How can we understand Fascia & our bodies in a simple way? Special guest Sue Adstrum, PhD

Fascia research in all its glory, but how do you present it so that ordinary people understand it, gets excited and start realizing the potential benefits of understanding how the body works? Together with Sue Adstrum, PhD-qualified anatomist & author of the Living Wetsuit, we discuss how Fascia as a subject could help us bridge the gap between research, practical application and how it relates to ordinary people and everyday life.

Om Podcasten

The Fascia Guide is a podcast about the living body, about new research and a new perspective on health, pain and what it means to be alive. There is an ongoing global revolution in the anatomical research field, profoundly changing the way we look at the human body. The reason? Fascia, a network of connective tissue with no beginning and no end, encapsulating everything in the body, from muscles and skeleton, to organs and cells. While until recently considered unimportant, Fascia is since 2017 acknowledged as the biggest organ in the body and Fascia research has sparked a wildfire of new insights that are challenging conventional belief about how the body works. The purpose of The Fascia Guide is to provide knowledge about the body in a simple way. It’s a podcast about science and proven experience, about philosophy and new insights, about the practical application of new research, and about the little things that make difference in terms of lifestyle and well-being With and by… Axel Bohlin founder & editor of The Fascia Guide. Hans Bohlin, Innovator & Fascia Expert Per Johansson, Doctor of human ecology and historian of science and ideas