Equine Spinal Health by Ceci Vet

Equine Spinal Health by Ceci Vet Ceci Morley B.Vet.Med.MRCVS - Equine Vet. Equine veterinary services, chiropractic and equine acupuncture across Essex. Equip Mag PEMF
Over 30 years' experience.

Equine Chiropractic, Acupuncture and Myofascial release improve the health and mobility of horses, regardless of age, size, workload or discipline.​

From first day at secondary school to University graduate, you smashed it Grace ❤️Love you
17/05/2026

From first day at secondary school to University graduate, you smashed it Grace ❤️Love you

Lovely and lively weekend celebrating Moonie. Thank you to The Muddy Duck, CHEF Mick Billington and to Phil at The Swan ...
04/05/2026

Lovely and lively weekend celebrating Moonie. Thank you to The Muddy Duck, CHEF Mick Billington and to Phil at The Swan for letting us do some gardening with the horses

04/05/2026
Welcoming my newest treatment📣 To add to my portfolio of:Chiropractic Acupuncture💉Myofascial Release🐎I am very excited t...
28/04/2026

Welcoming my newest treatment📣

To add to my portfolio of:
Chiropractic Acupuncture💉
Myofascial Release🐎

I am very excited to share my Equi Mag PEMF ⚡️
Pulsed Electromagnetic Field (PEMF) therapy uses electromagnetic pulses to stimulate cellular repair, reduce inflammation, alleviate pain, improve circulation, and enhance cellular metabolism.
Treatment advised for:
💪 Musculoskeletal injuries
❤️‍🩹 Promoting faster healing
👩🏼‍⚕️ Non-invasive pre-competition performance enhancing
🧖‍♀️Relaxation

📲Call or message me on 07876 401032 to book your horse in!

05/04/2026

A couple of nights off at Forest equine escapes  with Deb. Might be a holiday but it doesn't stop us working.
25/02/2026

A couple of nights off at Forest equine escapes with Deb. Might be a holiday but it doesn't stop us working.

10/02/2026

The Body Creates Tension First: Why and What You Can Do About It

When muscles and fascia are stressed—through exercise, repetitive use, sudden load, or injury—the body’s immediate priority is stability and safety. Before tissue can strengthen or adapt structurally, the nervous system responds by increasing muscle tone and fascial tension.

This increase in tone:
• stabilizes joints
• distributes load
• protects vulnerable tissues
• prevents excessive or uncontrolled movement

It is fast, efficient, and protective. In this sense, tension is not a problem—it is the body doing its job.

The Nervous System’s Role

Muscle tone is regulated by the nervous system, not by muscle alone. When stress is detected, sensory receptors in muscles, fascia, and joints signal that additional support is needed. In response, the nervous system increases baseline tone in the surrounding tissues.

This creates a form of temporary scaffolding—extra support that allows the body to keep functioning while it determines whether the demand is short-term or ongoing.

Fascia as a Support Network

Fascia plays a critical role in this process because it transmits force throughout the body. When stressed, fascia stiffens slightly, helping spread load across a wider area rather than concentrating it in one place. This reduces tissue overload and lowers the risk of acute injury.

In healthy conditions, this increase in tension is meant to be temporary.

When Protection Becomes a Problem

If stress resolves and the nervous system perceives safety again, tone decreases and tissues return to a more elastic, adaptable state. However, when stress is repeated, unresolved, or combined with pain, fear, or compensation, the nervous system may maintain elevated tone longer than necessary.

At that point:
• movement becomes less efficient
• circulation may be reduced
• nerves may become irritated
• the body begins to rely on tension instead of coordination

What began as protection gradually becomes restriction.

Why Bodywork Matters

Massage and myofascial therapy help signal safety to the nervous system. By improving tissue glide, circulation, and sensory input, bodywork supports the nervous system in letting go of unnecessary tension.

The goal is not to force tissue to release, but to help the body recognize that it no longer needs to hold itself together through constant tension.

What This Means in the Body

After the initial protective tension response, the body is essentially waiting for instruction.
• If we strengthen without first restoring mobility, the nervous system assumes tension is still required and builds strength on top of stiffness.
• If we release without appropriate strengthening, the body may feel unstable and return to tension for safety.

True adaptation occurs when suppleness and strength are developed together.

When tissues are first allowed to soften and move freely:
• joints align more efficiently
• forces distribute evenly
• muscles can fully contract and relax

When strength is then built in this more organized state:
• fascia adapts elastically rather than rigidly
• muscles develop coordinated support instead of bracing
• movement becomes balanced, efficient, and durable

Why This Shapes Long-Term Movement

Muscles and fascia do not simply become stronger—they learn how to be strong. The patterns we reinforce determine whether the body relies on:
• tension or coordination
• compensation or balance
• rigidity or adaptability

This is why sequencing matters. Supple first to restore options. Strengthen next to reinforce healthy organization.

The Big Idea

The body’s initial tension is protective. What determines the outcome is how we guide the body afterward. How we reintroduce suppleness and strength teaches muscles and fascia what kind of body they are allowed to become.

https://koperequine.com/how-horses-experience-touch-the-three-neurobiological-pathways-that-shape-their-response/

Excellent ski trip with the gang to Norway
05/02/2026

Excellent ski trip with the gang to Norway

Last few days in Thailand with bestie Debs. Thank you for your messages whilst I have been away.I Will be back refreshed...
14/01/2026

Last few days in Thailand with bestie Debs.

Thank you for your messages whilst I have been away.

I Will be back refreshed and ready for work as of Tuesday 20/01/26

I will get back to any messages received whilst away and look forward to seeing you all 🇹🇭

22/11/2025

A Key Link in Fascial Continuity

The MTJ (muscle–tendon junction) isn’t a simple attachment point — it is part of a continuous fascia-to-tendon-to-bone chain.

From a Western anatomy standpoint, MTJs are sensor-dense, load-sensitive, and critically involved in regulating muscle tone and movement.

From a Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) standpoint, they sit along the jingjin—the tendino-muscular meridians that describe long, continuous lines of tension through the body.

This area is small, but it is one of the most influential zones in the entire musculoskeletal system.

Releasing or reorganizing tension at an MTJ often:

- improves glide

- restores force transmission

- reduces compensatory bracing

- changes movement patterns far from the area treated

This is why small, precise work here creates whole-body effects.

Check out the rest if this fascinating article here - https://koperequine.com/the-muscle-tendon-junction-mtj/

Address

Godfrey’s Farm House
Maldon
CM98NT

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