Fitness Dynamics - Mind Body Wellness

Fitness Dynamics - Mind Body Wellness Local fun fitness classes to increase your confidence, look and feel great! Love the body you have by looking after it & enjoying being active.

Empowering Women & Men 40+ in Wellness, Health & Happiness
Restorative Pilates | Strength Training | Fascial Fitness Trainer | Oxygen Advantage Functional Breathing Instructor | Nutrition
Join our Mind Body Wellness Club
30+ Years Coaching & Training All are welcome to come and join us. Fitness Dynamics offers fun, effective & motivational fitness classes, programmes, workshops and fitness class v

ideos, achieving a variety of fitness, wellness & health goals, for adults of all ages and fitness levels both online on Zoom for everyone everywhere and in the communities of the South Lakes & North Lancashire areas. We also hold fitness events to support Breast Cancer Care & other Charities to help raise awareness and funds as well as bring us all together for some sociable fun! I hope to see you in a class soon. Sam


As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases, so if I share an Amazon link and you click it won't cost you anything extra but, if I'm lucky I might make some commission! ;-)

13/06/2026

Saturdays 9.30 am šŸ˜šŸƒ

30/05/2026

So excited to be teaching today’s full outdoor Restorative Pilates class at Levens Hall

If you’d like to join us on Summer Saturdays the next class is on the 13th of June (no class 6th June).

Message me for details, or visit my website for more info, booking, health form and app link. There’s lots of info in the FAQ area, Join the website and our wonderful Fitness Dynamics community.

See you soon, Sam šŸ§˜šŸ¼ā€ā™‚ļø

07886457563
www.fitnessdynamics.co.uk

09/05/2026

There’s something very special about moving outdoors surrounded by nature šŸ’š

Birdsong, fresh air, gentle movement, breathing deeply, releasing tension and simply slowing down for an hour.

Our Saturday morning Outdoor Restorative Pilates classes take place under the beautiful canopy at Levens Hall Gardens, so we’re sheltered whatever the weather.

Many people say they leave feeling calmer, lighter, more relaxed and more connected to themselves again. Wonderful for helping to calm and regulate a busy nervous system.

Some people even enjoy taking their shoes off and feeling the grass beneath their feet 🌿

šŸ§˜šŸ¼ā€ā™€ļø Saturdays, 9:30am
šŸ“ Levens Hall Gardens
🌿 Please bring a mat

Booking:
fitnessdynamics.co.uk

Or message/call:
07886457563

✨ Weekly Classes ✨MONDAY9:30am – Restorative PilatesGaskell Hall, Silverdale5:45pm – Restorative PilatesAthenaeum, Leasg...
07/05/2026

✨ Weekly Classes ✨

MONDAY
9:30am – Restorative Pilates
Gaskell Hall, Silverdale

5:45pm – Restorative Pilates
Athenaeum, Leasgill

7:00pm – Lift Strong
Athenaeum, Leasgill

TUESDAY
9:00am – Restorative Pilates
Yealand Village Hall

WEDNESDAY
6:15pm – Trigger Point Pilates
Milnthorpe Catholic Church Hall

THURSDAY
9:30am – Dance Strong
Arnside Educational Institute

10:30am – Restorative Pilates
Arnside Educational Institute

5:45pm – Dynamic Pilates
Athenaeum, Leasgill

FRIDAY
9:30am – Restorative Pilates
Athenaeum, Leasgill

SATURDAY
9:30am – Outdoor Restorative Pilates
Levens Hall Gardens, under the canopy
(May-September)

Booking & info:
07886457563
www.fitnessdynamics.co.uk

Or download the:
šŸ“± Fit by Wix App
Invite Code: SAMFITD

A massive THANK YOU to Ida Rolf for her incredible early, ground-breaking work and understanding of our bodies' fascia. ...
07/05/2026

A massive THANK YOU to Ida Rolf for her incredible early, ground-breaking work and understanding of our bodies' fascia. 🤩🤸

Ida Rolf: ā€œWomen came to her with chronic pain doctors called "psychosomatic." She found the physical cause medicine had ignored—and they dismissed her too.
In the 1940s, Ida Pauline Rolf had a problem that wouldn't go away: she was a brilliant biochemist in a world that didn't know what to do with brilliant women.
She had earned her PhD in biological chemistry from Columbia University in 1920—one of the few women in her field. She had worked at the Rockefeller Institute. She had published research. She had the credentials, the training, the mind.
But chronic health issues—her own and her children's—kept leading her to doctors who had the same response: rest. Wait. Accept it. There's nothing structurally wrong.
Clean X-rays. Normal blood work. No visible pathology.
The implicit message: maybe it's in your head.
Ida Rolf didn't accept that answer. She was a scientist. If the pain was real—and she knew it was—there had to be a physical mechanism medicine was missing.
So she started looking where nobody else was looking: at fascia.
Fascia is the dense, fibrous connective tissue that wraps around every muscle, organ, nerve, and bone in the body. It's everywhere—a continuous web that holds you together, transmits force, and shapes your structure. In the 1940s, medical schools barely mentioned it. It was considered inert packing material, something you cut through to get to the "important" stuff during surgery.
Rolf saw something different. She saw fascia as dynamic, adaptive, and capable of holding patterns—patterns created by injury, posture, repetitive stress, and emotional trauma. When fascia tightened and reorganized around these patterns, it pulled the body out of alignment. And that misalignment created pain that no X-ray would ever show.
Women came to her with stories doctors had stopped listening to.
Shoulders that never relaxed. Hips that felt crooked. Backs that ached without visible injury. Necks that couldn't turn fully. Chronic headaches. Jaw pain. Pelvic pain. Exhaustion from holding their bodies together against invisible forces.
They had been told: lose weight. Exercise more. Take a vacation. See a psychiatrist. It's stress. It's hormones. It's menopause. It's motherhood. It's life.
The subtext was always the same: you're unreliable. Your pain isn't real. You're exaggerating. You're too emotional. You're a difficult patient.
Ida Rolf believed them.
She developed a method she called Structural Integration—a systematic approach to releasing fascial restrictions through deep, sustained manual pressure. She worked methodically through the body in ten sessions, each targeting specific fascial layers and regions. The goal wasn't relaxation. It was reorganization.
And it hurt.
Rolfing wasn't gentle. She pressed deeply into tissue, holding pressure until the fascia released. Patients cried. They trembled. They had emotional breakthroughs as their bodies let go of patterns they'd been holding for decades.
But when they stood up afterward, something had shifted. Shoulders dropped. Spines lengthened. Hips balanced. Pain that had been constant for years eased or disappeared entirely.
The women whose suffering had been dismissed as psychosomatic were getting structurally better. Their bodies were changing shape. Their movement was improving. The pain was real, the cause was physical, and the treatment worked.
Ida Rolf tried to bring her work to the medical establishment.
They rejected her completely.
She was a woman. She didn't have a medical degree. Her method was based on manipulation of tissue doctors considered irrelevant. She talked about "energy" and "gravity" and "structural integration" in ways that sounded unscientific. And worst of all, she was claiming to cure conditions medicine had already categorized as psychosomatic—which implied doctors had been wrong.
The medical community called her a quack. They dismissed Rolfing as pseudoscience, dangerous manipulation, and exploitative bodywork preying on desperate patients. Some doctors warned people to stay away from her.
But the people she helped kept coming. And they kept getting better.
Throughout the 1950s and 60s, Rolf trained practitioners, refined her technique, and built a following—mostly among people medicine had failed. Dancers and athletes came because they understood bodies in ways doctors didn't. People with chronic pain came because they had nowhere else to go.
Women came because Ida Rolf was one of the only people who believed them.
She was uncompromising, intense, and absolutely convinced she was right. She didn't soften her approach to make doctors comfortable. She didn't apologize for lacking an MD. She kept working, kept teaching, kept proving that the pain medicine dismissed was structurally real.
And slowly, science began to catch up.
In the 1970s and 80s, researchers started studying fascia seriously. They discovered it wasn't inert—it was rich with nerve endings, mechanoreceptors, and cells that responded to mechanical stress. They found that fascial restrictions could create referred pain, limit range of motion, and alter movement patterns. They confirmed what Rolf had been saying for decades: fascia mattered.
By the 2000s, fascia research had exploded. Biomechanics labs were mapping fascial networks. Physical therapists were incorporating fascial release into treatment. Medical textbooks were updating their anatomy sections. Scientists were publishing papers on fascial plasticity, myofascial pain syndromes, and the role of connective tissue in chronic conditions.
Ida Rolf had been right all along.
Today, Rolfing is practiced worldwide. The Rolf Institute trains certified practitioners. Research continues to validate the biomechanical principles underlying her work. Fascia is now recognized as a key player in chronic pain, postural dysfunction, and movement disorders.
But here's what still needs saying: Ida Rolf's story isn't just about fascia. It's about who gets believed.
Women are significantly more likely than men to have their pain dismissed, minimized, or attributed to psychological causes. Studies show women wait longer in emergency rooms, receive less pain medication, and are more likely to be prescribed psychiatric drugs for physical symptoms. Chronic pain conditions that predominantly affect women—fibromyalgia, endometriosis, chronic fatigue syndrome—took decades longer to be taken seriously than comparable conditions affecting men.
Ida Rolf saw this pattern in the 1940s. She saw women being gaslit by a medical system that didn't have the tools—or the interest—to understand their suffering.
And when she developed those tools, when she found the physical mechanism medicine had missed, the same system dismissed her too.
A PhD biochemist with reproducible results was called a quack because she was a woman working outside traditional medical hierarchies, treating a patient population medicine had already decided was unreliable.
It took decades for science to validate what she and her patients already knew: the pain was real. The tissue held the story. The body could be reorganized. And women weren't making it up.
Ida Pauline Rolf died in 1979 at age 83. She lived just long enough to see her work begin to gain scientific recognition, but not long enough to see fascia become a major field of research.
She spent most of her career being dismissed by the very establishment she had been trained in.
But she kept working. She kept believing her patients. She kept insisting that invisible pain deserved visible solutions.
And she proved that the most profound healing often begins not with a diagnosis written by someone who doesn't believe you, but with someone who listens—to your body's structure, its silent stories, and the tissue that remembers what medicine chose to overlook.ā€

- Emora

- - -

http://www.secretlifeoffascia.com/

03/05/2026

The UK could lead the renewable revolution. We are a country rich in wind and waves that can power our homes and cars with cheap, clean energy. But right now, we’re stuck in fossil fuel cost chaos. Every time instability abroad impacts oil and gas supply, energy prices surge, households pay higher...

I started teaching Pilates around 28 years ago, after already teaching other fitness classes since my early 20s.At the t...
01/05/2026

I started teaching Pilates around 28 years ago, after already teaching other fitness classes since my early 20s.

At the time, I was doing lots of step, circuits and high-impact classes, and my body was starting to feel it. I had ongoing lower back pain from wear and tear and an over-curved lower spine. I was even advised by a GP to consider changing career.

Finding Pilates changed everything.

It helped me improve my posture, build strength where I needed it, and move without pain. My back issues are now minimal, and I’ve been able to keep teaching and doing what I love for over three decades.

Pilates is simple, but powerful:

* It improves strength and posture
* It releases tension and stiffness
* It helps your body work better day to day

It’s one of the reasons I still feel able to teach, move, and support others all these years on.

If you’ve been feeling stiff, achy or out of balance, Pilates can make a real difference.

Just visit the website for more details, or drop me a message, I’m always happy to chat it through. šŸ’¬

www.fitnessdynamics.co.uk

Sam šŸ§˜šŸ¼ā€ā™€ļø

🌿 Outdoor Pilates is BACK at Levens Hall this Saturday at 11am — and I cannot wait!The first session is already full (th...
30/04/2026

🌿 Outdoor Pilates is BACK at Levens Hall this Saturday at 11am — and I cannot wait!

The first session is already full (thank you so much, you lovely lot! 🄹), but don’t worry — you can join the waiting list on the app and grab a spot if one comes up.

Sessions run most Saturdays right through to the end of September, so there’s plenty of time to join us outside this summer. Booking ahead is the best way to secure your place.

I also have morning and evening classes running during the week — in the community and online — so there’s something to fit around whatever your week looks like.

šŸ‘‰ Full timetable and booking at www.fitnessdynamics.co.uk

Not sure where to start? Just drop me a message or give me a call — I’m always happy to chat it through. šŸ’¬

Sam šŸ§˜šŸ¼ā€ā™€ļø

ļæ¼šŸ’„Announcement!šŸ’„ļæ¼So pleased to announce Sam from Fitness Dynamics - Mind Body Wellness will be presenting at ourWomens W...
23/03/2026

ļæ¼
šŸ’„Announcement!šŸ’„
ļæ¼
So pleased to announce Sam from Fitness Dynamics - Mind Body Wellness will be presenting at our

Womens Wellness and Fitness Festival South West
Event

Bowood Hotel and Spa
Sunday 17th May
9.30am to 3pm

Feel-Good Sassy Hoedown

A fun, low-impact dance session with easy-to-follow routines and a touch of line dancing. Designed to help you move more freely, build confidence, and enjoy exercise in a relaxed and supportive environment.

Get your early bird tickets now via our website OR comment WELL
Roz x

17/01/2026

Address

Holme

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