Mandy Sergent Glitzer - Yoga Therapist and Backcare Specialist

Mandy Sergent Glitzer - Yoga Therapist and Backcare Specialist Mandy is an Experienced Yoga Teacher (ERYT-500), Certified Yoga Therapist (C-IAYT) and NASM Certified Personal Trainer (CPT).

She specializes on helping clients move past fear and back pain, giving them tools to feel empowered and in control. Mandy began practicing yoga roughly 15 ago. At that time, she had graduated from Penn State with a B.S. in Environmental Engineering and found herself bouncing around the U.S., from state to state and job to job, with a general sense of discontent. Once she began practicing yoga, wh

at kept her coming back to her mat weren’t the physical benefits of her practice. It was the way in which her mind seemed to turn off during yoga. The “what next, what if” worries, concerns and chatter seemed to fade away. It was as if the physical postures took enough concentration to quiet down all of her mind chatter, and before she knew it, she was even moving without thinking. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, the answers to her worries would come. It wasn’t long before Mandy would turn to her yoga mat before making any big life decision. In 2003, Mandy graduated from her first 200 hour Yoga Teacher Training program from the Mount Nittany Institute of Natural Health and began teaching yoga classes throughout Central Pennsylvania. Over the years, yoga became a larger part of her life, until she left the engineering world behind in 2009, and began teaching and seeing yoga therapy clients full-time. Phoenix Rising Yoga has been one of the schools to most greatly impact Mandy's teaching style and offerings. Mandy has completed their 200 hour, 500 hour, and advanced Yoga Therapy program allowing her to become one of the first Certified Yoga Therapists through the International Association of Yoga Therapists (C-IAYT). Phoenix Rising is an inquiry-based method that uses classic postures, breathing, meditation, and relaxation techniques to increases awareness of body, breath, and mind. In 2014, with the birth of Mandy's second son, her practice took another big turn. Suddenly Mandy found herself with intense back pain. While she had had "marked" scoliosis for as long as she can remember, she was able to live pain free until this point. Before having children, Mandy had a 68 degree thoraco-lumbar "C" curve. Several years and 2 baby boys later, the curve had deepened to 77 degrees making Mandy a full 2 inches shorter. Mandy sought the help of a wide variety of professionals, both main stream medical and alternative health: chiropractors, her family doctor, a specialized pain management doctor, massage therapists, an acupuncturist, a Feldenkrais practitioner, and a Physical Therapist. While Mandy received varying amounts of compassion and true desire to help from each of these professionals, one theme remained the same - she was still one of the most healthy people they worked with and nobody could understand the source of her pain. Fueled by her desire to truly understand the nature of her pain, she began to research Yoga for Scoliosis and jumped into learning with both feet. Mandy has studied with Rachel Jesien, Loren Fishman and is currently completing a very comprehensive Yoga for Backcare and Scoliosis certification program with Alison West at Yoga Union in NYC. In many ways, Mandy feels like her yoga journey has come full circle as she is now seeing great physical benefits from her practice. She also finds her dormant engineering mind sparking back to life to help understand the very complex spinal relationship that is created by scoliosis with it's lateral curves, accompanying rotation, and possible hyper-kyphosis and hyper-lordosis. Mandy remains grateful for her Phoenix Rising training, as this work of correcting spinal asymmetry often feels like she is unraveling at the seams and is then being sewn back up again, and again, and again. Mandy is a member of the Yoga Alliance (E-RYT200, RYT-500), the International Association of Yoga Therapists, and the American Association of Drugless Practitioners. In addition to those listed above, Mandy earned teaching certificates in prenatal yoga, Curvy Yoga, and has attended countless teaching training workshops over the years.

POV: You realize your week has an extra 5 appointments so you better sneak a workout in today, then spend the next 5 min...
04/26/2026

POV: You realize your week has an extra 5 appointments so you better sneak a workout in today, then spend the next 5 minutes rearranging your attitude from “I have to workout” to “I get to workout.”

Spent the weekend in Module 1 of Scolio Pilates with   clients be ready for some new things!
03/21/2026

Spent the weekend in Module 1 of Scolio Pilates with clients be ready for some new things!

Squat day with my itty bitty weights. Squats have always been tough for me and my curved spine. My pelvis likes to live ...
02/18/2026

Squat day with my itty bitty weights. Squats have always been tough for me and my curved spine. My pelvis likes to live in a different zip code. I hate them less than I used to, so that’s progress.

02/16/2026

This week’s Metta Meditation is getting a little remix.

Join Mandy for a free Radiating Metta Meditation, where we’ll gently expand loving-kindness, starting with ourselves and sending it outward to others. Come sit, breathe, and let your heart soften and swell.

Link: https://app.punchpass.com/org/2529/series/46932

Finding spinal elongation in the wild. No fancy equipment needed.
07/04/2025

Finding spinal elongation in the wild. No fancy equipment needed.

It’s been a busy few days with my family and studio, but I’m back for day 25 of   month. Perhaps the most common questio...
06/25/2025

It’s been a busy few days with my family and studio, but I’m back for day 25 of month.

Perhaps the most common question I get from students: Is it ok to do spinal twists with scoliosis?

Well, we need to remember that a spine with scoliosis is already a twisted spine. The front of the spine turns towards the curve side (generally).

Let’s think of an example. If you have a right thoracic curve (a very common pattern), your ribcage is already twisted back on the right side. If you then twist your upper body towards the right, you are exaggerating your scoliosis pattern. This isn’t really something we want to do. Is it ok to twist towards the left then? Maybe. First, you’d want to be careful that you aren’t leaning into your curve pattern further compressing your concavity. Second, we need to be aware of what is happening in the lumbar spine. You could also have a left lumbar curve, which could be exaggerated by twisting towards the left.

I do not teach a lot of twisting in . When I do, we focus on absorbing our curves. In the photos below, you see me ignoring my scoliosis and twisting like what is taught in normal yoga (left photo). You can see that my curve is exaggerated here. In the second (right photo) I’m focusing on absorbing my curve. You can see I’ve maintained much more length and symmetry.

I do, however, focus on de-rotation. I know this probably sounds like twisting and I guess it is in a way. De-rotation is about bringing our scoliosis twists closer to neutral. We can de-rotate with our breath and we can de-rotate by padding our bodies in certain positions. More on those two methods in the future….

Feeling completely zonked this am, but I’ve got a date with the weights anyway.
06/25/2025

Feeling completely zonked this am, but I’ve got a date with the weights anyway.

Day 20 of   month brings us to the next principal of  : drawing the lateral curve towards the midline. After we’ve reste...
06/20/2025

Day 20 of month brings us to the next principal of : drawing the lateral curve towards the midline.

After we’ve rested and connected to our breath, we’ve lengthened our spines, and we’ve stacked our body blocks, we gently encouraged the sideways sift of the spine back towards the midline.

The first photo shows me doing this passively, using a blanket roll under my curve. The second photo shows me actively, using my own musculature, pulling my curve towards the midline.

Of course our curves are actually 3 dimensional, so we need to be careful that we aren’t catching our curve in a more rotated position when we come to a side lying position such as these.

06/19/2025

Three safe core strength exercises that I’m currently obsessed with. Learn these and more in the Centered and Strong monthly membership. Comment scoliosis strong for more details.

Address

2541 E College Avenue
State College, PA
16801

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