SPEAKER_03 52:16–52:26
Well, so if fascia covers everything, like everything, right? It's one big piece. It's continuous. Can't I just make a line anywhere that I want if it's all continuous? So is it really such a thing as a fascial line? But there are relationships that produce the effect, so when I talk about helices, helical angles, ERs and IRs, that's what we're talking about. It's like there is a pathway, if you will, that will alter that in very specific manners just because of the way that we are physically structured. And so that's what you're influencing more than anything else. So if you tickle somebody's belly button and they get more, they get the knee gets closer to the wall in that little thingy that you're doing. It's like all you're doing is you're promoting a systemic change that allows you to capture a more optimal representation of everything, right? I'm influencing the tension in the system in a favorable way that allows me to access the space. There's nothing magical about a fascial line, if you will. You're providing a sensory input that promotes a change in the system to allow it to acquire space. The fascia will behave as it will behave based on the rest of the system. It does nothing in isolation by itself.
fascial linesfascia continuitysystemic tensionsensory inputhelical mechanics