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Hi! Myofascial work is becoming my specialty as my practice grows, almost organically. I didn't really choose it, it chose me! My clients love it and get so much benefit from it. John Barnes is sort of the myofascial guru, and I would love to attend some of his classes, but haven't yet. Thomas Myers is another wonderful myofascial master. I recently completed Erik Dalton's myoskeletal alignment course, which borrows from Rolfing, structural integration, and myofascial release, and I LOVE it. I also like George Kousaleos' work with myofascial spreading (CORE Institute). I'm planning in April to attend a structural integration training class by Judah Lyons (Lyons Institute), too. There is so much out there for the myofascial worker, you will never grow bored with this modality. It is amazing work. --elizabeth
Hi Elizabeth,
Can you explain what you mean by it chose you? Thanks.
Elizabeth Yon said:Hi! Myofascial work is becoming my specialty as my practice grows, almost organically. I didn't really choose it, it chose me! My clients love it and get so much benefit from it. John Barnes is sort of the myofascial guru, and I would love to attend some of his classes, but haven't yet. Thomas Myers is another wonderful myofascial master. I recently completed Erik Dalton's myoskeletal alignment course, which borrows from Rolfing, structural integration, and myofascial release, and I LOVE it. I also like George Kousaleos' work with myofascial spreading (CORE Institute). I'm planning in April to attend a structural integration training class by Judah Lyons (Lyons Institute), too. There is so much out there for the myofascial worker, you will never grow bored with this modality. It is amazing work. --elizabeth
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