I wanted to have this conversation because there’s still a gap between what many of us were originally taught about fascia and what’s actually being explored and published now. When I sat down with Brian Tuckey, it became clear that this isn’t just an evolution of a technique. It’s a shift in how we understand what we’re treating.
Brian has spent decades working in manual therapy and osteopathic manipulation, and what stood out to me in this conversation is how intentional he’s been about answering a question most of us were never taught to ask: what is actually happening in the body when these techniques work?
That question is what led him to expand traditional counterstrain into what is now known as Fascial Counterstrain. Instead of stopping at “this helps,” he’s built out a system that connects what we feel with our hands to specific anatomical structures and physiological processes.
In this episode, I’m breaking down what that actually means for you in practice. Because when you understand the mechanism, your clinical decisions change. And when your clinical decisions change, your results and your confidence tend to follow.
Fascial Counterstrain is a diagnostic and treatment system that identifies and resolves underlying dysfunction by targeting specific tissues through precise positioning and indirect manual techniques.
When I asked Brian to explain what this work actually is, he didn’t describe it as just another technique you layer into what you already do. He described it as a system. That distinction matters, because it changes how you approach assessment and treatment from the start.
He explained that what many of us recognize as tender points are not the problem themselves. They are surface-level indicators of a deeper issue happening within specific anatomical structures. Over time, he mapped those points to exact tissues like nerves, vessels, and visceral structures, so instead of guessing, you’re following a defined diagnostic process.
In practice, that means you’re no longer treating based on symptoms alone. You’re using what you feel to identify where dysfunction is originating, then applying a very specific position to reduce that signal. Once the tenderness resolves, you hold that position briefly, allowing the body to shift out of that protective state.
What stood out to me in this conversation is that this removes a lot of the uncertainty many therapists feel. You’re not relying on trial and error. You’re following a repeatable process where the body gives you feedback in real time.
Fascial Counterstrain evolved from traditional counterstrain by expanding a symptom-based technique into a mechanism-driven system with precise anatomical and physiological mapping.
In our conversation, Brian walked through the origin story, which starts with Dr. Lawrence Jones. The original counterstrain method came from a clinical observation: placing a patient in a position of comfort could eliminate pain and restore function without force. From there, Jones mapped around 200 tender points that could be used to guide treatment.
But as Brian explained, the limitation was that no one really understood what those points represented. The process worked, but it lacked a clear explanation of what tissue was being affected or why the change was happening. That gap is what pushed him to keep going.
Over time, he expanded the system to include more than 1,000 techniques and, more importantly, created a way to connect each tender point to a specific structure in the body. That shift turned the work from “find a sore spot and treat it” into a structured diagnostic process where each finding has meaning.
What stood out to me is that this wasn’t about adding more techniques for the sake of it. It was about removing ambiguity. When you can identify what you’re treating and why it matters, your decisions become more precise and your results become more consistent.
Fascial Counterstrain works by identifying and resolving areas of trapped inflammation caused by impaired lymphatic drainage within specific tissues.
When Brian explained the mechanism, this is where the conversation shifted from technique to physiology. He described the core issue as inflammation that becomes stuck in the interstitial space, meaning the fluid between cells is not draining properly. That buildup changes how tissues behave and how the nervous system responds.
He pointed to research where interstitial fluid from trigger points was sampled and found to contain significantly higher levels of inflammatory chemicals compared to normal tissue. That finding supports the idea that what we feel as tension or tenderness is tied to a localized inflammatory environment, not just muscle tightness.
From there, he built the model around impaired lymphatic drainage. If the body cannot clear that inflammation efficiently, it remains in place and continues to drive protective responses like muscle guarding and pain signaling. Over time, that becomes what we recognize as chronic dysfunction.
What this clarified for me is that the goal of treatment is not simply to release tension. It’s to change the environment of the tissue so that inflammation can move out. When that happens, the nervous system no longer needs to maintain that protective response, and the symptoms resolve as a result.
Fascial Counterstrain expands treatment scope because it addresses dysfunction across multiple interconnected fascial systems rather than limiting intervention to musculoskeletal structures alone.
One of the biggest shifts in this conversation was realizing that fascia is not just muscle-related tissue. Brian described it as a continuous system that includes vascular, neural, and visceral components, all sharing similar properties and communication pathways.
Because of that, when you work through this lens, you’re not confined to treating joint pain or muscle tightness. You’re able to follow dysfunction into systems that influence things like circulation, organ function, and even neurological symptoms. He gave examples from his own practice, including patients coming in for brain fog, post-concussion symptoms, digestive issues, and chronic fatigue.
What ties those together is the same underlying principle: if inflammation is not moving and drainage is impaired, it can affect any system it’s present in. When you restore that movement, the symptoms tied to that system can change.
From a clinical standpoint, this changes how you think about your role. Instead of staying within a narrow set of conditions, you start to see how your work applies to a much broader range of presentations, as long as you can identify the underlying dysfunction driving them.
Fascial Counterstrain can be applied immediately after initial training because it uses a structured diagnostic process paired with specific, repeatable treatment protocols.
When I asked Brian about this, I wanted to understand how quickly someone could realistically integrate this into their work. His answer was clear: you don’t have to wait until you’ve completed the full curriculum to begin using it.
In the foundations training, practitioners learn around 40 techniques across multiple systems, along with the beginning of the diagnostic process. Once you identify the correct tender point and confirm it through assessment, the treatment itself follows a defined setup. You position the body in a specific way, monitor the change in tenderness, and hold that position briefly once the signal resolves.
What stood out to me is that this gives you a clear entry point. You can start integrating pieces of the work while still relying on your existing skill set. Over time, as your hands become more trained and your understanding of the physiology deepens, your speed and accuracy improve.
It also highlights something important about how this is taught. The process is designed to be repeatable. You’re not expected to figure it out from scratch each time. You’re following a system that helps you confirm you’re in the right place before you treat.
Connect with Brian Tuckey, PT
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