Filed under: SAN ANTONIO

Xray Vision Acquired

I recently was lucky enough to be involved with a Functional Anatomy Course at the UTSA Health Science Center. It was a clinical applications course with cadaver prosections with the Department of Physical Therapy, and it was awesome! 

The last few major continuing education courses that I have taken have been focused on the anatomy, more so than techniques, so that I can have a stronger understanding of what is happening structurally underneath my toes as I work on you. The Kinesiology and Anatomy classes way back in my massage school were my most dreaded and favorite classes, since I kind of obsessed about learning everything about everything. (Darn you cursed Corachobrachialis! You were the brain fart muscle I missed on my final - so simple, so frustrating, but now I know you like the back of my hand... err foot!) The only books I've ever been able to stay awake long enough to finish reading has been anatomy books (ok, and Harry Potter), and I geek out on any online webinar that talks about fascia, even if I've already heard it a hundred times!

The Myofascial Meridians course that I took late last year focused on the fascial sheets and bags surrounding each and every muscle, fiber, and cell in the body, showing the interconnectivity of everything. Even though I had already read the book related to that course, seen the video and sat in on countless Anatomy Trains webinars, the hands on experience in that class really helped validate in my head why I do what I do when I massage you. Some say it's intuition, but the geek in me likes to think that I have xray vision and I'm following the fascial pathways along your muscles - so that class helped me realize that I really am feeling what I thought I was feeling, I'm not crazy! The group that I trained with, Anatomy Trains, has a 500 hour training program that I am foaming at the mouth to take one day. (Keep your toes crossed)

This weekend’s cadaver course at UTSA gave me the chance to actually touch those structures with no skin or layers of other tissues clouding up its detail. To actually see their relationship to each other, to physically move a layer of muscle away and truelly feel what lays below it was so..... AWESOME! I can't say it enough. Just awesome. 

Do you know how tiny the Piriformis actually is!? It feels so much bigger under my feet and hands. The Sciatic Nerve? They weren't kidding, it really is big. I got to actually see the Nucleus Pulposis - the fluid inside your vertebral discs! Push on it and watch the bubble move - so neat! The IT Band?! So very thin and so strong! I felt the entire length of Iliacus and Psoas - those muscles that make you want to cry when I work on them? Yep - I went there, and if only I could massage your muscles like I was able to on that lovely donated body. I touched the underside of muscles that I could normally never really get to, and was able to hold its circumference in my hand, tug it a tad, and make it recreate the movement on the bone it is attached to.

Thank you thank you, a thousand times to the donors and their families, your contribution has really made positive impression on me.

The faculty and attending Physical Therapists in the class were so amazingly educational in every way as well. They were fascinated by the nerves and their pathways and quizzed each other on what goes where and which innervates what - I was just wowed that so many of the nerves are so thin and tiny like a strand of hair! The PT's were so investigative about the pathologies and condition of the joints - we felt the inside of the knee, a smooth healthy joint as well as another with significant wear and tear - I understand better the inside view of knee pain now. It was so inspiring to be around such a smart group of professionals that dug right into the subject matter. What's even more amazing? They were impervious to the smell of formaldehyde! My stomach ballooned up - TMI, but the gas was worth it!

Anyways, long story short, I love anatomy, and I love that I'm in a profession where I can never stop learning.

Socially Acceptable

I realize I'm not the worlds best blogger. I think it's my reading narcolepsy that's to blame. If I read a lot, I fall asleep. If I actually do take the time to sit down and write something, it'll be so long that you'll fall asleep. Naps are nice, but they are kind of inconvenient if it happens face first into your laptop in a Starbucks.

So while I'm busy ~not~ keeping this blog super bogged down with posts, you can follow me on Twitter and Facebook. Whether you are a client of Heeling Sole, a massage therapist interested in learning more about Ashiatsu Oriental Bar Therapy, or a graduate of one of my classes, I'll have a little bit of something for everyone here on the blog (occasionally) but more often it'll be on my social networks, in 140 characters or less.

Twitter: twitter.com/heelingsole

Heeling Sole Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/heelingsole

Texas Ashiatsu Classes on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JeniAOBT

And I'm sure you already know about my mailing lists, which I end up re-posting here as a PDF file anyways, but just incase you'd like to get alerts from me in your inbox, you can sign up on this page: http://www.heelingsole.com/contact.html

Thanks for tuning in! OH, and don't forget that I redesigned the Heeling Sole website ... check it out!

 

~Jeni

Texas LMT's: one last chance to learn Ashiatsu in 2011!

Barefoot Basics:

Learn our world famous technique where you will utilize one foot to deliver the deepest, most luxurious massage on the planet while creating a structural change in chronic soft tissue damage! Go deep without even trying, save your body and amaze your clients with the pressure they've always dreamed of!

December 1-3 in San Antonio, 1 spot left!

January 12-15 in Houston, 2 spots left!

3 days, 25 CE's: $595


or 


 

Ashi-Thai class:

This is a beginner Ashiatsu course - no previous Thai or Ashiatsu training necessary!  Learn to take your client into a passive stretch to engage the deeper connective tissues and joint capsules, increasing range of motion, and reducing chronic pain.

December 15-16 in San Antonio, 3 spots left!

2 Days, 16 CE's: $399

 

View the latest newsletter to the Texas Ashiatsu class mailing list online here: http://www.icontact-archive.com/e3vnSxrRCJe6Ep8hGsJLzBa8KUv419kZ?w=2

 

or in PDF form here:

Click here to download:
112001TXAOBTnewsletter.pdf (496 KB)

 

Update for 2011 Texas Ashiatsu classes

Just a quick update: December's Barefoot Basics is now full, which will cap off a total of 64 new Ashiatsu therapists trained in this year in that class by me! Congratulations to those of you who made it in and are (or will be soon) using a great new tool to massage with -your feet!

I can't fit any more Barefoot Basics classes in this year, unless someone figures out how to clone me, but I did squeeze in an Ashi-Thai on December 15-16th. If you want those toes trained by 12/31/11, that really really is your last chance in Texas!

 

See the latest newsletter here: http://www.icontact-archive.com/e3vnSxrRCJe6Ep8hGsJLzKohldhYRNDS?w=3

See the 2011/2012 Texas Ashiatsu schedule here: http://heelingsole.com/workshops.html

~Jeni

Texas two steppin' double header

I just finished teaching a double whammy of classes almost back-to back: I've got a bit of a calm before the storm when I leave to teach Ashi-Thai and present AOBT at a national Massage Convention in Portland in a few weeks, so let me get my feet on you in the office while I'm available! Visit http://heelingsole.com/services-main.html if you'd like to schedule an Ashiatsu session in San Antonio with me before I take off again on October 13th.


Texas Ashi weekend #1 was in San Antonio last week with a group of experienced and Certified Ashiatsu therapists dancing the double footed "dosey doe". We had a fabulous time learning the advanced strokes together! I am proud to announce 6 more Master Level AOBT graduates are now across Texas, make sure and try a session from Carol in Austin, Courtney in Dripping Springs, April in San Antonio, Jamie in Palestine, Andrea in Austin, and Sally in Richmond!

Aa911

Texas Ashi weekend #2 was Barefoot Basics in Houston this week, drawing in a new crowd of Ashiatsu beginners from the Texas towns of Marshall, Baytown, Houston, Lake Jackson, League City and even all the way from Lavaca Arkansas! Welcome to the Ashi-family Sandy, Frances, Charisma, Tonya, Marilyn and Michelle, and thanks to our host Hollie for a great time in a great place!

Houston9

Are you ready to learn Ashiatsu Oriental Bar Therapy? Check out my class schedule and see when I'll be near you in Texas!  http://heelingsole.com/workshops.html