The Wright Stretch

The Wright Stretch Gentle assisted stretching for the relief of chronic pain.

05/16/2026

I was listening to a podcast a couple months ago where a guy said Fascia is going through a “hot girl phase” right now. Haha probably true but, I love seeing all of the public conversations on the topic lately. Here’s Sue Hitzmann spreading fabulous information as usual on Access Daily. She always describes fascia’s connection to the nervous and lymphatic systems so beautifully.
I’m taking a class on the fascia hydrator. It’s a pretty amazing tool to add to the tool box if I do say so myself. Vibration meets lymphatic drainage and soft tissue release. 🤓👌🏽

There is so much growth happening in the fascia field. This is an exciting article. 🤓
05/13/2026

There is so much growth happening in the fascia field. This is an exciting article. 🤓

The detection of another circulatory system in the human body could have enormous scientific implications.

A pioneer in the industry. I wish I could have met her.https://web.facebook.com/share/18zKE9xb5V/?mibextid=wwXIfr
05/05/2026

A pioneer in the industry. I wish I could have met her.

https://web.facebook.com/share/18zKE9xb5V/?mibextid=wwXIfr

In 1920, Ida Rolf walked out of Columbia University with a PhD in biochemistry — one of the very few women in America to hold such a degree.
She had published research. She had worked alongside some of the greatest scientific minds of her era at the Rockefeller Institute. By every measure, she was exceptional.
But something kept pulling her away from the laboratory.
Her own body was struggling. So were her sons. And every time she looked to conventional medicine for answers, she got the same response: nothing wrong. Nothing we can find. Nothing we can do.
Ida Rolf wasn't built for that kind of answer.
She was a scientist. She knew that "we can't find it" didn't mean "it doesn't exist." So she started searching — not in textbooks, but in bodies. She began studying osteopathy, chiropractic, yoga, the Alexander Technique, and a dozen other healing traditions. She looked for patterns. For mechanisms. For the physical logic underneath pain that doctors had dismissed.
What she kept coming back to was fascia.
Fascia is the dense, fibrous connective tissue that wraps around every muscle, organ, nerve, and bone in the body. In the 1940s, medical textbooks treated it as filler — something you cut through to reach the real anatomy. Inert. Unimportant. Not worth studying.
Rolf saw something entirely different.
She believed fascia was adaptive — that it tightened and reorganized around injury, poor posture, and years of physical stress. And when that happened, the body gradually pulled itself out of alignment. Not in any way an X-ray could show. But in ways a person could feel every single day.
She began working with patients — methodically, carefully — applying deep, sustained manual pressure to release these restrictions. She called the method Structural Integration. She designed it as a ten-session system, working through the body layer by layer, restoring the alignment gravity was constantly fighting against.
People who came to her had often been everywhere else first.
They had chronic aches their doctors couldn't explain. Headaches that never quite left. Shoulders that felt locked. Backs that had ached for so long they'd started to believe the pain was just part of them.
And one by one, many of them found relief.
The medical establishment was not impressed.
She had no medical degree. Her ideas about connective tissue were outside the accepted model. Her language — structure, gravity, alignment — sounded more like philosophy than medicine to ears trained on pathology reports. And she was treating patients with conditions some doctors had already decided were all in their heads.
They called her a quack. They dismissed her method as unscientific manipulation. Some warned patients to stay away.
Ida Rolf kept working anyway.
Through the 1950s and into the 1960s, she trained practitioners. She refined her technique. She taught at Esalen Institute in California, where her ideas finally reached a wider audience — dancers, athletes, movement therapists, and people in chronic pain who had run out of other options.
She was demanding, uncompromising, and utterly convinced that the body's structure mattered in ways medicine hadn't fully reckoned with yet.
And in the decades after her death, something shifted.
Researchers began studying fascia with new tools and new interest. They found it was far from inert — threaded with nerve endings, responsive to mechanical pressure, capable of influencing how pain signals moved through the body. The study of fascial networks became a legitimate field. Physical therapists began incorporating connective tissue work. Anatomy education began changing.
Rolfing itself remains debated in clinical circles. But the fundamental idea Ida Rolf devoted her life to — that the body's connective tissue plays a meaningful role in chronic pain and structural health — has earned serious scientific attention.
She died on March 19, 1979, at age 82.
She had spent most of her career building something the world wasn't ready for — in a time when women were told their instincts weren't reliable, their methods weren't legitimate, and their patients' suffering wasn't real.
She believed the body held answers that medicine hadn't learned to ask for yet.
And she spent forty years proving it, one person at a time.

❤️❤️❤️
04/23/2026

❤️❤️❤️

Last week was unforgettable. I went to the Laboratory of Anatomical Enlightenment in Boulder Colorado and undertook a le...
04/22/2026

Last week was unforgettable. I went to the Laboratory of Anatomical Enlightenment in Boulder Colorado and undertook a learning opportunity unlike anything I’ve ever experienced. Guided by Tom Meyers and Todd Garcia we participated in a fascial dissection from skin to bone with cadavers that had no chemical processing. Working with fresh donors allows for a clear, unhindered view of the connective tissue (and everything else).
Working with Tom Meyers has been a dream of mine for years so I can’t really put into words how grateful I am to have had this opportunity. His lectures are seriously phenomenal. Overall I would say the experience was humbling and awe inspiring.
I needed a few days to process but now that I have I want to take a moment to send my heartfelt gratitude to the donors that gave us the gift of their bodies to learn from, the instructors who hold such a wealth of knowledge and showed so much patience and of course Tom Meyers and Todd Garcia for sharing their genius skill and instruction with us.
Curiosity is what continues to drive me in this work and while I feel I learned a LOT during the course it was a great reminder that I still have SO MUCH TO learn!

I’m all packed up and ready to LEARN! This continuing ed course is going to be very different from the rest. Hope you al...
04/14/2026

I’m all packed up and ready to LEARN! This continuing ed course is going to be very different from the rest. Hope you all have a wonderful week. I’ll share more details soon. 🥼🤓

Short, sweet and to the point. This kind of feedback is genuinely life affirming. 🥹❤️
04/02/2026

Short, sweet and to the point. This kind of feedback is genuinely life affirming. 🥹❤️

Last weekend we celebrated the 30 year anniversary of . It has been such an honor to be a part of this process. Ann & Ch...
03/19/2026

Last weekend we celebrated the 30 year anniversary of . It has been such an honor to be a part of this process. Ann & Chris are 2 of my favorite people on this planet. They aren’t just family. They’re mentors, teachers and the dearest of friends. On top of the anniversary we were able to see the premier of the new documentary “Stretch of a Lifetime” where my little girl plays young Ann. What a gift this journey has been. I am beyond grateful and can’t wait to see what the next 30 years will have in store for all of us. 💝💕💝💕

Can we talk about vibration for a sec? I asked AI to define vibration and this is what it said…Vibration is a repetitive...
01/26/2026

Can we talk about vibration for a sec? I asked AI to define vibration and this is what it said…
Vibration is a repetitive, back-and-forth or up-and-down motion around an equilibrium point, essential in physics for phenomena like sound and earthquakes, involving characteristics like frequency (how fast) and amplitude (how far). It’s categorized as free (unrestrained, like a pendulum) or forced (externally driven, like a vibrating phone), and can be harmonic (constant) or random (varying). Humans sense vibration through touch receptors, while it’s crucial in technology (speakers, machinery analysis) and nature, with impacts ranging from musical notes to structural damage.

I use my tool in almost every session these days. The harmonic, 40 hertz frequency has been a game changer for aiding in the body’s (already) incredible ability to heal itself. From a proprioceptive and neurofascial standpoint I think we’re still just touching the surface of the potential gains that can be achieved with vibration. So, while I used to resist using external tools, I am fully embracing the benefits of this relatively new technology. I’ve also kept up with using my from the for my own self-care. It’s freaking amazing if you haven’t tried it yet.

Having said all that I still believe that the ultimate and most effective tool for changing our vibration comes from within. As we head into the week and close out our month I’m sending you all high vibes for a phenomenal week ahead. Let’s keep lifting each-other up despite any challenges or differences we may face. 💕🌊💕🌊💕

01/13/2026

This year I rang in the New Year in the Caribbean with family. The fireworks on Aruba reminded me so much of Oahu. They know how to celebrate!!
It was nice to take a beat and spend some time reflecting on 2025. There is SO MUCH to be Grateful for!! Wishing all of my clients (past and present) a beautiful and healthy 2026. I love you guys and can’t thank you enough for your support. Happy New Year!!! 🥂💕🎊

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