The Balanced Pelvis

The Balanced Pelvis Holistic One-on-One movement-based Physical Therapy, Pilates, personal training and NO Exercise required pain relief StemWave

06/03/2026

Bone density responds to load — but hip pain often stops women from loading their hips at all.

The good news?
Most hip pain improves when mechanics improve.







Howe et al., BMJ
Bennell et al., Osteoporos Int
Dr. Vonda Wright — hip loading for aging athletes
Jill Cook — load management

Let’s connect a few dots that almost NO ONE connects:Pelvic floor → pelvic stability → balance → fall risk.Your pelvic f...
05/25/2026

Let’s connect a few dots that almost NO ONE connects:

Pelvic floor → pelvic stability → balance → fall risk.

Your pelvic floor isn’t just a “bladder muscle.”
It’s part of your deep balance system, working with your diaphragm, deep abdominals, and hip stabilizers.

When it’s not coordinating well, your body starts compensating with gripping, stiffening, or wobbling — and that’s when fall risk increases.

The good news?
You can train this system at ANY age.

Small changes in breath, posture, and pelvic floor coordination can dramatically improve your balance.

If you’ve been feeling unsteady or unsure about your balance, you don’t have to figure it out alone. Message me anytime — this is exactly what I help women with.

05/20/2026
05/20/2026

Your pelvic floor is part of your balance system — not just your bladder system.
When it’s not coordinating well, your body compensates with gripping, stiffening, or wobbling… all of which increase fall risk.

The solution isn’t “just strengthen.”
It’s coordination + breath + pelvic stability.

Save this for your next workout. Granacher et al., J Strength Cond Res
Kim et al., Clin Interv Aging
Diane Lee — deep system coordination
Dr. Vonda Wright — movement as medicine

Most women don’t realize this… but your pelvic floor has more to do with your balance than your shoes ever will.If your ...
05/18/2026

Most women don’t realize this… but your pelvic floor has more to do with your balance than your shoes ever will.

If your pelvic floor is underactive, your body wobbles and overcorrects.
If it’s overactive, everything stiffens and your reaction time slows down.

Both patterns increase fall risk — especially during quick turns, uneven ground, or stepping off a curb.

And here’s the part no one talks about:

👉 Pelvic floor coordination matters more than pelvic floor strength.
👉 Balance isn’t just an ankle or hip issue — it starts at the center.
👉 Women 40+ benefit the MOST from pelvic floor–based balance training.

If you’ve been feeling “off balance,” “wobbly,” or “tight,” your pelvic floor may be part of the story.

If this sounds familiar and you want support improving your balance and pelvic coordination, you’re always welcome to reach out. I’m here to help.

Hip pain often isn’t a hip problem — it’s a pelvic control problem.When the pelvis rotates, tips, or shifts, the hip joi...
04/30/2026

Hip pain often isn’t a hip problem — it’s a pelvic control problem.

When the pelvis rotates, tips, or shifts, the hip joint loses clean movement.
This can create pinching in the front, aching on the side, or deep glute tension.

You can stretch the hip all day, but if the pelvis isn’t stable, the hip will continue to compensate.

Restore pelvic control → the hip finally moves the way it’s supposed to.

Pilates teaches hip dissociation — the ability to move the hip without dragging the pelvis along for the ride.This skill...
04/28/2026

Pilates teaches hip dissociation — the ability to move the hip without dragging the pelvis along for the ride.
This skill is essential for reducing hip pinching, improving gait, and calming lateral hip pain.
When the glute med and deep rotators activate well, the hip joint finally gets space to move cleanly.
This is the foundation of true hip stability.

04/28/2026

Pain that switches sides between your hip and low back is a pelvic control issue.
O’Sullivan et al. show lumbopelvic control predicts recurrent pain.

Chronic plantar fasciitis isn’t just inflammation — it’s a degenerative fasciopathy. That means the tissue becomes thick...
04/24/2026

Chronic plantar fasciitis isn’t just inflammation — it’s a degenerative fasciopathy. That means the tissue becomes thickened, overloaded, and slow to heal.
And that’s why quick fixes don’t last.

Here’s how the most common treatments compare:

⭐ Steroid Injections
They may temporarily reduce pain, but they don’t repair the fascia or improve load tolerance.
Research shows steroids can weaken collagen over time and don’t address the mechanical overload that caused the problem.

⭐ Laser Therapy (HILT/LILT)
Laser can help with pain and inflammation, but systematic reviews show no clear long‑term advantage over shockwave therapy.
It’s helpful — but not regenerative.

⭐ Acoustic Devices (Radial Pressure Wave)
Many devices marketed as “acoustic therapy” are not true shockwave.
They stay superficial and don’t reach the plantar fascia or calf‑Achilles complex — the real drivers of heel pain.

Many devices marketed as “acoustic therapy” are not true shockwaves.

StemWave belongs to the same category as the devices used in clinical trials.
Electrohydraulic shockwave has the largest focal zone, deepest pe*******on, and strongest regenerative response.

Research shows true shockwave can:
reduce pain
improve function
stimulate neovascularization (new blood vessel growth)
remodel degenerative fascia
outperform exercise alone in chronic cases

This is why StemWave is ideal for heel pain that hasn’t responded to injections, Laser, or acoustic devices.

Regenerate the tissue → restore the mechanics → end the cycle.
If your heel pain has overstayed its welcome, it’s time for a regenerative, whole‑chain solution.

I’d love to help you calm the tissue, restore mobility, and rebuild the chain.

First treatment is $69. What are you waiting for?

Wearing et al. — chronic plantar fasciitis involves degenerative changes, not just inflammation.
Cook & Purdam — chronic tendon/fascia pain reflects load mismatch, not local weakness.
Multiple systematic reviews comparing laser vs shockwave show similar short‑term outcomes but no superior long‑term benefit.
Schmitz et al. — radial pressure wave is not equivalent to focused/electrohydraulic shockwave in depth or biological effect.
Ogden et al. — foundational work on electrohydraulic shockwave physics and biological effects.
Wang et al. — shockwave stimulates neovascularization and collagen regeneration in poorly healing tissues.

04/23/2026

“Unboxing the tech that lets me treat pain patterns with precision.
One device, one head, and endless ways to support real movement change.”

Address

234 Willard Street
Cocoa, FL
32922

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

+14077343318

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