Myosense Massage Therapy

Myosense Massage Therapy Helping you stay active and pain free with massage therapy, acupuncture (TCM), and the rolf method of structural integration. Located downtown Ottawa.

Doing what makes sense for your muscles. Helping you stay active with massage therapy, acupuncture, and the rolf method of structural integration. Located in Ottawa'a downtown core, we have a team of highly trained RMT's to help with your aches and pains.

05/29/2026

Professional dancers develop extraordinary skills - but often at a high physical and nervous system cost.

In her personal story, dancer Jennifer-Lynn Crawford describes how Rolfing® Structural Integration helped her rediscover sensation, stability and a sense of home in her body - and why she sees it as “a gift to movers”.

For dancers wondering how to sustain their bodies long-term - or exploring a meaningful professional path beyond the stage - this perspective is deeply relatable.

👉 Read the full blog article: https://rolfing.org/articles/professional-dancer-rolfing-helped-inhabit-my-body

👉 Explore Rolfing® as a professional pathway for dancers: https://rolfing.org/dance-to-rolfing-professional-pathway-dancers

Not sure if acupuncture is right for you?Start with a 15-minute consult.Get clarity on your symptoms, a personalized app...
05/20/2026

Not sure if acupuncture is right for you?

Start with a 15-minute consult.
Get clarity on your symptoms, a personalized approach, and a clear next step—no pressure, just answers.

Book now and take the guesswork out of your healing.

HYROX training = serious quad fatigue 🔥Running. Sled pushes. Lunges. Wall balls.Your quads take a beating — and when the...
05/12/2026

HYROX training = serious quad fatigue 🔥

Running. Sled pushes. Lunges. Wall balls.
Your quads take a beating — and when they stay tight, performance and recovery can suffer.

Using yoga balls for quad self-massage can help:
✔️ Reduce muscle tension
✔️ Improve tissue mobility
✔️ Decrease post-workout stiffness
✔️ Support better recovery between sessions
✔️ Help you move more efficiently during training

Slow rolls. Deep breaths. Consistent recovery.

Your recovery work matters just as much as your training. 💙

Jaw tight? Headaches won’t quit? Neck always stiff?These are often connected.Our TMJ + Neck treatments target the root o...
05/12/2026

Jaw tight? Headaches won’t quit? Neck always stiff?

These are often connected.

Our TMJ + Neck treatments target the root of the tension—addressing the jaw, face, and neck together to reduce pain, improve movement, and help your body actually hold the results.

If you’ve been managing symptoms but not getting lasting change, this is for you.

Book your session and start breaking the cycle.

✨ Glow from the inside out. ✨Cosmetic acupuncture is more than skin deep.This holistic treatment helps support collagen ...
05/12/2026

✨ Glow from the inside out. ✨

Cosmetic acupuncture is more than skin deep.
This holistic treatment helps support collagen production, improve circulation, soften fine lines, and restore natural radiance — all while supporting balance within the body.

No fillers. No harsh downtime.
Just healthy, refreshed skin that still looks like you.

💙 Natural collagen support
💙 Skin tightening + toning
💙 Support for acne + acne scarring
💙 Rooted in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Book your consultation and start your glow journey.

Most people don’t realize their jaw and neck are directly connected.Tension in one often drives pain in the other—showin...
05/05/2026

Most people don’t realize their jaw and neck are directly connected.

Tension in one often drives pain in the other—showing up as headaches, jaw clicking, stiffness, or even difficulty chewing.

Our TMJ + Neck sessions are designed to treat these areas together, using targeted techniques (including intraoral work when appropriate) to reduce tension and restore function.

Less chasing symptoms. More treating the source.

holistichealth painmanagement

J.P. Now offers 15 minute complimentary consultations! Not sure if acupuncture is right for you? Start with a 15-minute ...
05/05/2026

J.P. Now offers 15 minute complimentary consultations!

Not sure if acupuncture is right for you? Start with a 15-minute consult.

This focused session gives you the opportunity to discuss your concerns, ask questions, and get a clear understanding of how Traditional Chinese Medicine can support your health. No pressure—just clarity and a plan.

Book your consult and take the first step toward feeling better.

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05/02/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CK8dtWaRJ/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Women came to her with chronic pain doctors called "psychosomatic." She found the physical cause medicine had ignored—and they dismissed her too.
In the 1940s, Ida Pauline Rolf had a problem that wouldn't go away: she was a brilliant biochemist in a world that didn't know what to do with brilliant women.
She had earned her PhD in biological chemistry from Columbia University in 1920—one of the few women in her field. She had worked at the Rockefeller Institute. She had published research. She had the credentials, the training, the mind.
But chronic health issues—her own and her children's—kept leading her to doctors who had the same response: rest. Wait. Accept it. There's nothing structurally wrong.
Clean X-rays. Normal blood work. No visible pathology.
The implicit message: maybe it's in your head.
Ida Rolf didn't accept that answer. She was a scientist. If the pain was real—and she knew it was—there had to be a physical mechanism medicine was missing.
So she started looking where nobody else was looking: at fascia.
Fascia is the dense, fibrous connective tissue that wraps around every muscle, organ, nerve, and bone in the body. It's everywhere—a continuous web that holds you together, transmits force, and shapes your structure. In the 1940s, medical schools barely mentioned it. It was considered inert packing material, something you cut through to get to the "important" stuff during surgery.
Rolf saw something different. She saw fascia as dynamic, adaptive, and capable of holding patterns—patterns created by injury, posture, repetitive stress, and emotional trauma. When fascia tightened and reorganized around these patterns, it pulled the body out of alignment. And that misalignment created pain that no X-ray would ever show.
Women came to her with stories doctors had stopped listening to.
Shoulders that never relaxed. Hips that felt crooked. Backs that ached without visible injury. Necks that couldn't turn fully. Chronic headaches. Jaw pain. Pelvic pain. Exhaustion from holding their bodies together against invisible forces.
They had been told: lose weight. Exercise more. Take a vacation. See a psychiatrist. It's stress. It's hormones. It's menopause. It's motherhood. It's life.
The subtext was always the same: you're unreliable. Your pain isn't real. You're exaggerating. You're too emotional. You're a difficult patient.
Ida Rolf believed them.
She developed a method she called Structural Integration—a systematic approach to releasing fascial restrictions through deep, sustained manual pressure. She worked methodically through the body in ten sessions, each targeting specific fascial layers and regions. The goal wasn't relaxation. It was reorganization.
And it hurt.
Rolfing wasn't gentle. She pressed deeply into tissue, holding pressure until the fascia released. Patients cried. They trembled. They had emotional breakthroughs as their bodies let go of patterns they'd been holding for decades.
But when they stood up afterward, something had shifted. Shoulders dropped. Spines lengthened. Hips balanced. Pain that had been constant for years eased or disappeared entirely.
The women whose suffering had been dismissed as psychosomatic were getting structurally better. Their bodies were changing shape. Their movement was improving. The pain was real, the cause was physical, and the treatment worked.
Ida Rolf tried to bring her work to the medical establishment.
They rejected her completely.
She was a woman. She didn't have a medical degree. Her method was based on manipulation of tissue doctors considered irrelevant. She talked about "energy" and "gravity" and "structural integration" in ways that sounded unscientific. And worst of all, she was claiming to cure conditions medicine had already categorized as psychosomatic—which implied doctors had been wrong.
The medical community called her a quack. They dismissed Rolfing as pseudoscience, dangerous manipulation, and exploitative bodywork preying on desperate patients. Some doctors warned people to stay away from her.
But the people she helped kept coming. And they kept getting better.
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, Rolf trained practitioners, refined her technique, and built a following—mostly among people medicine had failed. Dancers and athletes came because they understood bodies in ways doctors didn't. People with chronic pain came because they had nowhere else to go.
Women came because Ida Rolf was one of the only people who believed them.
She was uncompromising, intense, and absolutely convinced she was right. She didn't soften her approach to make doctors comfortable. She didn't apologize for lacking an MD. She kept working, kept teaching, kept proving that the pain medicine dismissed was structurally real.
And slowly, science began to catch up.
In the 1970s and 80s, researchers started studying fascia seriously. They discovered it wasn't inert—it was rich with nerve endings, mechanoreceptors, and cells that responded to mechanical stress. They found that fascial restrictions could create referred pain, limit range of motion, and alter movement patterns. They confirmed what Rolf had been saying for decades: fascia mattered.
By the 2000s, fascia research had exploded. Biomechanics labs were mapping fascial networks. Physical therapists were incorporating fascial release into treatment. Medical textbooks were updating their anatomy sections. Scientists were publishing papers on fascial plasticity, myofascial pain syndromes, and the role of connective tissue in chronic conditions.
Ida Rolf had been right all along.
Today, Rolfing is practiced worldwide. The Rolf Institute trains certified practitioners. Research continues to validate the biomechanical principles underlying her work. Fascia is now recognized as a key player in chronic pain, postural dysfunction, and movement disorders.
But here's what still needs saying: Ida Rolf's story isn't just about fascia. It's about who gets believed.
Women are significantly more likely than men to have their pain dismissed, minimized, or attributed to psychological causes. Studies show women wait longer in emergency rooms, receive less pain medication, and are more likely to be prescribed psychiatric drugs for physical symptoms. Chronic pain conditions that predominantly affect women—fibromyalgia, endometriosis, chronic fatigue syndrome—took decades longer to be taken seriously than comparable conditions affecting men.
Ida Rolf saw this pattern in the 1940s. She saw women being gaslit by a medical system that didn't have the tools—or the interest—to understand their suffering.
And when she developed those tools, when she found the physical mechanism medicine had missed, the same system dismissed her too.
A PhD biochemist with reproducible results was called a quack because she was a woman working outside traditional medical hierarchies, treating a patient population medicine had already decided was unreliable.
It took decades for science to validate what she and her patients already knew: the pain was real. The tissue held the story. The body could be reorganized. And women weren't making it up.
Ida Pauline Rolf died in 1979 at age 83. She lived just long enough to see her work begin to gain scientific recognition, but not long enough to see fascia become a major field of research.
She spent most of her career being dismissed by the very establishment she had been trained in.
But she kept working. She kept believing her patients. She kept insisting that invisible pain deserved visible solutions.
And she proved that the most profound healing often begins not with a diagnosis written by someone who doesn't believe you, but with someone who listens—to your body's structure, its silent stories, and the tissue that remembers what medicine chose to overlook.

Dealing with forearm or elbow pain?This simple ball rolling technique can help relieve tension in the extensor muscles a...
04/27/2026

Dealing with forearm or elbow pain?
This simple ball rolling technique can help relieve tension in the extensor muscles and support recovery.
If it keeps coming back, we treat the root cause. Save this and you will thank us.

At Myosense, we hear this all the time…“Are acupuncture needles big?” 👀They’re actually ultra-fine—about the width of a ...
04/22/2026

At Myosense, we hear this all the time…
“Are acupuncture needles big?” 👀

They’re actually ultra-fine—about the width of a human hair.

✨ Gentle
✨ Precise
✨ Focused on relieving pain at the source

Acupuncture is commonly used to help with:
• Neck & shoulder tension
• Low back pain
• Headaches & migraines
• Muscle tightness & stress-related pain

Most clients are surprised by how comfortable—and even relieving—it feels, often after just one session.

If you’ve been dealing with ongoing pain, don’t wait for it to get worse.

👉 Limited appointments available—book your visit at Myosense today and start feeling the difference

Address

400-280 Albert Street
Ottawa, ON
K1P5P3

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 8pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 8pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 8pm
Thursday 7:30am - 8pm
Friday 7:30am - 8pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm
Sunday 11am - 4pm

Telephone

+16138970473

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