Discover the hidden web that connects and shapes us.

When your body says, “Enough!”
Throughout life, your body absorbs traumas big and small.
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A car accident.
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A fall you “walked off.”
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A stiff neck after sleeping in an odd position.
Each time, your body compensates: shifting posture, absorbing force, moving differently. Over time, these small adaptations layer on top of each other.
Until one day… you bend down to lift a bag, and your back “gives out.”
It isn’t that one stretch that caused it — it’s the accumulation of compensations. This is your body saying: “Enough.”
What affects your fascia, affects everything.
Fascia is your body’s great connector: a living web that links muscles, bones, nerves, and organs.
When fascia thickens or tightens, it can:
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Create lines of tension.
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Put pressure on blood vessels or nerves.
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Force muscles to overwork.
This is why pain often shows up far from the original problem. Trauma in one spot can ripple through fascia, appearing later as discomfort somewhere else.
Trauma can “ripple” through your body.
Imagine pulling one corner of a spider’s web—the whole web distorts. Fascia works the same way.
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A fall on the pelvis → may later appear as neck pain.
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An impact near the liver → might show up as shoulder pain.
Your body is one continuous fabric, not disconnected parts.
" When one part of your body is weak or compromised, your entire structure responds to balance out the problem – just like a suspension bridge. Understanding this is key to finding the cause of a problem and not just treating its symptoms."
Bev Kosuljandic, MCSP, MCPA
Tensegrity: the principle behind my approach.
Tensegrity combines tension and integrity. It’s the principle that explains why your bones don’t simply stack like bricks —they float in a sea of soft tissue, balanced by tension in fascia and muscles.
When injury occurs, the strain doesn’t just stay in one place. It disperses, stretching and stressing the whole system. This is why pain often appears at your body’s weakest point, not the site of the original injury.

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“Your body carries your history. Sometimes the source of today’s pain is something from long ago. Tensegrity shows us how old damage affects balance across the whole body.”
— Robert Fong, Jericho Physio
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This is why fascia work is so powerful. Instead of chasing symptoms, we look at your body as a whole—following the lines of tension, listening to the web, finding the real source of imbalance.
Fascia remembers. Fascia adapts. Fascia can also release.