Marlborough Reflexology

Marlborough Reflexology Deeply relaxing, therapeutic and restorative treatment to support
the heath of your body and mind. Facial and Neuro Reflexology

Sharing some really useful info on the topic of boils and what they mean, and need to add that Facial Neuro Reflexology ...
04/11/2025

Sharing some really useful info on the topic of boils and what they mean, and need to add that Facial Neuro Reflexology is a marvelous supportive therapy to help with the flow of the lymph, and enhance optimal organ function. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18pB2YuUTZ/?mibextid=wwXIfr

💧 Boils & The Lymphatic System: When Detox Pathways Overflow

By Bianca Botha, CLT, RLD, MLDT & CDS

When a boil appears, most people see it as just a painful skin infection. But in lymphatic therapy, we view it differently — as a signal.
A boil often reveals that your lymphatic and detox pathways are congested, and the body is trying to push toxins, pathogens, or cellular waste to the surface when deeper channels are blocked.

🌿 The Deeper Mechanism

The skin is not just a covering — it’s your largest lymphatic organ. When the internal terrain (gut, liver, and lymph) becomes sluggish, the body reroutes waste through the skin’s lymph capillaries.
If those capillaries are overwhelmed, bacteria like Staphylococcus aureus can colonize trapped waste pockets — creating inflammation, pus, and the hallmark swelling of a boil.

In essence, a boil is the body’s emergency drainage valve. It’s shouting:

“My internal pathways are full — I’m using the skin to detox!”

💫 The Lymph Connection

When the liver or gut struggles to filter toxins effectively, lymphatic congestion builds in the axillary (armpit), inguinal (groin), or cervical (neck) nodes. These are the same drainage basins that serve the skin areas where boils commonly appear.

This means:
• Boils under the arms → Liver, axillary, and breast lymph stagnation
• Boils on the buttocks or thighs → Colon and pelvic lymph overload
• Boils on the face → Digestive and sinus lymph imbalance

⚖️ Why Some People Get Recurrent Boils

Recurrent boils often indicate a systemic lymphatic imbalance, not just a skin issue.
Contributors include:
• Chronic inflammation and poor liver detox
• Gut dysbiosis (especially Candida or SIBO)
• Insulin resistance or high sugar intake
• Low-grade immune suppression or high stress
• Dehydration and poor lymph flow

When the lymph stagnates, the immune cells can’t circulate efficiently — infections linger, inflammation heightens, and the skin becomes a secondary detox organ.

💎 Therapeutic Approach

The solution isn’t just antibiotics or creams — it’s to unblock the deeper flow.
A holistic lymphatic protocol includes:
1️⃣ Lymphatic Drainage Therapy – to clear congested nodes and restore immune flow.
2️⃣ Liver Support – lemon water, dandelion, or prescribed hepatic support to improve filtration.
3️⃣ Gut Healing – remove inflammatory foods and restore the microbiome.
4️⃣ Hydration & Minerals – to maintain interstitial fluid balance.
5️⃣ Nervous System Balance – vagus nerve support reduces chronic immune stress.

As internal pathways clear, the skin no longer needs to “push out” the overload — boils heal faster and stop recurring.

✨ In Summary

A boil isn’t your enemy — it’s a messenger.
It reveals where your lymphatic system is fighting to keep you safe when deeper detox routes are overwhelmed.
When you treat the cause — lymph stagnation, liver overload, and immune fatigue — the body no longer has to use the skin as an outlet.

Credentials:
Bianca Botha CLT, RLD, MLDT & CDS

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.

In our treatment sessions, we often talk of proper hydration with my clients for optimal body function, and here is a fa...
01/11/2025

In our treatment sessions, we often talk of proper hydration with my clients for optimal body function, and here is a fabulous piece by Bianca Botha from Lymphatica that explains it so well… https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19Qt4b5nSP/?mibextid=wwXIfr

🌿 WHY HUMANS DEHYDRATE SO QUICKLY 🌿

By Bianca Botha, CLT, RLD, MLDT & CDS
Lymphatica – Lymphatic Therapy & Body Detox Facility

💧 INTRODUCTION

Water is the foundation of human life — comprising 50–70% of our total body weight. Yet, despite this abundance, we can lose hydration shockingly fast. Dehydration occurs when fluid losses exceed fluid intake, disrupting the delicate equilibrium that governs cellular, circulatory, and lymphatic balance.

While the body has intricate mechanisms to preserve water — such as hormonal regulation (ADH, aldosterone) and thirst signaling — the pace at which we lose fluids through breathing, sweating, urination, and even skin evaporation often outpaces our ability to replenish them.

⚗️ THE SCIENCE OF WATER BALANCE

🔹 Water Gains
• Drinking fluids and consuming water-rich foods (fruits, vegetables, soups).
• Metabolic water, produced during cellular respiration — a small but important contributor.
• Interstitial recycling, where lymphatic and capillary fluid exchange maintains internal hydration.

🔹 Water Losses
• Urine: The kidneys filter ~180 L of plasma per day, conserving most water but losing ~1.5–2 L daily.
• Sweat: Thermoregulatory loss that increases dramatically in heat or exertion.
• Respiration: Every breath releases warm, humid air — invisible yet significant.
• Skin evaporation: Continuous, insensible water loss across the dermis.
• Digestive elimination: Fluid lost through f***s or gastrointestinal disturbances.

💡 When total losses exceed intake by as little as 2–3%, cellular performance and lymphatic transport begin to decline.

🔬 WHY HUMANS DEHYDRATE SO QUICKLY

1️⃣ High Thermoregulatory Demand

Humans are warm-blooded and rely on sweating for cooling.
During heat exposure or physical activity, sweat rates may exceed 1 L/hour, rapidly depleting water and electrolytes.
When sweating outpaces intake, plasma volume drops, impairing blood flow and lymphatic circulation.

📚 Research shows that mild dehydration (1–2% body water loss) already reduces thermoregulation, cognitive clarity, and muscular efficiency.
(Source: Extreme Physiology & Medicine Journal, 2014)

2️⃣ Constant Insensible Losses

Even without visible sweating, humans lose ~0.5 L per day simply by breathing and skin evaporation.
Dry environments, air-conditioning, altitude, or cold air amplify these losses.
Unlike sweat, insensible water loss cannot be sensed or replaced consciously, making dehydration stealthy and cumulative.

3️⃣ Limited Fluid Reserve

Although water represents most of our body mass, only a fraction is easily accessible for circulation and lymph transport.
A mere 3–4% reduction in total body water can alter blood viscosity, increase interstitial stagnation, and slow lymphatic clearance.

🧠 This explains why even mild dehydration leads to brain fog, fatigue, and swelling — your cells literally shrink as osmotic pressure rises.

4️⃣ The Lagging Thirst Mechanism

Our thirst reflex activates after dehydration has already begun.
The body must first detect an increase in plasma osmolarity before the hypothalamus signals thirst — typically once we’ve lost ~1–2 L of fluid.
In older adults or those under chronic stress, this signal is blunted, meaning they may dehydrate without awareness.

5️⃣ Kidney & Hormonal Influences

The kidneys regulate fluid retention through antidiuretic hormone (ADH) and aldosterone, but several factors increase fluid loss:
• Caffeine or alcohol (mild diuretics)
• High blood glucose (osmotic diuresis)
• Medications such as diuretics or corticosteroids
• Low sodium or potassium intake impairing renal water reabsorption

Over time, excessive fluid loss can trigger a stress response that constricts lymphatic capillaries, reducing interstitial flow and detox capacity.

6️⃣ Dietary & Lifestyle Accelerators
• Low fruit/vegetable intake → less “hidden” hydration.
• High protein or salt diets → increased osmotic load, forcing the kidneys to excrete more water.
• Processed foods → low natural water, high sodium.
• Busy lifestyles → delayed drinking habits, especially in hot climates or air-conditioned offices.

Every one of these factors silently pushes the body toward dehydration before symptoms even appear.

7️⃣ Environmental & Behavioral Stressors
• Hot and humid environments = high sweat output
• Cold or dry air = high respiratory water loss
• Air travel = dehydration from cabin pressure & low humidity
• Exercise without adequate electrolyte replenishment
• Restricting fluids due to work, travel, or convenience

These real-life triggers create an imbalance faster than most realize — sometimes within hours, not days.

🩸 THE PHYSIOLOGICAL CASCADE

Once dehydration begins, several systems react:
• Cardiovascular: Plasma volume decreases → heart rate rises → reduced oxygen delivery.
• Nervous System: Neurons shrink → fatigue, confusion, headache.
• Lymphatic: Reduced interstitial volume → slower lymph propulsion and toxin clearance.
• Renal: Blood flow to kidneys declines → concentrated urine, risk of stones.
• Thermoregulatory: Sweat response weakens → overheating and inflammation risk.

This cascade highlights why proper hydration is not cosmetic — it’s a lifeline for cellular repair and lymphatic detoxification.

🌿 CLINICAL & THERAPEUTIC RELEVANCE

In lymphatic therapy, dehydration can mimic or worsen stagnation:
• Thickened lymph fluid moves sluggishly through collectors.
• Fascial layers lose glide, increasing restriction and pressure.
• Detoxification pathways (renal, hepatic, intestinal) slow down.
• The nervous system becomes more sympathetic-dominant (stress-state).

Therefore, hydration is the first step of lymphatic flow restoration.
Every drainage protocol, fascia release, or detox phase should be anchored in fluid restoration before mobilization.

💠 PRACTITIONER INSIGHT

To maintain balance within the lymphatic–circulatory–neural triad, monitor these parameters in clients:
• Urine colour & output frequency
• Skin elasticity and temperature
• Tongue coating or dryness
• Puffiness versus dehydration lines
• Heart rate variability and energy dips
• Electrolyte status (Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, Mg²⁺)

Hydration protocols should include:
1. Structured water intake — sipping throughout the day, not bulk drinking.
2. Electrolyte support — trace minerals, lemon, and Himalayan salt.
3. Hydrating meals — cucumber, citrus, soups, and leafy greens.
4. Timing — 250 mL upon waking, before meals, and post-therapy.

🌸 CONCLUSION

Humans dehydrate quickly because our physiology is designed for constant fluid exchange — not for long periods of depletion.
Every breath, every drop of sweat, and every metabolic reaction draws from our internal reservoirs.
When intake falls behind even briefly, the ripple effect reaches the blood, lymph, brain, and mitochondria.

Hydration, therefore, isn’t only about drinking water — it’s about maintaining the electric, osmotic, and circulatory balance that allows the body to detoxify, heal, and regenerate.

📖 REFERENCES
• Mayo Clinic. Dehydration: Symptoms & Causes.
• Cleveland Clinic. Dehydration Overview.
• Journal of Extreme Physiology & Medicine (2014). Fluid Balance and Thermoregulation.
• The Physiologist Magazine (2021). The Science of Hydration.
• PMC 2908954. Hydration and Health Review.

⚕️ PROPERTY OF LYMPHATICA

Authored by: Bianca Botha, CLT, RLD, MLDT & CDS

🩵 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.

31/10/2025

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Good morning! Shermine and I are holding an open Zoom session for anyone interested in studying Facial & Neuro Reflexolo...
28/10/2025

Good morning!

Shermine and I are holding an open Zoom session for anyone interested in studying Facial & Neuro Reflexology Method Lone Sorensen.
Monday 3rd Nov 6-7 pm.

We have the 2 day CPD course coming up end of November (Trauma release - stand alone method) and the full Diploma training starts in January.
Courses will be held in Marlborough - Wiltshire.

The Zoom session is to connect with our students/fellow therapists wishing to add this cutting edge therapy to their skill sets and answer questions regarding the training.

Hope to see you there!

Topic: Shermine Boustany's Personal Meeting Room
Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/8919876682?pwd=aVRadm15cU9vTGZTNmN4ZURqZVRFZz09

Meeting ID: 891 987 6682
Passcode: NaiJoe12

Join instructions
https://us02web.zoom.us/meetings/8919876682/invitations?signature=yG9zrfzFMcDZEdGWihBAnSqzxWWDzQMkkKnAX3Duujk

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Our Story

NATURAL HEALING WITH FACIAL REFLEX THERAPY

Complementary therapies were part of Zee’s self-care for many years, so she could happily juggle the demands of a growing family and her busy, Johannesburg based Interior Design practice with equal fervour.

However, several family moves around the globe, and one small but significant car accident led her onto a new and unexpected career path, and she discovered her true calling - Facial Reflex Therapy. This overall health promoting modality resonated with her on such a deep level, that she decided to go back to studying, and became a Facial Reflex Therapist with Lone Sorensen - Sorensensistem.

With her gentle, positive, open and friendly disposition, and the innate belief that our body has its own wisdom and healing capabilities, she now helps clients of all ages towards health, wellbeing, equanimity and a renewed zest for life - NATURALLY.