongue is actually connected to your toes through an intricate network of connec...
01/21/2025

This is interesting..🤔🧐

From birth, your tongue is actually connected to your toes through an intricate network of connective tissue known as fascia.

If your tongue is not resting correctly in your mouth due to mouth breathing, things can get out of alignment in your mouth and the rest of your body.
Tongue posture can lead to a foot imbalance and vice versa because the tongue guides all myofascial continuity structures that run from the inner arch of the foot up through the middle of the body to the tongue and jaw muscles.

When the tongue sits on top of the palate, it seals the oral cavity and holds the throat open like a tent. These muscles support the neck, keep your posture straight, help you breathe, and maintain your posture upright.
Your tongue also acts as a rudder and support system through a fascial line, and when the tongue is down, we breathe through our mouth, and the head falls forward due to lack of support, which leads to poor posture and increased energy expenditure.

CTTO:

It’s Fall, y’all!  Be mindful while raking those leaves when your shoulders and back begin to ache!  Lots of water and s...
11/24/2024

It’s Fall, y’all! Be mindful while raking those leaves when your shoulders and back begin to ache! Lots of water and some heat on those sore areas!

It’s that time of year that we get busy with school starting, and then the holidays are looming ever so closely.  Don’t ...
08/18/2024

It’s that time of year that we get busy with school starting, and then the holidays are looming ever so closely. Don’t forget about self care! You need a massage!

I am closed today, and possibly tomorrow.  Our road doesn’t get cleared, so it’s quite treacherous. We have about 8-9 in...
01/16/2024

I am closed today, and possibly tomorrow. Our road doesn’t get cleared, so it’s quite treacherous. We have about 8-9 inches of snow piled up, and the temps are below freezing, so that means the snow isn’t going anywhere! I’m sorry for the closure, but I’d rather you stay home and be safe!

Hoping you have a safe and miraculous and marvelous Christmas this year!I will be closed from December 21 - January 2nd....
12/18/2023

Hoping you have a safe and miraculous and marvelous Christmas this year!
I will be closed from December 21 - January 2nd. See you next year!

Working extra hours just for YOU!  As the holidays quickly loom in front us, be sure to take care of YOU!!
10/14/2023

Working extra hours just for YOU! As the holidays quickly loom in front us, be sure to take care of YOU!!

Neuromuscular Therapy, Reflexology, Cranial-Sacral, Myofascial Release, Trigger Point Therapy, Lymphatic Drainage, Oncology, Deep Tissue, Hot Stone and Pre-natal

Address

2910 West Old Topside Road
Louisville, TN
37777

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 4pm
Tuesday 8am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 8am - 12pm
Saturday 8am - 12:30pm

Telephone

+18652335055

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Our story

My name is Wanda Simerly, and I’ve been a Licensed Massage Therapist for over 5 years. I’m here to help hurting people through therapeutic massage.