Deep Serenity Equine Bodywork LLC

Deep Serenity Equine Bodywork LLC Hi I’m Nya, a National Board Certified Equine Structural Integration Therapist in Chehalis WA.

Yes yes yes great information about the Fascia System. Thank you Koper Equine for sharing.
08/08/2025

Yes yes yes great information about the Fascia System. Thank you Koper Equine for sharing.

Here are 25 of the Most Interesting & Important Properties of Fascia:

Fascia is a truly fascinating tissue that plays a central role in how the horse moves, feels, and functions.

1. Fascia is a full-body communication network.
It connects every muscle, bone, organ, and nerve—literally a three-dimensional web that transmits mechanical, chemical, and electrical signals faster than nerves in some cases.

2. It’s a hydraulic system. Fascia is made up largely of water, and its gel-like matrix allows for gliding, shock absorption, and pressure distribution. Movement and massage help keep this system hydrated and functional.

3. It has more sensory nerve endings than muscle. Fascia is densely packed with mechanoreceptors (for pressure, tension, stretch) and nociceptors (pain sensors). It’s key in body awareness (proprioception), coordination, and even pain perception.

4. It transmits force across the body.
Muscles don’t work in isolation—fascia distributes force across chains of movement (like the deep front line or superficial back line) spreading forces both across joints and parallel to them through other tissues.

5. Fascia can contract independently of muscle.
Thanks to tiny contractile cells (myofibroblasts), fascia can hold tension on its own—even without conscious movement. This contributes to stiffness, guarding, or holding patterns.

6. It responds to …https://koperequine.com/25-of-the-most-interesting-important-properties-of-fascia/

Good info
07/28/2025

Good info

Chronic back pain can interrupt myofascial force transmission, and here’s how:

🔄 The Myofascial System & Force Transmission

The myofascial system is a continuous, interconnected web of fascia and muscle that transmits mechanical forces throughout the body. When functioning properly, it allows force generated in one area (like the hips) to be transmitted efficiently to another (like the shoulders or spine). This is essential for coordinated movement and postural stability.

🧠 How Chronic Back Pain Disrupts This System
1. Protective Muscle Guarding
Chronic pain often leads to involuntary muscle tension or bracing. This creates uneven loading and localized rigidity, blocking smooth fascial glide and limiting the transmission of force through the kinetic chain.
2. Fascial Densification or Adhesions
Prolonged inflammation and immobility can cause thickening or stickiness in the fascia. These areas resist tension and disrupt the normal transmission of mechanical forces across fascial lines.
3. Neuromuscular Inhibition
Pain alters motor control, especially in stabilizing muscles like the multifidus or transverse abdominis. Weak or inhibited muscles can’t contribute effectively to the force chain, leading to compensations.
4. Loss of Elastic Energy Transfer
Healthy fascia stores and transfers elastic energy during movement (like a spring). Chronic tension and restriction reduce this recoil capacity, making movement less efficient and more fatiguing.
5. Asymmetry in Load Distribution
Pain leads to altered movement patterns and compensatory loading, which further distorts the fascial lines and force vectors in the body.

🌀 Clinical Implications
• Reduced performance & coordination
• Increased risk of injury elsewhere (compensation)
• Slower recovery due to poor tissue adaptability

✅ Therapeutic Considerations
• Myofascial release therapy to restore glide and elasticity
• Movement re-education to correct compensation patterns
• Progressive load training to re-establish balanced force transmission
• Breathwork & vagus nerve stimulation to downregulate chronic tension

❌ This concept applies to any area of chronic pain, not just the back. Chronic pain disrupts the myofascial system’s ability to transmit and distribute force efficiently, no matter where it’s located in the body. Chronic pain is not isolated. It creates a ripple effect through the myofascial web, altering how tension, load, and movement are distributed across the body.

Great information!
07/17/2025

Great information!

07/04/2025

Have a safe and happy 4th of July everyone!!

One of the biggest questions I get asked is if I do bodywork on my own horses. The answer to that is, Yes! Here is my ma...
07/02/2025

One of the biggest questions I get asked is if I do bodywork on my own horses. The answer to that is, Yes! Here is my mare, who I am taking through the full series. Just did session one of the series and now we are waiting for her chiropractor to come and adjust her. ❤️🐴

06/15/2025
One of the best parts of going to work on horses is having the barn cats crawl up into your arms for snuggle loves.     ...
05/19/2025

One of the best parts of going to work on horses is having the barn cats crawl up into your arms for snuggle loves. .

05/18/2025

05/07/2025
05/06/2025

Hi Everyone!! I finally made an Instagram for my business so if you’d like to follow me it is
ds_equinebodywork.

One of the biggest things I love to get, is a wonderful message from an owner who is excited to see the benefits of the ...
04/05/2025

One of the biggest things I love to get, is a wonderful message from an owner who is excited to see the benefits of the bodywork in their horse. This is why love doing this work. It is sssssoooo rewarding. 

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