Fascia Explained

  • Home
  • Fascia Explained

Fascia Explained Welcome to Fascia, Explained.

Published a new Substack piece after a bit of a break.One question kept coming up:If fascia really matters as much as th...
14/03/2026

Published a new Substack piece after a bit of a break.

One question kept coming up:

If fascia really matters as much as the research suggests… what are we actually supposed to do about it?

This article explores a few things that start to make more sense the deeper we go into this topic.

It also sets up something interesting we’ll write about next: vibration plates.

Curious what you think:

https://open.substack.com/pub/fasciaforward/p/so-if-fascia-matters-this-much-what?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web

Your body doesn't get "tight."It adapts to what you repeatedly ask of it.Same inputs → same signals → same stiffness.Sed...
14/02/2026

Your body doesn't get "tight."

It adapts to what you repeatedly ask of it.

Same inputs → same signals → same stiffness.
Sedentary or repetitive — both lower signal variety.

And low signal variety changes tissue behavior.
You don't need more intensity.
You need more information.

Change the signals.
Change the tissue.

Link in comments for the curious.

Your body isn’t broken.It’s stuck.A lot of people assume stiffness, puffiness, or soreness without injury means:– aging–...
08/02/2026

Your body isn’t broken.
It’s stuck.

A lot of people assume stiffness, puffiness, or soreness without injury means:
– aging
– lack of discipline
– not stretching enough
– not training “correctly”

But that’s rarely the issue.

The body doesn’t just need movement.
It needs varied signals.

If you sit all day or move the same way every day - same route, same lifts, same patterns, your tissues adapt to that narrow input.

Not because anything is wrong.
Because that’s what bodies do.

Over time, the system becomes efficient… and less responsive.

That “stuck” feeling?
It’s not damage.
It’s a signal shortage.

If this resonates, don’t “move more” today.

Move differently, even a little.

That’s often where things start to change.

New Substack out tonight! (This is a good one 🤓)Thanks for checking it out!
28/01/2026

New Substack out tonight!
(This is a good one 🤓)
Thanks for checking it out!

My personal Substack. Click to read Colleen's Substack, by Colleen Anderson, a Substack publication.

Fascia is less like parts…and more like a spider web.Touch one strand, and the entire web responds.That’s how fascia wor...
28/01/2026

Fascia is less like parts…
and more like a spider web.

Touch one strand, and the entire web responds.

That’s how fascia works in the body.

It’s a continuous, connective network that wraps, links, and transmits tension everywhere - muscles, organs, nerves, joints. Pain or restriction rarely stays local, because the web itself is global.

When fascia becomes dehydrated, inflamed, or guarded, the web stiffens.
Movement feels restricted. Pain spreads. The system loses adaptability.

Restoring health isn’t about fixing one “spot.”
It’s about helping the web regain:
• glide
• hydration
• intelligent tension

You don’t heal a spider web by pulling harder on one strand.
You restore balance across the whole network.

🕸️ Fascia listens everywhere.

If fascia and lymph sound like modern wellness trends, here’s an inconvenient truth:They were being treated, deliberatel...
25/01/2026

If fascia and lymph sound like modern wellness trends, here’s an inconvenient truth:

They were being treated, deliberately and systematically long before our modern health and fitness philosophies existed.

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, hospitals and medical gyms weren’t focused on building muscle mass or burning calories.

They focused on moving tissue.

Patients didn’t “train”.
They didn’t chase soreness.
They weren’t told to “push through.”

They were gently moved - rhythmically, repeatedly, without strain.

Why?

Because early physicians observed something we’re only now relearning:
When tissue stops moving well, the body stiffens, swells, and struggles to adapt.

And tissue doesn’t need significant exhertion and exhaustion to change.
It needs simple signal, movement, and continuity.

What we now call fascia care, lymphatic support, and nervous system regulation isn’t new.

It’s remembered knowledge that is finally garnering modern attention once again.

The muscle-first gym may feel normal today.
But historically, it’s the outlier.

Perhaps the future of body care isn’t about doing more.

Perhaps it’s about restoring the kinds of movement the body evolved to recognize.

Gentle.
Rhythmic.
Continuous.

If this reframes how you think about movement, you’re in the right place.
More coming.

Fascia, Explained is where we explore what fascia is, why it matters, and how it impacts pain, movement, performance, an...
22/01/2026

Fascia, Explained is where we explore what fascia is, why it matters, and how it impacts pain, movement, performance, and everyday life.

If you’re curious, thoughtful, or interested, join us on Substack as well!
👉 Link in comments

22/01/2026

Your muscles don’t actually start your movement.
They’re the final actors taking the stage.

The director?
A continuous, living fabric woven through you, your Fascia.

It’s not inert packing material.
It’s adaptive. Responsive.
Quietly shaped by how you sit, breathe, and move, every single day.

That’s why a simple stretch can sometimes feel unsafe.
And other times, movement feels fluid… without a clear reason why.

This isn’t a new idea.
It’s a clearer one.

This short film introduces the system that prepares every motion you make.

👁️ Watch this reel not to fix your body, but to witness how it’s been organizing itself all along.

Follow our page to learn more

Welcome! Here, we’ll explore: • what fascia is  • how it influences movement, pain, posture, and resilience • why so man...
04/10/2024

Welcome! Here, we’ll explore:
• what fascia is
• how it influences movement, pain, posture, and resilience
• why so many people feel “off” even when they’re doing everything right
• and how small, thoughtful changes can support the body more effectively

This is not about quick fixes or extreme methods.
It’s about understanding how the body actually works, as a system.

19/09/2024

This page is for:
• curious people who want to understand their bodies better
• those navigating pain, stiffness, or recurring issues
• movement, wellness, and skincare professionals
• anyone who senses there’s more going on beneath the surface

You don’t need a background in anatomy.
Just curiosity.

Send a message to learn more

Address


Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Fascia Explained posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Fascia Explained:

  • Want your practice to be the top-listed Clinic?

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram