Take a closer look at our Continuing Education courses…

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Our Continuing Education Classes

Introduction to Craniosacral Therapy

16-hour course, over two days

A grounded, practical introduction for bodyworkers who want better results without working harder

Most people who sign up for this class are feeling burned out, uninspired, or ineffective in their practice — sometimes all three. Many are tired of relying on deep tissue techniques that exhaust their bodies without consistently helping their clients. Others are newer massage therapists who’ve heard about craniosacral work and are curious, hopeful, and looking for something that actually makes sense in real sessions.

This course is especially valuable for practitioners working with clients who live in a constant state of high stress — clients whose nervous systems are “jacked up,” whose muscle tension doesn’t respond well to force, and who present with chronic pain, headaches, anxiety, overwhelm, neurodiversity, or emotional patterns that aren’t being addressed effectively through massage alone.

If you’ve ever thought:

  • I’m working too hard

  • My hands are tired

  • I don’t know what to do when nothing changes

  • I feel like I’m guessing

—you’re in good company.

Many students say within the first hour of day one, “I wish I had understood this years ago,” or “I’ve wasted so much time doing deep tissue.”

What this class actually teaches

In this Introduction to Craniosacral Therapy course, we explore principles drawn from craniosacral work that help practitioners learn how to listen more clearly to the body’s innate rhythms and respond with precision, presence, and intention.

You’ll learn how to:

  • slow down without losing effectiveness

  • work with less force while achieving better results

  • recognize and support regulation in the nervous system

  • improve fluid movement and tissue mobility

  • develop a more refined, listening-based touch

This work is not about memorizing techniques for the sake of technique. Instead, we focus on understanding why certain approaches work, how anatomy informs what your hands are feeling, and how tissues relate to one another down to the smallest level. From there, your hands begin to know what to do.

Presence, listening, and practical skill

This class balances listening and technique equally. Listening tells us where to work and what may be happening. Skillful technique allows us to respond once we have that information. Neither matters much without the other.

Each day begins with focused lecture to shape how you think about the work while your mind is fresh. From there, the class is highly experiential: demonstration, guided practice, and hands-on coaching so you learn what you’re actually feeling for with your “fing-ears.”

I am deeply committed to making sure every student can feel the rhythm we are working with by the end of the first day. Once that happens, everything changes. Many students return on day two reporting better sleep, less pain, reduced anxiety, or a greater sense of groundedness simply from being worked on and witnessed at this level.

What changes after the weekend

By the end of the course, most students are surprised by how much they don’t have to work to get meaningful results.

Common shifts include:

  • a softer, more intentional quality of touch

  • slower pacing with greater confidence

  • less force, more clarity

  • increased trust in what they’re feeling

  • clients noticing a clear difference in sessions

I encourage students to use only craniosacral approaches for six weeks after the class whenever possible, so they can truly see what this work does in real practice. I also invite students to reach out with questions about their clients — mentorship is a critical part of learning work at this level, and I genuinely love supporting students as they integrate what they’ve learned.

Is this class right for you?

This course is appropriate for both newer and experienced practitioners. It is especially well-suited for bodyworkers who are curious, open-minded, and willing to slow down in order to work smarter.

If you need a rigid checklist or want to collect CE hours without engaging deeply, this may not be the class you’re looking for. While I do teach protocols, I frame them as maps — helpful for learning, but never a substitute for listening to the body itself. Over time, students naturally move beyond the protocol as their confidence and perception grow.

Many practitioners choose to repeat this class at a discounted rate (contact me for details about this) because there is a lot here, and each pass through the material lands differently as your hands and understanding mature. I am not stingy with what I teach.

In short

This class is a great fit for practitioners who are looking to:

  • rediscover inspiration in their work

  • get better results for their clients

  • support regulation and resilience in the nervous system

  • work with more ease and less physical strain

  • deepen their relationship with their hands, their clients, and their practice

If you’ve been longing for work that feels more sustainable, effective, and meaningful — this is a strong place to begin.

Sign up for your next class!

16-hour course, over two days

Lymphatic & Venous Drainage

A physiology-based approach to supporting circulation, inflammation, and fluid movement

Most people who enroll in this class are practitioners who feel like they could be doing more for their clients’ overall health. Many are experienced massage therapists who are tired of working hard without seeing lasting results — especially with clients who present with chronic inflammation, swelling, pain, or systemic stress patterns.

Some come curious about the recent popularity of lymphatic work. Others arrive because massage alone isn’t holding results, or because they are working with post-surgical clients and want a safer, more effective way to support recovery. This class also attracts therapists who are looking for gentler work that supports career longevity without sacrificing clinical effectiveness.

Why lymphatic and venous drainage matters

This course addresses a major blind spot in most lymphatic trainings: the role of venous drainage and return pathways.

Rather than focusing on lymph in isolation, we examine how the lymphatic and venous systems function together, and how improving venous return reduces demand on the lymphatic system as a whole. This perspective is rooted in time-tested bodywork principles that long predate modern lymphatic trends, emphasizing the importance of opening pathways away from tissues before encouraging increased flow toward them.

Students learn how to think differently about circulation — not as something to “force,” but as something to support through sequencing, anatomy, and physiology.

What this class helps with

This work is particularly helpful for clients who present with:

  • swelling or edema

  • chronic inflammation

  • a feeling of heaviness, congestion, or puffiness

  • fibromyalgia or inflammatory pain patterns

  • autoimmune or systemic inflammatory conditions

  • post-surgical recovery (medical and cosmetic)

  • sensitivity or flare-ups following traditional massage

Many students report that prior to this class:

  • massage helps briefly, then symptoms return

  • clients feel worse after deeper work due to inflammation

  • swelling and congestion feel confusing or intimidating to address

  • fluid dynamics weren’t clearly taught in school

It’s common to hear students say early on, “I never learned this,” or “This explains so much about why my work hasn’t been holding.”

How students change after the weekend

After the course, students have a clearer, more grounded understanding of how circulation works — both on and off the table. They leave with a logical, full-body protocol for lymphatic and venous drainage that can be used immediately in practice, along with a framework for deciding when and why this work is appropriate.

Touch becomes:

  • significantly lighter

  • slower and more intentional

  • more confident, even when pressure is minimal

For many students, the first day challenges their assumptions about effectiveness. By the second day, most have had a personal experience of improved elimination, better sleep, or a general sense of lightness — and the work starts to make sense in their own bodies.

Clients often report:

  • feeling lighter and less congested

  • reduced swelling

  • less pain without deep work

  • improved recovery between sessions

  • greater tolerance to other therapies

By the end of the weekend, most students are surprised that such light strokes can create meaningful changes in a client’s overall health.

How this class is taught

Each day begins with focused lecture to establish a clear understanding of anatomy, physiology, and sequencing. From there, the class is highly hands-on, with demonstration, guided practice, and direct coaching to help students learn how light is light enough.

Pressure is taught with specificity — often described as similar to the touch you’d use over a closed eyelid — so students can trust that they are working effectively without digging into tissue.

While the class includes a defined sequence, it is taught logically rather than mechanically, helping students understand why each step matters. This work stands on its own and is not intended to be layered into a traditional massage session.

Is this class a good fit for you?

This course is appropriate for both newer and experienced practitioners, particularly those who are curious, willing to slow down, and interested in physiology and circulation.

It may be frustrating for therapists who:

  • only want to work deeply

  • equate pressure with effectiveness

  • are unwilling to change long-held habits

This class is a great fit for practitioners who want to help their clients improve health at a foundational level — recognizing that effective circulation to and from tissues is essential for function, regulation, and long-term results.

In short

This is a subtle, powerful class that earns its place in a sophisticated clinical skill set. It asks practitioners to think differently, work more efficiently, and trust physiology rather than force. While the work itself is quiet, the outcomes often speak loudly — sometimes weeks later, when clients report changes no other approach had produced.

Sign up for your next class!