Ahurewa Bodywork Retreat

Ahurewa Bodywork Retreat Bodywork Practitioner and Birth Coach

12/22/2025
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12/17/2025

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Give the gift of health!
12/08/2025

Give the gift of health!

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11/30/2025

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Happy Thanksgiving!
11/27/2025

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11/21/2025

The body remembers everything it survives. Every tightening, every holding, every moment when an emotion was too much to feel fully is woven into the tissues in ways that are subtle but unmistakable under a practitioner’s hands. Once we understand the three autonomic states, we begin to see how they manifest within the fascia, posture, organ tone, and movement. The body becomes a map of the nervous system’s history.

In sympathetic activation, the fascia behaves differently. It pulls upward and inward, becoming denser, warmer, and more reactive to touch. You can feel it in the diaphragm that won’t descend, the psoas that refuses to soften, the jaw that stays rigid no matter how gently you cradle the head. The organs tighten as well. The stomach feels guarded, the liver feels congested, and the intestines lose their rhythm. These are not random patterns. They are the body preparing to move, fight, or flee. Over time, this creates postures that resemble bracing, characterized by lifted ribs, a forward head, gripping hips, or a chest that fails to open fully. The emotional patterns are equally clear. Clients often report irritability, restlessness, heightened sensitivity, or a feeling of being constantly “on alert.” The tissue mirrors the story.

In dorsal vagal shutdown, the patterns shift in an entirely different way. Fascia becomes cool, heavy, and slow to respond. It loses its elastic quality and begins to feel more like clay than silk. The organs can feel sluggish or almost silent. The breath moves minimally. The body may sink into the table as if gravity suddenly intensified. These are survival patterns, too. They emerge when the body has endured more than it can process. Posturally, this state creates collapse—rounded shoulders, a folded chest, a withdrawn abdomen, or a neck that tucks inward. The emotional presentation often includes numbness, exhaustion, disconnection, or a sense of being far away from oneself. Again, the tissue mirrors the story.

And then there is ventral vagal engagement, the state where healing begins. In this state, fascia becomes supple and responsive, gliding under your hands instead of resisting or collapsing. The organs start to move with the breath. The diaphragm opens. The ribcage expands—the tissue warms. The face brightens. Clients often describe a sense of clarity, groundedness, or a feeling of coming home to themselves. The posture reflects it, too. Shoulders ease back into their natural alignment. The spine lengthens. The pelvis finds neutral. The whole system becomes more coherent, more alive, more available for emotional integration.

When we understand how these states shape fascia, posture, organ tone, and emotional expression, the work becomes clearer. You begin to sense when a client is guarding emotionally because their physical tissue is guarding. You notice when a dorsal body is not ready for deep work because the system is still protecting itself. You learn to wait, soften, and co-regulate until ventral safety rises. Emotional release stops being a surprise. It becomes a physiological shift you recognize as soon as it begins.

This is the heart of somatic work. The nervous system writes its memories into the body, and with the right touch, pacing, and presence, those memories begin to unravel. Fascia melts. Breath returns. Organs move. Tears rise. Tremors release. The body prioritizes safety over survival.

❤️.  Great read.
11/19/2025

❤️. Great read.

The vagus nerve is one of the most extraordinary structures in the human body. It is the bridge that spans the divide between the brain and the heart, the lungs and the diaphragm, the organs and the emotional self. It is the primary pathway of the parasympathetic nervous system, which means it governs our ability to rest, digest, restore, and feel safe. When the vagus nerve softens, the entire body follows; when it tightens, the whole system braces.

This nerve originates at the brainstem, emerges through the jugular foramen, and descends through the throat, passing through the vocal cords, the pharynx, the carotid sheath, the heart, the lungs, the diaphragm, and deep into the gut, where it wraps around the stomach, liver, pancreas, and intestines. It is a living story cord, carrying messages in both directions. Eighty percent of its fibers run from the body to the brain, which means emotional regulation is influenced far more by sensation than by thought. The vagus nerve speaks the language of feeling long before it speaks the language of logic.

This is why bodywork can profoundly shift a client’s emotional landscape. When we touch the fascia, guide the breath, soften tension in the diaphragm, or release constriction in the jaw, the vagus nerve listens. It perceives these changes as signals of safety, and the entire system recalibrates. Heart rate slows, breath deepens, digestion resumes, muscles release and the emotional body begins to thaw.

One of the simplest and most effective tools for vagal activation is humming. Because the vagus nerve innervates the larynx and pharynx, vibration created by humming stimulates its sensory branches. This mechanical resonance enhances vagal tone, which in turn improves heart rate variability, stress recovery, and emotional stability. Clients often report feeling warm, heavy, or deeply settled within moments. The hum is a conversation between sound and the nervous system, a way of telling the body, “You are safe now.”

The diaphragm is another essential gateway. As the primary muscle of respiration, it is both mechanically and emotionally tied to vagal function. When the diaphragm is tight, breath becomes shallow, the vagus nerve stiffens, and the system moves toward fight or flight. When we release the diaphragm manually or guide clients into slow belly breathing, the vagus nerve is stretched and soothed, promoting a shift from sympathetic activation to parasympathetic rest. This is why diaphragmatic work can bring tears, warmth, memories, and spontaneous emotional release. The diaphragm is the emotional hinge between the upper and lower body.

Cranial work also influences vagal health. At the base of the skull, the vagus nerve emerges adjacent to the occipital condyles and upper cervical fascia. Gentle decompression at the cranial base can reduce irritation, improve vagal tone, and soothe the entire central nervous system. Even a light touch can shift someone from a guarded state into a deep exhale that feels like relief.

And then there is the belly. The deepest branches of the vagus nerve wrap the visceral fascia of the digestive system. When we perform gentle abdominal massage, organ-specific work, or slow fascial holds, we support motility, reduce sympathetic nervous system firing, and help the body process emotions. The gut is sometimes referred to as the “second brain,” but in reality, it serves as an emotional archive. Fear, grief, shame, and instinct live here. When the visceral layer softens, the stories held there soften with it.

My Parasympathetic Reset, which many lovingly refer to as the Sleep Therapy Massage, weaves all of these techniques together. It uses sound, fascia, cranial stillness, diaphragmatic release, and visceral unwinding to restore balance to the vagus nerve. Clients often drift into a dreamlike state because the nervous system finally feels safe enough to let go. Muscles melt. The breath widens. The heart quiets. The mind stops bracing. This is not simply relaxation. It is neurological reorganization. It is the body stepping out of defense and back into belonging.

For bodyworkers, this is some of the most meaningful work we can offer. Touch becomes communication, stillness becomes medicine, and breath becomes transformation. By supporting the vagus nerve, we not only ease pain and tension but also help clients return to themselves, regulate their emotions, and feel at home in their bodies again.

Athletes in training:    •  Faster recovery:  • Increased flexibility and range of motion • Injury prevention  • Improve...
11/06/2025

Athletes in training:
• Faster recovery:
• Increased flexibility and range of motion
• Injury prevention
• Improved circulation:
• Reduced muscle tension:
• Enhanced mental focus
You do the work on the field, let us help you with your recovery. #3445
High School athletes -50/50 package price. 2 sessions for 100.00.

BIG SHOUTOUT for Xavier Dennis of 🏈 Picayune High School, one of our favorites @ Ahurewa Bodywork Retreat.  What a great...
11/06/2025

BIG SHOUTOUT for Xavier Dennis of 🏈 Picayune High School, one of our favorites @ Ahurewa Bodywork Retreat.
What a great accomplishment!! Congratulations!!!

Happy Halloween everyone.   ☠️ 👻
10/30/2025

Happy Halloween everyone. ☠️ 👻

ATTENTION ATHLETES: College, High School and Jr High School.....For most of my massage career I have had the opportunity...
09/04/2025

ATTENTION ATHLETES: College, High School and Jr High School.....

For most of my massage career I have had the opportunity to work with some of the top professional athletes in our country. These athletes believe that massage and self-care is one of the very best ways to invest in yourself and your game..

Here to help you, UP your GAME!

Kids are back in school!It's time to relax and recharge. Individual pricing:50 minute session 105.0080 minute session 14...
08/18/2025

Kids are back in school!
It's time to relax and recharge.

Individual pricing:

50 minute session 105.00
80 minute session 140.00

Package pricing:

2, 50 minute sessions 1 spot specific 100.00.
The Game Changer 5 sessions (@ 100.00 each session) 500.00

Address

304 B West Canal Street
Picayune, MS
39466

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 7pm
Tuesday 9am - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 7pm
Thursday 9am - 7pm
Friday 9am - 2pm

Telephone

+19859601158

Website

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