Fascial Tension Patterns and Glide Dysfunction
How adaptation becomes fixation,
and how loss of glide reshapes movement and pain.
In the previous lesson, we explored fascia as a regulatory interface between movement, tension, and the nervous system.
In this section, we move deeper.
We begin to understand how fascial tension patterns form over time,
how the body adapts…
and how these adaptations, when repeated, begin to restrict glide and alter coordination.
This is where function slowly becomes dysfunction.
Watch the Lesson
A quiet, slow-paced explanation designed to be felt, not just understood.
Lesson Summary
Key Ideas
These are the core principles you should retain from this lesson.
1. Adaptation is Constant
The body is always adapting to mechanical and emotional input.
2. Adaptation Can Become Fixation
When recovery is insufficient,
adaptation becomes a persistent pattern.
3. Loss of Glide is Central
Fascial dysfunction is not only about tension — it is about reduced sliding between layers.
5. Compensation Is Not Resolution
The body reorganizes,
but this reorganization may reduce efficiency and increase strain elsewhere.
4. Tension Spreads Through Chains
Local stress can propagate through fascial continuity.
Fasciapuncture Atlas
Fascial Tension Distribution and Transmission
Fascial tension rarely remains local.
It redistributes along connected chains, often creating densification zones in the thoracolumbar region.
These zones reflect not only mechanical load, but also a loss of glide between fascial layers.
Clinical Insight
This is a key clinical shift.
Pain is not always located at the origin of dysfunction.
A patient may present with:
- shoulder tension
- low back discomfort
- restricted movement
But the underlying issue may lie in how the system has adapted as a whole.
👉 The question is no longer: “Where is the pain?”
👉 But: “What pattern is the system expressing?”
Continue Learning
In the next lesson,
we will explore how fascial tension patterns develop and how to begin identifying them clinically.
