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In this episode, Classical Osteopathy – What’s the Difference, we explore how classical osteopathy views the body not as a collection of parts, but as a continuously organising, adaptive system.
Rather than focusing on isolated symptoms or structural faults, this approach considers how the body maintains balance under constant forces such as gravity, movement, and internal pressure. It reframes familiar concepts like “lesions” as meaningful adaptations—local expressions of how the whole system has reorganised to sustain function.
The discussion moves through key ideas including whole-body coordination, the role of rhythm, the interaction between structural tension and internal pressure, and how patterns of strain develop over time. It also examines how treatment shifts from correction to supporting the body’s own capacity to redistribute load and restore efficiency.
This episode offers a clear introduction to the principles that distinguish classical osteopathy from more reductionist approaches, highlighting a model based on organisation, adaptation, and whole-body integration rather than isolated dysfunction.
By Institute of Classical Osteopathy - www.classical-osteopathy.orgIn this episode, Classical Osteopathy – What’s the Difference, we explore how classical osteopathy views the body not as a collection of parts, but as a continuously organising, adaptive system.
Rather than focusing on isolated symptoms or structural faults, this approach considers how the body maintains balance under constant forces such as gravity, movement, and internal pressure. It reframes familiar concepts like “lesions” as meaningful adaptations—local expressions of how the whole system has reorganised to sustain function.
The discussion moves through key ideas including whole-body coordination, the role of rhythm, the interaction between structural tension and internal pressure, and how patterns of strain develop over time. It also examines how treatment shifts from correction to supporting the body’s own capacity to redistribute load and restore efficiency.
This episode offers a clear introduction to the principles that distinguish classical osteopathy from more reductionist approaches, highlighting a model based on organisation, adaptation, and whole-body integration rather than isolated dysfunction.