Anatomy Trains in Soquel
The 12-series fascial work, brought to Soquel
If you searched Anatomy Trains in Soquel, you are most likely after one of two things: someone who can actually do this work near Soquel, or a clear explanation of what it is. This page covers both.
What Anatomy Trains is
Anatomy Trains is a map of how fascia connects the body. Not as separate muscles, but as continuous lines of connective tissue that run from foot to fingertip, head to heel, side to side, and in spirals through the trunk.
Tom Myers developed the map over thirty years of dissection, clinical work, and writing. The framework is taught in medical schools, used by physical therapists, and increasingly cited in mainstream anatomy. In May 2026, the New York Times Magazine ran a major feature on the interstitium, the fluid network running through fascia.
Soquel bodies, Soquel patterns
Anatomy Trains reads the body as continuous lines of fascia rather than separate muscles, so where you live and how you move shows up in predictable places. Creek-side trails plus desk hours pull in two directions: the back line from uneven walking, the deep front from sitting.
In and around Soquel, a few patterns come up again and again:
- Creek-side trails and coastal walking create uneven terrain loading
- Desk work combined with weekend outdoor activity overload
For most Soquel clients, the lines that ask for the most attention are the Superficial Back Line, Deep Front Line. The 12-session series works through all of them in sequence rather than chasing one sore spot.
What Anatomy Trains Structural Integration (ATSI) is
ATSI is the hands-on practice built on the Anatomy Trains map. A 12-session series that reorganizes the fascial system in a defined sequence:
- Sessions 1 to 4 (Sleeve). Open the superficial layers. Restore the breath. Free the surface lines.
- Sessions 5 to 8 (Core). Work into the deep fascial structures. Address core support, hip mechanics, the deep front line.
- Sessions 9 to 12 (Integration). Bring it together. Refine movement. Lock in the new organization.
Full program detail on the 12-Session Series page.
Getting Anatomy Trains work if you are in Soquel
I work from a studio in Santa Cruz and travel for mobile sessions across Santa Cruz County and the wider Bay Area. Soquel is about 8 minutes from the studio.
Mobile sessions in Soquel are available, and clients cover travel time from Santa Cruz, so most people doing the full 12-series either book mobile blocks or come to the Santa Cruz studio. We will sort out what makes sense for you at your assessment, no pressure either way.
How this differs from massage, PT, and chiropractic
- Massage releases tension locally.
- PT rehabs a specific injury.
- Chiropractic adjusts joints.
- ATSI reorganizes the fascial system so your body needs the others less often.
It is not better. It is different. Most serious clients use all four.
Who does this work
I do. ATSI-certified, over 750 hours of training, and currently a teacher-in-training under Tom Myers, co-teaching courses with him. There are only a handful of ATSI-certified practitioners in the broader Bay Area. Full background on the Training Lineage page and on the Tom Myers-trained practitioner page.
Book a free 30-minute movement assessment
I will watch you move, ask the questions that matter, and tell you honestly whether the 12-session series makes sense for what you are after. No pitch.
Questions, answered
Do you travel to Soquel for sessions?
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Yes. I am based at a Santa Cruz studio and travel for mobile sessions across Santa Cruz County and the broader Bay Area. Soquel is roughly 8 minutes away. Mobile sessions are available, and clients cover travel time from Santa Cruz, so many Soquel clients mix mobile work with studio visits. We will figure out the right setup at your free assessment.
Is there an Anatomy Trains practitioner based in Soquel?
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Certified ATSI practitioners are rare anywhere. There are only a handful in the broader Bay Area. I work from Santa Cruz with mobile coverage across the region, which is how most Soquel clients access the full Anatomy Trains series.
Is Anatomy Trains the same as fascia work?
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Anatomy Trains is a map of fascial relationships in the body, developed by Tom Myers over thirty years. Fascia work in general is any hands-on practice that addresses the connective tissue system. Anatomy Trains Structural Integration (ATSI) is the specific 12-session series built on that map.
How is this different from Rolfing?
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Same family of work. Ida Rolf developed Structural Integration in the 1950s. Tom Myers studied under Rolf and built the modern Anatomy Trains framework on top of her foundation, with updated anatomical and fascial research. ATSI is the current evolution of that lineage.
How long does the series take?
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Twelve sessions, typically spread over eight to twelve weeks. Sessions run 75 to 90 minutes. You finish with a reorganized fascial system, not a maintained one.