If you practice yoga, Pilates, massage, or other forms of bodywork, you already know how powerful intentional movement and skilled touch can be. But many people still hit familiar roadblocks: recurring tightness, limited mobility, or postural patterns that just will not shift - no matter how consistent the practice is.
This is where Rolfing® Structural Integration fits beautifully into the picture.
Rather than replacing your favorite modalities, Rolfing works with them, helping create the structural conditions that allow these practices to be more effective, more comfortable, and longer lasting.
Rolfing focuses on the body as an interconnected whole, emphasizing the role of fascia - the web of connective tissue that surrounds and supports muscles, bones, and organs. Over time, stress, injury, and repetitive movement can cause fascial restrictions that alter posture and limit ease of movement.
Rolfing sessions aim to:
Instead of addressing isolated symptoms, Rolfing looks at how the entire body organizes itself.
Yoga is incredible for strength, flexibility, breath, and awareness, but sometimes tight or imbalanced fascia can limit progress in certain poses. Employing the combination can Increase joint space and range of motion, help release long-held restrictions that stretching alone does not reach, reduce compression in the spine and hips, and make poses feel more accessible and sustainable.
Pilates emphasizes precision, control, and balanced muscle engagement. But if the body’s structure is already skewed - think uneven hips, forward head posture, or collapsed arches - those patterns can persist even with excellent instruction. Rolfing supports Pilates by:
Clients often report that Pilates feels more effective and less effortful after structural work.
Massage, myofascial release, craniosacral therapy, acupuncture, and similar modalities are fantastic for relaxation, circulation, and nervous system regulation. Rolfing complements them by:
Many people alternate Rolfing with massage or other therapies, using Rolfing for structural change and other modalities for ongoing maintenance and recovery. Integration matters as Yoga and Pilates teach your body new ways to move, Massage and bodywork help your body relax and recover, and Rolfing helps your body reorganize itself so those changes last. In short, when structure supports function, everything else works better.
Rolfing pairs especially well with other practices if you:
Rolfing is not about fixing a “broken” body - it is about helping your body find more ease, balance, and efficiency. When combined with yoga, Pilates, and other bodywork practices, it can amplify results and deepen your relationship with movement.
If you already invest time in caring for your body, Rolfing can help you get more out of everything you are doing on the mat, on the table, and in everyday life.
If you are looking for a practitioner of Rolfing in Van Nuys, Bob Alonzi stands out from the rest because he has received both the basic and advanced certification from the Rolf Institute. You can contact Bob at https://bobalonzi-advanced-rolfer.com/ or call 310-451-3250.
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