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Coming Home to Ourselves — and to Our Space

December 8, 2025 Leave a Comment

 

Honouring the Body as We Move Into the Darker Months

November 6, 2025

 

As November arrives, the earth softens into stillness. Leaves fall, days shorten, and the pull inward becomes unmistakable. Our bodies sense this change long before our minds acknowledge it.

If you’ve been craving warmth, quiet, or slower mornings — you’re not alone, and nothing is wrong. Seasonal shifts affect mood, energy, and the nervous system in very real ways. This month invites us to listen, to slow down, and to care for ourselves with intention.

At Fascial Connections, we see this time of year as a reminder that self-care isn’t something to squeeze in before the year ends — it’s an ongoing act of prevention and compassion. Tending to the small restrictions and aches now helps prevent them from becoming bigger challenges later.

As the days grow shorter, we encourage you to give your body the attention it’s been asking for. Whether through Myofascial Release, mindful rest, or gentle movement, take this opportunity to restore your balance before the rush of winter begins.

 

🌿 Planning Ahead
Our schedules for January and beyond are now open. To secure the times that best fit your needs, please reach out to your therapist directly or email info@fascialconnections.ca for booking support.

Please also note that Tara’s schedule will shift in January — she will be available Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.

 

This season, may you find moments to ground, breathe, and reconnect with yourself — and remember, we’re here to support you every step of the way.

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🌿 We’re Coming Home!

After months of patience, perseverance, and community support, we’re thrilled to share that we’re heading home!

The restoration team has given us the green light, and as of Monday November 10th, our doors at Fascial Connections Myofascial Release & Wellness Center will be open once again in our beautifully renewed space.

This journey—since the fire—has tested our ability to flow with change, to practice resilience, and to trust the process of healing (in more ways than one). We couldn’t have done it without you.

To our clients, colleagues, and friends who adjusted schedules, showed understanding, and stood by us: thank you. Your kindness and patience made all the difference.

We can’t wait to welcome you back home—to the place where so much care, healing, and connection happens every day. 💙

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🌘 As the Light Shifts: Understanding Mood Changes Heading Into Winter

As autumn deepens and daylight fades, many people begin to notice subtle shifts — in energy, sleep, motivation, and even emotions. These changes are not a sign of weakness or “not coping.” They are a natural response to our physiology adjusting to less sunlight.

The Biology Behind Seasonal Mood Shifts

Sunlight plays a key role in how our brain and body function. When daylight decreases:

  • Serotonin, a neurotransmitter tied to mood and wellbeing, naturally drops
  • Melatonin, the hormone that regulates sleep, increases earlier in the day — often leading to fatigue or sluggishness.
  • Circadian rhythms (our internal clock) shift, altering sleep, hunger, and energy cycles.
  • Vitamin D levels may decline, influencing immunity, bone health, and mood regulation.
  • The nervous system may lean more toward freeze or conservation states — a biological “curling inward” for winter, just like nature all around us.

When layered with modern life — where we’re expected to perform at full speed year-round — this seasonal shift can feel like heaviness, irritability, or emotional sensitivity.

This is not just “winter blues.” For many, it is a whole-system seasonal adjustment.

 

The Body Remembers Light

Our fascia, nervous system, hormones, and emotional centres are beautifully intertwined. Decreased light signals the body to slow down — a rhythm deeply rooted in human biology, just like animals preparing for winter.

Instead of fighting it, there is gentleness in honouring the body’s wisdom.

  • More rest is not laziness — it’s seasonal intelligence
  • Wanting warmth, stillness, or comfort is biological alignment
  • Feeling emotions more deeply is nervous-system communication, not failure

 

Supporting Mood and Nervous System Through the Darker Months

We can’t change the season — but we can support ourselves through it.

Simple supportive practices include:

✨ Seek light daily — morning light in particular helps reset circadian rhythms
✨ Move gently and often — walking, stretching, slow “slothified”(Tara-ism), mindful practices support emotional flow and circulation
✨ Connect with others — community and warmth buffer emotional dips
✨ Create cozy rituals — tea, breathwork, blankets, journaling, quiet evenings
✨ Schedule nourishing moments — especially when energy dips

And most importantly: let your body move and feel. Emotional tightness often lives in physical tightness. Slow, sustained release work, breath, warmth, and gentle pressure on the body can help the nervous system soften and exhale.

 

Winter Is Not About Withstanding — It’s About Tending

This season asks us to soften inward, not collapse.
To rest, not retreat.
To honour the quiet signals of the body, not override them.

You do not need to be the summer version of yourself right now.
You are allowed to shift, just as the season does.

A slower rhythm is not a step backward — it is a return to balance.

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Diabetes, Fascia & Metabolic Health:

Flow Beneath the Surface

November is Diabetes Awareness Month, and a reminder that health is more than numbers — it’s flow. Circulation, connective tissue, and cellular communication all work together beneath the surface to support balance in the body.

When we think of diabetes, we often focus on blood sugar and insulin. But fascia — the body’s connective tissue — plays a quiet, powerful role in how nutrients travel, how oxygen is delivered, and how the body maintains fluid motion and communication.

 

When Chemistry Meets Tissue

Over time, elevated blood sugar can make connective tissue stiffer through a process called glycation, where sugar binds to collagen and elastin. This limits elasticity and slows tiny capillary flow, making the body feel less adaptable and more mechanical.

Inflammation and metabolic changes can also thicken the fascia’s ground substance — the gel-like space between cells — leading to a sense of tightness, sluggishness, or reduced flexibility.

These shifts happen gradually, often showing up as stiffness or slower recovery long before lab results change.

 

Movement Is Metabolism

Metabolism isn’t just chemistry — it’s movement. The fascia acts as a communication network, allowing nutrients, signals, and energy to flow freely through the body.

When fascia is hydrated and supple, the body’s internal communication stays clear. When it’s restricted or dehydrated, that flow slows — we feel it as fatigue, tension, or heaviness.

Supporting that natural rhythm with gentle movement, hydration, and regular rest helps the body stay responsive and in flow.

 

The Body’s Inner Rhythm

Our fascial system also reflects our daily rhythms. During rest, fascia reorganizes, collagen repairs, and tissues reset. When we honour consistent sleep, natural light, and moments of true pause throughout the day, we support the internal timing that keeps our metabolism — and our fascia — balanced.

 

Supporting Whole-Body Flow

Understanding metabolic health through the lens of fascia reminds us that healing is more than control — it’s cooperation.
Every mindful choice — movement, nourishment, rest, and emotional steadiness — helps restore the body’s natural flow.

At Fascial Connections, we see this every day: when the body begins to move with ease, energy follows.

 

Health is movement — not only of the body, but of energy, rhythm, and relationship through every layer of fascia.

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Part II of The Hidden Impact of Abdominal Scars on Women’s Health

 

Why Abdominal Scars Cause Dysfunction

After any abdominal surgery or organ trauma, scar tissue forms as the body’s normal healing response. However, unlike the organized collagen in healthy tissue, scar tissue is laid down in a chaotic, cross-linked manner, resulting in less flexibility and/or restrictions. When this scar tissue extends deeper, it creates adhesions: internal bands that can bind organs to each other or to the abdominal wall, interfering with their natural movement and causing organs and tissues to stick together or even torsion rather than glide/move smoothly during motion.

 

Types of Impact

  • Musculoskeletal: Adhesions can limit the range of motion of fascia and muscle layers, leading to chronic pain, altered gait, and postural issues. For example, restrictions in the abdominal fascia can cascade through the kinetic chain, affecting back and pelvic mechanics.
  • Visceral: When organs are tethered, their motility is reduced, contributing to digestive problems, irregular bowel movements, chronic abdominal pain, and even infertility or pelvic floor dysfunction in women.
  • Neurological: Entrapment of nerves within adhesions may result in local or referred pain, increased sensitivity, and even changes in central pain processing (such as allodynia or hyperalgesia).
  • Obstructive: In severe cases, scar-related adhesions can cause intestinal obstructions, a significant and sometimes life-threatening complication. This risk is especially present after multiple or open abdominal surgeries.

 

Prevalence and Risk Factors

  • More than 90% of patients undergoing abdominal surgery will develop adhesions, though many are asymptomatic. The risk and severity increase with open surgeries, multiple procedures, and inflammatory complications.
  • Women with C-sections, hysterectomies, or surgeries for endometriosis are particularly at risk for adhesions that may affect reproductive organs and pelvic mobility.

 

Clinical Symptoms

Patients may experience:

  • Chronic localized or referred pain
  • Bloating and digestive irregularity
  • Reduced mobility in the abdomen, pelvis, or lower back
  • Symptoms of pelvic floor dysfunction or pain during intercourse
  • Obstetric or fertility complications due to organ restriction or distortion.

 

Physical Therapy and Treatment

  • Manual therapy—especially myofascial release—can identify and gently mobilize restrictions, aiming to restore tissue glide and reduce pain. Techniques such as sustained, gentle pressure or movement applied to scars and surrounding tissue can remodel adhesions and improve movement.
  • Preventive strategies post-surgery (early, guided mobilization, scar massage) and tailored physiotherapy can minimize long-term dysfunction.

 

Takeaway for Women’s Health and Menopause

Women in the menopausal phase, especially those with a surgical history, may face compounded risks as hormonal changes affect tissue repair and elasticity. Scar-related adhesions can thus have a magnified impact on pelvic organ support and function, further underscoring the vital role of awareness and targeted rehabilitation in this population.

Abdominal scars require a holistic, proactive approach—combining education, skilled assessment, and hands-on therapy—to truly address their wide-ranging effects on mobility, organ health, and quality of life. (Liza Fortier, PT)

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Canada Life Insurance

This is an update for all osteopathy clients.  It has been brought to our attention that Shea’s treatments are not currently being reimbursed by Canada Life.  Shea is aware of this issue and has been in contact with Canada Life to start the process of resolving this issue.  Clients have been given a variety of reasons as to why their claims have been denied, but rest assured that Shea is a registered osteopathic provider, and this was just a clerical error on their end that should be resolved shortly.  We will continue to update you as we learn more and when this issue is completely behind us.  We thank you for your patience through this unexpected challenge and hope to have your osteopathy care covered again very soon.

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