For patients

When this work helps

If you've done real physical therapy — followed the protocol, done the homework, made progress — and then hit a plateau where the same compensation pattern keeps reasserting itself, that's the pattern this work is built for. The PT did everything right. The fascial substrate underneath the rehab is still holding the old pattern, and no amount of strengthening or stretching pulls it through.

A few sessions of fascial bodywork can unstick what the rehab has been bumping up against, and the PT progress that had stalled often resumes. The most common scenario: you finish PT discharged with measurable improvement, but the body hasn't quite let go of what the injury asked it to hold. That's where Tissue Alchemy picks up.

If you're still in active PT and progressing, finish it. If you've plateaued mid-PT or finished and the residual pattern hasn't cleared, this is the right place to come next. The 2-hour intake includes a full assessment of where you are, what's been tried, and whether fascial work is the right tool for your situation.

For clinicians

How I think about referrals

If you're a PT, sports-medicine provider, athletic trainer, or movement specialist considering referring patients for fascial bodywork, here's the short version of how I work and where I think the collaboration is most useful.

I work with patients whose acute pathology has been managed but whose chronic compensation patterns are limiting full recovery. The work is fascia-focused — precision vibration, manual technique, and nervous-system pacing — and it complements rather than substitutes for rehab. I don't diagnose, I don't manage medical conditions, and I refer back to a physician or PT whenever a patient presents with anything that needs clinical assessment.

If you'd like to coordinate on a specific patient, share rehab phase information, or align session timing with a return-to-sport protocol, I'm happy to talk. The contact page is the best starting point, or call directly. I can also send a clinician-facing one-pager describing the method, the toolkit, and the kinds of patterns I see respond — useful if you want to evaluate the fit before sending someone in.