What is Craniosacral Therapy?
Craniosacral therapy, often called CST, is a gentle hands-on technique developed in the 1970s by Dr. John Upledger, an osteopathic physician and former researcher at Michigan State University. He went on to found the Upledger Institute, which remains the leading training body for craniosacral practitioners around the world. Unlike a traditional massage, craniosacral therapy uses extremely light touch, about five grams of pressure, roughly the weight of a nickel.
The work focuses on the craniosacral system, which includes the membranes and cerebrospinal fluid surrounding your brain and spinal cord. When that system holds tension, it can show up as headaches, jaw pain, neck and back tightness, anxiety, and a general sense of being stuck in fight-or-flight. A skilled therapist feels for those subtle restrictions and helps release them, allowing your central nervous system to settle into a more regulated state.
Most people are surprised by how powerful something so gentle can feel. Sessions are quiet, slow, and deeply restorative, and the benefits often continue to unfold in the hours and days that follow.
What Craniosacral Therapy Helps With
Craniosacral therapy works with the nervous system rather than the muscles, which is why its applications reach further than typical bodywork. Common reasons clients in Grand Rapids book sessions include:
- Chronic migraines and tension headaches — by releasing restrictions around the cranial bones and dura, CST can reduce the frequency and intensity of headaches that have not responded to other treatments.
- TMJ dysfunction and jaw pain — gentle work around the cranium, jaw, and upper neck can ease the patterns that drive clenching, grinding, and chronic jaw soreness.
- Neck and back pain — particularly pain that lingers after the muscles have been worked on but the underlying tension keeps returning.
- Post-concussion and head injury recovery — many clients use CST as part of their rehabilitation after concussions, whiplash, or other head and neck trauma.
- Anxiety and chronic stress — by helping the nervous system shift out of fight-or-flight, CST is one of the most direct ways bodywork can address chronic stress.
- Fibromyalgia and chronic pain — the gentle pressure is often more tolerable than traditional massage for clients with widespread pain or sensitivity.
- Sleep issues — many clients report dramatically improved sleep starting the night of their session.
If you are dealing with something that has not been listed here, reach out. CST has a wide range of applications and your therapist can talk through whether it is a good fit.
What to Expect During Your Session
Craniosacral therapy looks very different from a typical massage. Here is what a session usually involves:
Intake and Conversation
Every session begins with a short conversation about what brought you in, your medical history, and any specific symptoms or goals. This helps your therapist understand where to focus and what kind of care will serve you best.
On the Table, Fully Clothed
You stay fully clothed for the entire session and lie comfortably on the massage table, usually face-up. Loose, comfortable clothing works best. No oils or lotions are used. Your therapist will place hands lightly on different parts of your body — commonly the feet, sacrum, lower back, ribs, neck, and head — and hold each contact for several minutes at a time.
Quiet, Slow, and Subtle
The room stays quiet by design. CST works best when the nervous system is allowed to settle, so there is far less talking than in a regular massage. Many clients drift off, fall into a meditative state, or simply notice their breathing slow and deepen. Some feel small unwinding movements or warmth where the therapist is working.
After the Session
Most people leave feeling calm, light, and a little spacey. Drink plenty of water and take it easy for the rest of the day if you can. The full effects often continue to unfold over the next 24 to 72 hours as your nervous system integrates the work.
Why Mobile Craniosacral Therapy Works So Well
CST relies on a calm nervous system. Driving across town, finding parking, sitting in a waiting room, and small-talking with a receptionist all activate the exact stress response we are trying to settle. When the session happens in your own home, none of that gets in the way. You finish, you stay where you are, and you let the work integrate without having to rejoin traffic.
For clients dealing with migraines, anxiety, post-concussion symptoms, or chronic pain, that difference is significant. The home setting amplifies the effect of the work itself.
To experience the benefits of mobile craniosacral therapy in Grand Rapids, contact us today to schedule your session. You can also explore our other specialized services including prenatal massage, trigger point therapy, and aromatherapy massage.