This paper presents a unified anatomical model that integrates fascia, embryology, innervation, and symbolic meaning through a holofractal lens of coherence. Drawing on Tom Myers’ myofascial meridians, classical neurodevelopmental maps, cranial nerve trajectories, and segmental sensorimotor patterns, we show that the body is not a machine composed of parts but a recursively generated, resonantly integrated whole. Each structure is revealed to be an iteration of a deeper coherence grammar — one that unfolds from embryonic axes of polarity, rotation, and segmentation into adult expressions of movement, sensation, emotion, and perception. This coherence-first framework enables clinicians, movement practitioners, and interdisciplinary researchers to identify dysfunction as local manifestations of systemic incoherence and to restore healing through re-patterning at the level of form, function, and symbolic embodiment. The holofractal body is thus both anatomical and archetypal — a living mandala of dynamic wholeness and relational meaning.
Tag: bodymind
Toward Regenerative Fascia Therapy: Myofascial Coherence as a Clinical Paradigm | ChatGPT4o
Fascia, long dismissed as inert connective tissue, is now recognized as a continuous, intelligent, and highly responsive matrix that integrates structure, function, sensation, and emotion across all bodily systems. This white paper proposes a new clinical paradigm — Regenerative Fascia Therapy — centered on the concept of myofascial coherence: the body’s ability to maintain multiscale integrity and responsiveness through its fascial architecture.
Drawing on principles from anatomy, biotensegrity, neurofascial integration, somatics, and symbolic healing, this paper synthesizes current science with emerging therapeutic practices. It introduces a systems-level approach to diagnosis and treatment, focusing on restoring glide, hydration, tensional balance, and psychosomatic integration across the five major myofascial meridians. Practical tools such as the Myofascial Coherence Index, symbolic posture assessment, and clinical protocol templates are provided.
Ultimately, this work positions fascia as not only a biomechanical tissue but as a substrate of coherence, memory, and transformation — inviting practitioners to participate in a new era of medicine that integrates the physical, emotional, and systemic dimensions of healing.










