Latest posts

  • The New Language of the Body

    Biodynamic Craniosacral Therapy and a Different Way of Listening Craniosacral therapy introduced a quieter language for speaking about the body. A practitioner of this modality does not touch only with their hands, but with their whole person. They touch with their history, expectations, training, habits of thought, emotional weather, need to be useful, and the

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  • On the Work of William Garner Sutherland

    Medical knowledge typically develops from what can be observed, measured, and reproduced under controlled conditions. Over time, these observations are organized into stable descriptions that become the basis of teaching and practice. But the history of science is also a history of revision — what is considered complete at one stage often proves partial at

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  • Craniosacral Rhythms

    People rarely come to a craniosacral session out of pure curiosity. Usually, something has been off for a while. It might be pain that keeps returning. A tension that doesn’t quite let go. Fatigue that doesn’t match your lifestyle. Or something harder to name—a sense that the body is holding on, not quite settling the

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  • Craniosacral touch

    Craniosacral touch

    The Difference Between Touch and Contact Most people come to craniosacral therapy with a simple expectation. Something will be done to them. That’s understandable. It’s how we usually think about the body. If something hurts or feels off, we assume it needs to be fixed, adjusted, corrected. Craniosacral work doesn’t quite follow that logic. To get a sense of

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