Michael McIver's Rolfing Newsletter
December, 2015
Rolfing Revealed

Michael Laird McIver, Certified Advanced Rolfer, 
wishes you a joyful holiday season! 

Michael Laird McIver, currently in 42nd year of practice as a Certified Advanced Rolfer, is accepting new clients in Austin and Houston.

3939 Bee Cave Road, Suite A-1, Austin, TX 78746

1808 Lexington St., Houston, TX 77098

Schedule your appointments or free consultation today 
via e-mail [email protected] or phone 281-900-6017
 

Michael Laird McIver, Certified Advanced Rolfer
 
Rolfing Revealed
Excerpts from an Article by Lauren Viera

"Intensive bodywork technique grounded in gravity is gaining popularity.

The effects of Rolfing didn't really sink in until the day after my second session.

It was late afternoon, and I was walking between lunch errands. I'd been walking for about five minutes at a steady clip before it hit me: I was walking better. Better than the prior afternoon, better than ever. More of my foot was hitting the ground with each step, offering a stability I'd never felt before. I was carrying myself with better posture than before, and there was an easy swing in my arms.

What is Rolfing?

Rolfing allows your body the structural freedom to do what it wants to do naturally - move.

The practice is named after Ida P. Rolf, a pioneering biochemist who earned her doctorate from the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University in 1920, when women had just earned the right to vote.

After years of studying osteopathic and homeopathic medicine, as well as yoga, Rolf began experimenting in the 1940s, at first on friends and family, with the massaging and manipulation of fascia - the layer of soft, connective tissue that covers the muscles and holds in place everything around them.

Her theory was that after years of daily stress, "bound up" fascia restricts the muscles, in turn restricting movement. The solution? Manipulate the fascia enough, and gravity - yes, gravity - will take care of the rest.

Put simply, the "gospel of Rolfing," as its founder has been quoted as preaching, is this: "When the body gets working appropriately, the force of gravity can flow through. Then, spontaneously, the body heals itself."

Rolfing Practitioners

There's a growing community of practicing, certified Rolfers. The Rolf Institute of Structural Integration in Boulder, Colo., is the only educational facility in the country that offers Rolfing certification. Many other schools offer similar structural integration coursework, most of them founded by early Rolf disciples, but only the Rolf Institute certifies Rolfers. Earn your certification elsewhere, and you can't legally practice as a Rolfer.

Practitioners make strict distinctions among Rolfing, chiropractic work and deep-tissue massage. They're not the same, says Massa, 52, who's been Rolfing since 1994.

"It's not like bodywork; it's not like massage," Massa says. "Being a Rolfer is more like being a tailor than being a masseuse. You have to look at (the body) and say, 'What's too long? What's too short? What's too bunchy? What's too tight?' Rolfing is not a form of alternative medicine; Rolfing is more about education."

Rolfing for Chronic Issues

Occasionally, Rolfing reveals simple solutions to chronic issues. In one of my sessions, practitioner Jill Coyne observed that when walking, I was bringing my neck too far down to my chest. I explained to her that I had to do so to see under my bangs, which were desperately in need of a trim. "People's head postures are sometimes affected by their hairstyles," says Coyne.

As I'm nearing the end of my own Rolfing experience, I've learned to do a lot more than keep my bangs in check. I'm walking and running more, simply because it feels good to do so in a body that moves well. A few colleagues have commented that I appear noticeably taller, either because I'm standing up straighter, or because my fascia has stretched to allow my limbs more breathing room. The best side effect is the hardest to explain: the feeling of moving in a new body, one that moves more freely than before.

It's not painful: Rolfing used to have a bad reputation for being painful. It's not. Yes, it involves applying pressure to the body, but you're not expected to endure pain. Speak up if the pressure is too strong.

After your session: After and in between sessions, try walking. Try running. Try cardiovascular exercise of any kind, really. You might be surprised how differently your body moves once it's been Rolfed."

Dr. Ida Rolf, Founder of Rolfing

"Rolfing can be like making your bed in the morning. You think you're going to get by without pulling that bed apart, so you pull up this cover and the next cover. When you get all the covers puffed up, you've got nine ridges running across the bed. Now you've got to go to a deeper layer and organize the deeper layer, and make your bed on top of that. Then you've got a made bed. Well it's the same with the body: you've got to organize those deeper layers."
- Ida P. Rolf, Ph.D.

Michael Laird McIver, Certified Advanced Rolfer

3939 Bee Cave Road, Suite A-1, Austin, TX 78746

1808 Lexington St., Houston, TX 77098

Schedule your appointments today 
via e-mail [email protected] or phone 281-900-6017