↑

Fascial Connections Myofascial Release & Wellness Centre

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Team
  • MFR
  • Treatments
  • Bookings
  • Contact
  • TRU Connections

My Personal Battle with Depression and Anxiety

January 26, 2017 4 Comments

Many of my clients already know some of my story, but many of you don’t.  The truth is, I have suffered from depression and anxiety for years. Until recent years, it has been hard for me to discuss. It was something I wasn’t proud of.  I saw it as a weakness, even now as I actually put it down on paper, my hands are shaking.  Although I am aware of it’s control on me, I choose now to dive in and allow myself to feel. Let me explain….

My dad will have passed away 10 years ago, this coming November.  I witnessed him go through his own spiral of depression in the years prior to his passing.  At times, I was patient with him, and at other times, I am ashamed to admit, I ignored him.  His death was quick, and after, that shame weighed very heavy on me.  Too many thoughts; I should have seen more, been present more, asked more, sat more, listened more.  This list is big.  It sunk me.

I went to work, continued with life, but the feelings isolated me and soon I was pretty much pushing everyone away.  I was alone in my own world.  I looked the part I had to look, acted how I was supposed to act, but inside I was heavy with my own grief and shame.

Years went by, work continued.

I went to a series of courses that I literally thought was just going to be more myofascial release (mfr) training.  Little did I know what I would actually experience in that course.  The shame that came up, as well as the hurt and anger that lay within me that was suppressed for so long.  It was so far buried within me, that I had forgotten where some of it came from.  I had no clue how deeply connected our physical being was to our emotional and mental beings, until that day.  That day I came to understand that we are interconnected and infused: it is all one!

My back pain was the fear and old hurts from playing sports as a teenager.  Trauma I suffered and injuries I thought I had healed from.  Anger and loss that started before I could remember, but all seemed to stem around my 16-year-old self. My IBS flared that week and again it came back to a younger version of me that I had suppressed so long ago. No where did I think that this course was going to dive in and address the root causes to my heaviest memories and emotions. But there I was, raw, forced to deal with my own past, to challenge my belief systems.  Or to choose to continue down the same path I was going: the same dark hole, not letting anyone get close enough to me that they could hurt me again.

It was after that course that my husband and I decided it was time to start our family.  We planned it carefully, and it was executed the same way.  On April 5th, our beautiful son Graeson came in to this world.  He was perfect and I was in-love.  I never knew what unconditional love felt like until I held him.

Along with the same love that I was feeling for him, I too was feeling such loss. There in a hospital room true love was given birth to, and yet there I lay remembering years before, 4 floors up, watching my dad take his last breath.  It was such an overwhelming day of emotions that I chose to block the loss and feel the love.

Days turned in to weeks, weeks turned in to months. Graeson was growing up so fast and I was starting to fall in to a familiar pattern.  I sought help, I was told it was post partum anxiety.  I was given medication to take and I did, for a few weeks. I felt numb with it, and so tired. I stopped taking it, I hated how it made me feel.

Days turned in to weeks, weeks turned in to another month gone by, and my feelings got worse. I started to take the meds again. Again, weeks later, I quit.  I dumped them in the toilet.  I knew deep down for myself, the lack of feeling that the meds were providing me was not the answer I needed. I needed to give myself permission to feel again.

I somehow convinced my husband to go to Sedona for another MFR course. I realized that with him and my son there, I could not allow myself to feel what I needed to feel.  My healing process that I left the course with each evening, was halted because I had another role to play that wasn’t just for me.  I had to be mom and wife as soon as I met up with my husband and son.  I didn’t get out of the course what I was hoping to that week.

So, I went without them a few months later.  There, I was able to tap in to so many suppressed memories that were presenting themselves as ongoing pain patterns and symptoms for me.  There, I felt like I was able to help myself deal more with my post partum anxiety and the depression, these symptoms I had come to know I had felt long before my son was born or my dad passed away.

I continue to go to courses to learn as a therapist, but also for my own needs.  I have come to know that at any point, I can fall back in to a pattern, or a symptom of past trauma may pop up and my own downward spiral could happen.  However, in my journey with MFR, I have learned to listen to my own body.  To remember painful memories and deal with them in a way that I don’t have to hurt.  Where I don’t have to push others away or make them feel bad.   I have learned to honour my relationship with my dad, and to forgive myself, as I know now that I dealt with him the only way I knew how. I gave myself permission walking out of that first series of courses to allow myself to feel what it is I am feeling and dive deeper in to it rather than avoiding it.

My mentor John Barnes once told me, and everyone he trains, “you can never ask your clients to go where you have not gone yourself”.  I have come to know and understand how isolated people can feel in their own battle.  I have come to understand the depth of that darkness.  I know what it is like to have that darkness manifest in to pain.  I have grown in my own journey, and now, well now, I feel bless to be able to support so many others in theirs.

 

Tara Hagan-FieldsTara Hagan-Fields is an RMT with Fascial Connections Myofascial Release & Wellness Centre.   Tara is a Women’s Health Specialist and Expert Myofascial Release Therapist.  She focuses on the body as a whole and teaches you to do the same.  More about Tara here.  

Four Easy Detox Idea’s For the New Year

January 12, 2017 Leave a Comment

 

The body has the ability to naturally detoxify and heal itself.  Why not give your body a gentle hand to improve the incredible cleansing process and welcome your body into a fresh, heathy new year.

Here are just a few simple tips you can try to incorporate into your every-day life. Please use Organic ingredients as much as possible.

  1. Drink a Green Juice or Smoothie daily

Green juices are an incredible way to add vital and detoxifying plant chlorophyll to your bloodstream.  Juicing is the ultimate “fast food” getting into your cells within 15 minutes.  Here are some simple green juice recipes:

–          Celery, cucumber, kale, lemon (skin on) and pear (or green apple) – you can also try adding fresh parsley or cilantro

–          Spinach, arugula, celery, lemon, chlorella or spirulina powder, unsweetened green tea or pure water, or pure coconut water.

–          Kale, apple, lemon (peeled), one inch slice of ginger (peeled).

–          Spinach, 1 beet cut into cubes, 1 apple seeds removed, 1 lemon, peeled and pure water.

Please note * add liquids only if making smoothies.  You can also add a super greens powder such as Food Matters Superfood Greens, Barley Grass, Wheatgrass.  Buy from a reliable source health food store to ensure quality and purity.

Of special note * – It is more important to juice if you are ill and in a weakened state as juicing removes most of the fibre from the plants which, makes it much easier for your body to process.

  1. Drink More Water

Often we mistake thirst for hunger.  When your body is thirsty (dehydrated) you may confuse this for hunger pains and eat instead of drinking.  Reach for water first and ensure you’re well hydrated before eating any meal throughout the day.

Whenever possible drink your water at least 20 to 30 minutes before eating as this allows time for the water to properly penetrate the cells of your body and hydrate your stomach lining preparing it for proper digestion.  I like to add fresh lemon juice and apple cider vinegar to my water.

  1. Learn to Breathe Properly into Your Abdomen

Deep breathing, where you fill your belly and expand your diaphragm downwards, is one of the most powerful exercises you can do to activate your lymph system which helps detoxify your body. Your lymph system is your own personal garbage removal system (which we all need after the holidays).  Practice taking 10 deep breaths counting to 4 in holding for 4 and out 4. This exercise can be done anytime, while watching TV, while doing yoga or even better while meditating.

According to the “Tao of Natural Breathing” up to 70% of our body’s waste products are eliminated through our lungs and the rest via the urine, skin and feces.  When we breathe poorly the efficiency of our lungs is reduced and less oxygen is available to our cells.  This slows the blood flow which carries waste from the kidneys and lungs.  This in turn weakens our lymphatic system which fights off viruses and bacterial invaders.

Eli Bay is one of my favorite experts and instructors of stress reducing relaxation and deep breathing techniques.  Try this free Empowered Breathing exercise called Let Go.

  1. Use more Parsley and Cilantro in your Diet

These two plants are very powerful, natural detoxifiers for carrying heavy metals out of your body.  Add these incredible herbs to juices, salads, soups and other meals.

Try this Heavy Metal Detox Pesto Recipe from Raw for Beauty.

 

Here’s to a healthy, happy, amazingly plentiful 2016!

Live in Wellness

Michelle Thibodeau Registered Holistic Nutritionist  and Health & Cancer Coach at Fascial Connections Myofascial Release and Wellness Centre. Learn more about Michelle. Call to book an appointment or go online to www.fascialconncections.ca 

 

 

 

 

Source:  Food Matters TV

* first posted with Nu Healings

Breast Health – Post Mastectomy Myofascial Release

July 15, 2016 1 Comment

By Tara Hagan-Fields RMT, Women’s Health Specialist and Expert Myofascial Release Therapist.

breast cancerPain and tightness suffered post mastectomy/lumpectomy can limit one’s life drastically. Myofascial Release can help create vast changes by softening dense scars and fibrosed fascia that are unchanged with traditional therapy and stretching.

Traumatized tissue can have a cascading effect on the body. Locally, tightened and fibrous fascia can restrict blood flow and lymphatic flow, this can result in lymphedema. Auxiliary cording can occur, causing a significant loss of range of motion in the shoulder, resulting in a loss of function. Pain and weakness can occur in the shoulder, arm and chest wall. Burning, pins and needles, numbness or spasms can also occur in these areas.

cording
Axillary cording is a web of thick, rope-like structures under the skin of your inner arm. These cords usually start near the site of your scarring in the underarm region and extend down the inner arm to the inside of the elbow (sometimes they can continue down to the palm of your hand, or in to the chest wall instead of, or in addition to, the inner arm.

Tightness, with time, can start to effect areas not associated with the scar. Areas far removed from the local site may be impacted. Symptoms not “normal” to mastectomy, lumpectomy, reconstruction or augmentation can start to occur. Headaches, jaw pain, low back pain, pelvic pain, digestive issues, postural changes, hormonal imbalances, etc., may become a “common” occurrence for you.

The inability to move, or the pain suffered with common range of motion and activity can become debilitating. This might happen immediately, or it might occur 6 years down the road. In real life it might look like, the inability to wash your hair in the shower, get dressed in the morning, pick your child up out of the crib, hug a loved one, carry your groceries, drive your car, work at your computer, reach up and grab the sugar out of the cupboard. No matter the role you have as a woman: mom, worker, grandma: breast mfryour life is impacted.

Pain management and rehabilitation using Myofascial Release can help. Gentle and slow work done at the fascial barrier (on the scar and surrounding areas) can assist in restoring functional patterns by decreasing the restrictions.

Whether you had surgery, chemo or radiation last month, or 10 years ago, Myofascial Release should be added to                                                                          your recovery process.

 

 

 

 

Tara Hagan-FieldsTara Hagan-Fields is an RMT with Fascial Connections Myofascial Release & Wellness Centre.   Tara is a Women’s Health Specialist and Expert Myofascial Release Therapist.  She focuses on the body as a whole and teaches you to do the same.  More about Tara here.  

 

  • Email
  • Facebook
© 2016 Fascial Connections Myofascial Release & Wellness Centre | 400-2200 Prince of Wales Drive, Ottawa

Copyright © 2026 · Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in