Cover image of show Stoic Bodywork Podcast

Stoic Bodywork Podcast

Podcast by Stoic Bodywork

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Personal stories & conversations

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About Stoic Bodywork Podcast

Discussions about general health and wellness revolving around the three health bodies. The Stoic Bodywork system defines the self as being made up of the physical, mental, and spiritual health bodies. The systems goal is to balance the body, open the mind, and awaken the spirit. stoicbodywork.substack.com

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15 episodes

episode Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 015 - 100 Questions Part 5 (Final) artwork

Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 015 - 100 Questions Part 5 (Final)

This episode closes out the 100 Questions series. We started this series to answer common questions about therapeutic bodywork, functional training, pain, the fascial system, recovery, tissue health, and the philosophy behind Stoic Bodywork. This final episode covers questions 76 through 100, and it moves through a lot of ground. The first half of the episode is practical. We talk about what someone can do between sessions, what habits damage tissue health, how hydration actually relates to soft tissue, when to use heat or ice, how to think about pain, why chronic pain gets accepted as “just aging,” and how stress shows up physically in the body. The second half moves more into the foundation of Stoic Bodywork itself. I talk about why the business is called Stoic Bodywork, what the core belief behind the work is, how the methodology developed, what Stacey brings to the functional training side, how I stay current, what it means to run a business in this industry with integrity, and what I think it actually takes to help a body heal. As always, this episode is for general informational purposes only and is not medical, legal, or professional advice. If you are dealing with injury, severe pain, neurological symptoms, medical conditions, or mental health concerns, work with the appropriate licensed professional. In This Episode This episode covers: * What to do between bodywork sessions to support results * Why heat, stretching, hydration, and sleep matter * Daily habits that damage tissue health * Why hydration is more than just drinking water * How to think about ice versus heat * Why some recovery tools are overrated * What free habits actually make a difference * How to treat pain as information * Why chronic pain should not automatically be accepted as inevitable * How stress turns into physical tension * Why nutrition, protein, gut health, and nutrient absorption matter * How footwear affects the body from the ground up * What long-term body maintenance actually looks like * Why Stoic Bodywork is named Stoic Bodywork * The role of the physical, mental, and spiritual health bodies * How the Stoic Bodywork methodology developed * Stacey’s role in building the functional training side * The difficulty of running a bodywork business with integrity * What success looks like for a client * Why time and self-awareness are central to healing Key Takeaways 1. Between sessions, the body needs the right inputs. Bodywork does not end when the session ends. If we are trying to create a therapeutic change, the body needs time to integrate that change. Heat, mobility work, long-format stretching, hydration, stabilization work, and sleep can all help support the process. The point is not to do random recovery work. The point is to do the right thing for the specific outcome you are trying to create. 2. Inflammation is one of the biggest tissue-health variables. The episode comes back to inflammation several times. Poor nutrition, excessive alcohol, repetitive strain, overtraining, under-recovery, poor sleep, and unresolved stress can all create conditions where tissue quality suffers. The body keeps adapting to what you repeatedly ask it to survive. 3. Hydration is not just water. Hydration has to do with water, minerals, electrolytes, tissue quality, circulation, and how the fascial system moves. Drinking water matters, but the broader question is whether the body has what it needs to move fluid, carry nutrients, clear waste, and keep tissue functioning well. 4. Heat and ice are not the same tool. In this episode, I make a strong distinction between heat and ice. Ice can be useful in certain situations, especially acute trauma or pain control, but it is not the same thing as recovery. Heat generally supports blood flow and tissue exchange, which is why I recommend it more often after bodywork unless there is a specific reason not to. 5. Pain should first be treated as information. Not all pain means the same thing. Sharp, stabbing, electric, zapping, or neurological-feeling pain is different from soreness, fatigue, dull ache, or tissue tension. Pain should not be ignored, but it also should not always be treated as panic. The first step is paying attention. 6. Chronic pain is not something to casually accept. Aging changes the body. That part is real. But accepting chronic pain as inevitable often leads people to stop looking for better options. The better conversation is: “I am getting older, so I need to take better care of the system.” 7. Stress is physical. Stress does not stay in the mind. It can show up as jaw tension, neck tension, headaches, shoulder tension, breathing changes, posture changes, and pain patterns. The goal is not only to find something that helps you calm down. The bigger goal is to understand the root of the stress and decide what needs to change. 8. Nutrition is recovery material. The body cannot repair tissue out of nothing. Protein, amino acids, minerals, hydration, gut health, nutrient absorption, and overall food quality all matter. Recovery is not just what happens after training or bodywork. It is also what the body has available to work with. 9. Footwear changes the conversation from the ground up. The foot is a major sensory structure. How the foot feels the ground affects balance, gait, stabilization, and how force travels through the body. The right shoe is not the same for everyone, but the question is whether the footwear helps your body move efficiently or adds more noise to the system. 10. Long-term maintenance is functional fitness. Long-term body maintenance is not just massage. It is not just stretching. It is not just strength training. It is a continued relationship with movement, recovery, bodywork when needed, strength, stabilization, mobility, and awareness. The human body is designed to move. Maintenance means keeping it capable of movement. The Stoic Bodywork Philosophy The final section of this episode gets into the deeper story behind Stoic Bodywork. Stoic Bodywork is not named after modern internet stoicism. It is not about being emotionless or pretending nothing affects you. In this context, stoicism means learning to understand the difference between the internal and external experience, taking subjective information seriously, and then working to make it objective. That is a major part of how we work. A client comes in with pain, limitation, discomfort, stress, or a goal. That information is subjective. The work is to understand it, test it, observe it, and turn it into a clearer strategy. Stoic Bodywork is built around the idea that the physical health body, mental health body, and spiritual health body are all connected. Most of our work focuses on the physical body, but the physical body is also the system that collects much of the information the rest of the person has to process. That is why bodywork, functional training, recovery, and self-awareness all belong in the same conversation. Final Reflection: Time and Healing The final question of the series asks what more people need to understand about what it actually takes to help a body heal. The answer is time. Not just time on a clock. Not just days, weeks, months, appointments, or treatment plans. Those matter, but that is only one version of time. Healing also involves subjective time. The experience of being in the body. The experience of pain changing. The experience of trust coming back. The experience of feeling stronger, safer, more mobile, or more aware. Different tissues heal at different rates. Different people recover at different rates. Different lives create different obstacles. A disc issue, a sore muscle, a broken bone, a nervous system response, emotional stress, and spiritual disconnection are not all the same kind of problem, but they all require some relationship with time. That is why self-awareness matters. The more aware you become of your body, your habits, your stress, your recovery, your movement, and your choices, the better you can participate in the process instead of just waiting for something to change. That is where the 100 Questions series ends. With the idea that healing is not only something done to you. It is something you learn how to participate in. Having Trouble Sleeping? [https://stoicbodywork.com/stoicsleep] - Grab a jar of Stoic Sleep today. Use code Stoic for $5 off your first jar.Purebulk.com [https://purebulk.com/?ref=1112182.rYqUQ0e2JR] - For all your supplement needs. Use code Stoicbodywork15 for 15% off your first order and code STOICBODYWORK for 10% ANY order after that. Manifestation Statecraft [https://manifestationstatecraft.com/] - Looking for more Self-Awareness or a manifestation system that actually works? Check out the FREE first module of the course to learn how to turn your imagination into reality. SEO Title Episode 15: The Final 25 Questions on Recovery, Fascia, Pain, and Stoic Bodywork SEO Description The final episode of the Stoic Bodywork 100 Questions series covers recovery, hydration, heat versus ice, pain, stress, nutrition, footwear, functional fitness, and the philosophy behind Stoic Bodywork. Search Keywords Stoic Bodywork podcast, therapeutic bodywork, functional fitness, fascial system, fascia recovery, bodywork recovery, chronic pain, heat versus ice, hydration tissue health, soft tissue health, stress and the body, functional training, Montgomeryville bodywork, massage therapy Montgomeryville, long-term body maintenance This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicbodywork.substack.com [https://stoicbodywork.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

19 May 2026 - 1 h 48 min
episode Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 014 - 100 Questions Part 4 artwork

Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 014 - 100 Questions Part 4

The 100 Questions series continues with a harder look at the health and wellness industry itself. In Episode 014, Phil breaks down some of the biggest problems in modern pain, recovery, fitness, massage, and bodywork culture. He challenges the common messaging around “pushing through pain,” explains why symptom relief is often mistaken for true progress, and lays out why so many people spend years inside wellness systems without ever getting meaningful change. This episode also explores what separates relaxation massage, therapeutic massage, and Stoic Bodywork’s more integrated fascial-based approach. Phil explains why strength gains alone do not always fix movement quality or pain, why trainers are often underprepared to handle dysfunction and injury, and why mobility, flexibility, balance, stability, and tissue health are still widely misunderstood. The conversation then widens into practitioner standards and public trust: what certifications do and do not actually prove, what questions people should ask before booking with a trainer or bodyworker, how to spot red flags, why bad information spreads so easily on social media, and why fascia remains one of the most misunderstood pieces of the human movement system. This is one of the more direct episodes in the series. It is part critique, part philosophy, and part call for a better standard of education, thinking, and practice across the industry. In this episode, Phil covers: * The biggest lie the wellness industry tells people about pain and recovery * Why “no pain, no gain” is so often misused * Why so many people spend years in wellness systems without seeing real results * How symptom relief gets confused with true structural progress * Why so many tools, treatments, and trends fail to create lasting change * The difference between relaxation massage, therapeutic massage, and Stoic Bodywork * How an integrated fascial-based approach differs from standard bodywork and standard fitness * Why people can get stronger in the gym and still move poorly or stay in pain * What most trainers still get wrong about pain, dysfunction, and injury * What the corrective exercise and wellness industries misunderstand about mobility, stability, flexibility, and tissue health * Why “rest it” and “push through it” are both incomplete models * What most practitioners still misunderstand about adaptation, compensation, and healing * What certifications actually tell you about a practitioner, and what they do not * What questions to ask before booking with any bodyworker or trainer * The red flags that suggest a practitioner is out of their depth * Why bad pain and recovery information spreads so fast on social media * What the industry still misunderstands about fascia and performance * What better education in bodywork, training, and anatomy should look like Having Trouble Sleeping? [https://stoicbodywork.com/stoicsleep] - Grab a jar of Stoic Sleep today. Use code Stoic for $5 off your first jar.Purebulk.com [https://purebulk.com/?ref=1112182.rYqUQ0e2JR] - For all your supplement needs. Use code Stoicbodywork15 for 15% off your first order and code STOICBODYWORK for 10% ANY order after that. Manifestation Statecraft [https://manifestationstatecraft.com/] - Looking for more Self-Awareness or a manifestation system that actually works? Check out the FREE first module of the course to learn how to turn your imagination into reality. ExcerptA lot of people are told that pain is normal, that soreness means progress, and that if something feels off they should either rest completely or push straight through it. In Part 4 of the 100 Questions series, Phil explains why those messages fail people and what a more intelligent model of recovery and training actually looks like. SEO titleStoic Bodywork Episode 014: Pain Myths, Fascia, Certifications, and Industry Critique | 100 Questions Part 4 SEO meta descriptionEpisode 014 of the Stoic Bodywork Podcast critiques pain myths, symptom-based wellness, fascia misunderstandings, trainer education, certifications, and bad recovery advice in Part 4 of the 100 Questions series. TagsStoic Bodywork Podcast, pain recovery, fascia, bodywork, massage therapy, functional training, certifications, wellness industry, chronic pain, movement health This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicbodywork.substack.com [https://stoicbodywork.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1 May 2026 - 1 h 49 min
episode Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 013 - 100 Questions Part 3 artwork

Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 013 - 100 Questions Part 3

The 100 Questions series continues with a deep dive into the training side of the Stoic Bodywork method. In Episode 013, Phil shifts the conversation toward functional training, movement quality, injury recovery, and long-term resilience. He explains what functional training actually is, why he pairs bodywork with training instead of treating them as separate disciplines, and how the Stoic model bridges pain relief, correction, and performance. This episode also gets into the practical side of programming. Phil covers how to build around pain and post-injury limitations, the movement patterns he sees as foundational, why so many people train hard for years and still feel broken, and what strength training can and cannot do for tissue health and injury prevention. From there, the discussion expands into hypermobility, progressive overload for people with chronic pain histories, return-to-training decisions after major injury, the true purpose of warmups, the role of recovery and deloading, and how to handle asymmetries or structural differences that are not fully going away. If you are trying to understand how to train without constantly beating up your body, this episode lays out the philosophy behind doing that with more precision. In this episode, Phil covers: * What functional training is and how it differs from conventional gym training * Why Stoic Bodywork pairs bodywork with functional training * What functional training adds that bodywork alone does not address * How to build a training plan for someone in pain or post-injury * The non-negotiable movement foundations in the Stoic method * The most common movement dysfunctions and how to correct them * Why hard training alone often leaves people feeling worse, not better * The real role of strength training in tissue health and injury prevention * How to approach training for hypermobile clients * How to use load and progressive overload in people with chronic pain histories * How to think about return to high-level training after significant injury * What a proper warmup actually does physiologically * Why recovery, active rest, and deload weeks matter * How to program around asymmetry or structural difference * The difference between training around pain and training through pain Having Trouble Sleeping? [https://stoicbodywork.com/stoicsleep] - Grab a jar of Stoic Sleep today. Use code Stoic for $5 off your first jar.Purebulk.com [https://purebulk.com/?ref=stoicbodywork] - For all your supplement needs. Use code Stoicbodywork15 for 15% off your first order and code STOICBODYWORK for 10% ANY order after that. Manifestation Statecraft [https://manifestationstatecraft.com/] - Looking for more Self-Awareness or a manifestation system that actually works? Check out the FREE first module of the course to learn how to turn your imagination into reality. ExcerptA lot of people train hard, stay consistent, and still end up feeling broken. In Part 3 of the 100 Questions series, Phil explains why that happens and how functional training, recovery, and pain-aware programming can change the outcome. SEO titleStoic Bodywork Episode 013: Functional Training, Recovery, and Pain | 100 Questions Part 3 SEO meta descriptionPart 3 of Stoic Bodywork’s 100 Questions series covers functional training, injury recovery, hypermobility, warmups, recovery, asymmetry, and pain-smart programming. Tagsfunctional training, injury recovery, chronic pain, hypermobility, warmup, recovery, movement dysfunction, Stoic Bodywork Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicbodywork.substack.com [https://stoicbodywork.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

15 Apr 2026 - 1 h 30 min
episode Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 012 - 100 Questions About Therapeutic Bodywork, Part 2 artwork

Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 012 - 100 Questions About Therapeutic Bodywork, Part 2

The second installment of the 100 Questions series moves into one of the biggest topics in bodywork and recovery: pain. In Part 2 of the 100 Questions series, Phil focuses on pain and dysfunction. He breaks down structural vs. neurological pain, central sensitization, proprioception, trigger points, posture, chronic tension, and why pain often shows up in predictable places like the neck, shoulders, and lower back. The episode also connects breathing mechanics, diaphragm function, foam rolling, sleep, and gut health to musculoskeletal recovery. In this episode, Phil works through a full section of questions centered on how pain functions, why it can last long after tissue has technically healed, and how the body’s structural, neurological, and autonomic systems all shape what a person feels. He explains the difference between structural pain and neurological pain, how central sensitization can keep the body reactive, why proprioception matters in both injury and recovery, and why so many chronic pain patterns tend to show up in the same places over and over again. The conversation then expands into the larger recovery picture. Phil covers hip flexors and hamstrings, trigger points and tender points, posture, foam rolling, breathing mechanics, diaphragm function, sleep quality, and the relationship between gut health and chronic musculoskeletal issues. This is a practical episode, but also a broader one. It is about pain not just as a symptom, but as a language the body uses—and how better interpretation can lead to better treatment decisions. In this episode, Phil covers: * The difference between structural pain and neurological pain * Why pain can continue long after an injury appears to have healed * What central sensitization is * How proprioception affects movement, injury, and recovery * The role of the autonomic nervous system in chronic tension and pain * Why hip flexors and hamstrings are so commonly involved in dysfunction * Why chronic pain often appears in predictable places like the lower back, neck, and shoulders * The difference between trigger points and tender points * How much posture actually matters * What the research says about foam rolling and self-myofascial release * How breathing mechanics affect musculoskeletal function * Why the diaphragm matters far beyond breathing alone * How sleep affects tissue recovery and pain perception * The relationship between the gut and chronic musculoskeletal issues Having Trouble Sleeping? [https://stoicbodywork.com/stoicsleep] - Grab a jar of Stoic Sleep today. Use code Stoic for $5 off your first jar.Purebulk.com [https://purebulk.com/?ref=1112182.rYqUQ0e2JR] - For all your supplement needs. Use code Stoicbodywork15 for 15% off your first order and code STOICBODYWORK for 10% ANY order after that. Manifestation Statecraft [https://manifestationstatecraft.com] - Looking for more Self-Awareness or a manifestation system that actually works? Check out the FREE first module of the course to learn how to turn your imagination into reality. ExcerptPain is not always as simple as “something is damaged.” In this second episode of the 100 Questions series, Phil breaks down how pain patterns are shaped by structure, nerves, breathing, sleep, and recovery systems that most people never think about. Tagschronic pain, nervous system, fascia, bodywork, recovery, trigger points, posture, breathing mechanics, sleep recovery, Stoic Bodywork Podcast SEO title100 Questions About Pain, Dysfunction, and Recovery, Part 2 | Stoic Bodywork Podcast SEO meta descriptionPhil continues the 100 Questions series by covering chronic pain, central sensitization, trigger points, posture, breathing, sleep, gut health, and the nervous system’s role in recovery. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicbodywork.substack.com [https://stoicbodywork.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1 Apr 2026 - 1 h 39 min
episode Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 011 - 100 Questions About Therapeutic Bodywork, Part 1 artwork

Stoic Bodywork Podcast Episode 011 - 100 Questions About Therapeutic Bodywork, Part 1

A lot of people still do not know what bodywork actually is. That is part of the reason for this new series. In this first installment of the 100 Questions series, Phil answers the first round of common questions people ask about therapeutic bodywork: what it is, how it differs from massage, what a first session looks like, how assessment happens before touch, and what he is actually feeling for when working with tissue. From there, the conversation moves deeper into fascia and the bigger therapeutic model behind the work. Phil explains how he thinks about pain patterns, why symptoms are not always coming from the place that hurts, when bodywork helps most, when someone needs to be referred out, and how fascia relates to tension, movement, inflammation, trauma, and chronic pain. This episode also covers how therapeutic bodywork compares with physical therapy, chiropractic care, and surgery, along with a broader discussion of fascial research, tensegrity, myofascial meridians, and where the field may be going over the next decade. If you have ever wondered what bodywork really is, or how fascia fits into recovery and performance, this is the place to start. In this episode, Phil covers: * What therapeutic bodywork is and how it differs from massage * What a first session looks like from start to finish * How client assessment begins before hands-on work * What he is feeling for in tissue and fascia * How treatment order is decided inside a session * How long lasting results can take * Why some people feel worse before they feel better * How bodywork differs from physical therapy and chiropractic care * When bodywork may help avoid more invasive intervention, and when it cannot * The cases and conditions that tend to respond best * When to refer out * What fascia is, why it has been misunderstood, and what the research suggests * Tensegrity, the nervous system, chronic pain, trauma, inflammation, and range of motion * How fascia responds to training and load * Where fascia research may be headed next Grab a jar of Stoic Sleep [https://stoicbodywork.com/stoicsleep] to get a more restful and restorative sleep. No melatonin dependency, and no foggy morning wakeups. Stoic Sleep is an all natural sleep supplement developed by Phil. He takes it every night and you can to. Use code STOIC to get your $5 off your first jar. Get your supplements from one of the purest manufacturers in the industry Purebulk.com [https://purebulk.com/?ref=1112182.rYqUQ0e2JR] using code Stoicbodywork15 for 15% off your first order and STOICBODYWORK for 10% every order after that. ExcerptA lot of people hear the word “bodywork” and still assume it means massage. It does not. In this first episode of the 100 Questions series, Phil explains the difference, walks through what actually happens in a session, and opens up a deeper conversation about fascia, pain, movement, and therapeutic change. Tagstherapeutic bodywork, fascia, myofascial work, chronic pain, recovery, movement, massage therapy, sports recovery, body awareness, Stoic Bodywork Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit stoicbodywork.substack.com [https://stoicbodywork.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

26 Mar 2026 - 1 h 20 min
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