Elite Rehab & Conditioning

Elite Rehab & Conditioning My goal is to treat each client individually. Tech, Animal Sports Rehab Therapist, Orthobionomist and PEMF practioner

By tailoring their therapy and conditioning to their specific needs/goals with my extensive training and experience as a Vet.

Love this company and their products for both my personal horses and client horses that stay! Jump in and Add your amazi...
05/09/2026

Love this company and their products for both my personal horses and client horses that stay!

Jump in and Add your amazing barrel horses that are taking CEP!

I have loved reading everyone’s AI “unhinged bio’s” so of course I had to jump on the trend, mine gave me a image to go ...
05/01/2026

I have loved reading everyone’s AI “unhinged bio’s” so of course I had to jump on the trend, mine gave me a image to go with it ❤️ I both feel called out an proud 😆

Professional chaos coordinator with a soft spot for broken things—backs, horses, people, probably your emotional stability too. Runs on caffeine, faith, and the unshakable belief that the body whispers before it screams (and yes, I will listen to both).

Equal parts healer and “why does my own nervous system act like a feral raccoon at 2am.” Can rehab a horse, reset your vagus nerve, and still forget why I walked into the room.

Loves deep conversations, honest work, and anything that involves figuring out what the hell is actually going on beneath the surface—physically, emotionally, spiritually… we’re not doing surface-level here.

Somewhere between science and soul, structure and surrender. Probably overthinking, definitely overfeeling, but always showing up.

If it’s hard, I’m interested. If it’s meaningful, I’m all in.

Your tack and how it fits matters!
05/01/2026

Your tack and how it fits matters!

This week has been one of deep reflection and confirmation for me. The moments I’ve shared with each of you and your fur...
04/23/2026

This week has been one of deep reflection and confirmation for me. The moments I’ve shared with each of you and your furry babies—your trust, your openness, your willingness to show up and do the work—have reminded me exactly why I chose this path.

There’s something incredibly humbling about being invited into someone’s healing journey. It’s not something I take lightly. Every session, every story, every small shift matters… and this week, it all came together in a way that made it so clear: this is where I’m meant to be.

To my clients—thank you. Thank you for allowing me to walk alongside you, for trusting the process, and for reminding me that healing is not about fixing, but about listening, supporting, and honoring the body’s innate wisdom.

I’m grateful beyond words, and more certain than ever that this work is exactly where my heart belongs. 🤍

This goes right along with the class I just finished this week 🙌🏼 love the knowledge
04/19/2026

This goes right along with the class I just finished this week 🙌🏼 love the knowledge

Advanced spine and neck 🙌🏼 love, love, love learning!
04/16/2026

Advanced spine and neck 🙌🏼 love, love, love learning!

I love this so much, it’s hard to explain how my brain works but I love this so you can see the visual. I always explain...
04/10/2026

I love this so much, it’s hard to explain how my brain works but I love this so you can see the visual.
I always explain to the owners or clients at the first assessment, “it’s going to sound like I am tearing you or your horse apart” but it’s all part of putting the puzzle pieces 🧩 together and then it’s so cool to then be able to go back over and physically show (feel) the difference with the owner/client after 🙌🏼

In my initial evaluation, I visually evaluate the horse analyzing everything from posture, hoof balance, muscle patterns, how their mane falls and hair lays, how they hold they hold their tail, etc etc.

Every.
Detail.
Matters.

I start where my eyes go first. Then, I let the body start telling the story and start making connections.

I think one of the most important aspects of my job is to share this lens with owners. It’s overwhelming and it’s a lot to learn, but it is SO important. You can really start to learn what may be happening in movement, before you even watch them move.

So, together let’s analyze this horse!!

There’s no right or wrong place to start. Let your eyes take you to where you need to start then work from there.

I jotted some of my initials observations down over the image. 😉

Most prominently, I see a horse who wants to overload onto the front end, rather than properly engaging the hind end and accessing the core. Her hind end immediately stands out to me, especially in her pelvic region. There are a LOT of clues this horse is sharing here. And this is just one image of this horse. Can you imagine how much information you can gather from a FULL evaluation? Visual, in movement, palpation, more in depth analysis of hoof balance….

I hear owners discredit clues they’re seeing all the time. I want every owner to know how valued their perspective is. My perspective is different than yours, and both of ours is different than the next person. How cool is that!! Think about how powerful mutual collaboration can be. Trust your gut. Every detail matters, I promise. 🫶🏻

#𝙐𝙣𝙡𝙤𝙘𝙠𝙂𝙧𝙚𝙖𝙩𝙣𝙚𝙨𝙨

04/10/2026

After intense exercise, your horse’s body is navigating more than just “fatigue.”

There are real physiological processes happening:

• Accumulation of metabolic byproducts (including lactate + hydrogen ions)
• Microtrauma within muscle fibers
• Increased inflammatory signaling
• Temporary reduction in efficient lymphatic flow

Here’s the important part, you ready? 👀

The lymphatic system—responsible for clearing cellular waste and regulating inflammation—does NOT have a central pump like the cardiovascular system.

It DEPENDS on muscle contraction and movement to function effectively.

This is why complete rest immediately post-race can actually slow recovery.

So what do we want to do instead:

✨ Controlled, low-intensity movement the next day 💫

• Enhances lymphatic drainage
• Improved circulation and oxygen delivery
• More efficient clearance of metabolic waste
• Reduction in post-exercise stiffness
• Nervous system downregulation after sympathetic (“fight or flight”) activation

Think intentional, not intense:
• Hand walking or light riding at a walk
• Turnout (when appropriate)
• Incorporating ground poles at a walk

You’re not training harder—you’re helping the body restore balance.

Because a well-conditioned horse isn’t just one that can go hard…

It’s one that can recover efficiently. 💫



***I do not own the rights to the music or song

I spent this past week deepening my work in CranioSacral Therapy—and I’m honestly in awe of how much the body holds… and...
04/04/2026

I spent this past week deepening my work in CranioSacral Therapy—and I’m honestly in awe of how much the body holds… and how beautifully it knows how to unwind when given the space.

This work is subtle, but incredibly powerful. It’s not about forcing change—it’s about listening. Following the body. Supporting the nervous system as it shifts out of stress and into a place where true healing can happen.

What I felt over and over again in training was this:
✨ The body is always communicating
✨ It prioritizes what it’s ready to release
✨ When we slow down enough to listen, things begin to change

CranioSacral work focuses on the rhythm and flow of the central nervous system—the brain, spine, and surrounding tissues. When there’s restriction, the body compensates. When there’s ease, the body reorganizes.

And that’s where the magic is.

This approach blends beautifully with the work I already do. It allows me to meet the body even more gently, especially in cases of:
• Chronic pain
• Nervous system dysregulation
• Injury recovery
• Emotional holding patterns

For my clients (human and animal), this means an even deeper level of support—without force, without overwhelm.

Healing doesn’t always have to be loud or intense.
Sometimes it looks like stillness.
Sometimes it feels like a quiet shift.
Sometimes it’s just the body finally feeling safe enough to let go.

I’m so excited to begin integrating this into sessions 💫
If you’ve been curious about this work or wondering if it might help you or your animal, feel free to reach out—I’d love to talk more.

I love this work, I’m always blown away by Koper Equines brilliance and the way they share! Great read! I love the scien...
01/05/2026

I love this work, I’m always blown away by Koper Equines brilliance and the way they share! Great read!

I love the science behind it and I love that it works both human and animal!

Mind Over Matter: Why the Immune System Begins With the Nervous System

For decades, the immune system has been framed as the body’s primary defense mechanism — a standalone army that detects threats, launches inflammation, and restores health.
Modern biology now paints a very different picture.

The immune system does not act first.
It is activated, directed, and regulated by the nervous system.

From the first detection of threat to the final stages of tissue repair, the nervous system sits upstream — supervising immunity and determining whether the body defends, repairs, or overreacts.

1. The Immune System Begins With the Nervous System

The nervous system is the body’s first threat-detection system

Before immune cells ever mobilize, sensory neurons detect danger.

Specialized nerve endings — including nociceptors and mechanoreceptors embedded in skin, fascia, joints, viscera, and airways — respond instantly to:
• Mechanical stress
• Tissue damage
• Pathogens
• Chemical irritants
• Heat and cold extremes

These neurons fire milliseconds before immune cells can move, making the nervous system the true first responder. This is why it is now considered part of the front line of immune defense.

Nerves initiate immune responses locally

Sensory nerves do more than detect threat — they actively initiate immune action.

Through the release of neuropeptides such as:
• CGRP (calcitonin gene-related peptide)
• Substance P
• VIP (vasoactive intestinal peptide)

nerves can immediately:
• Dilate blood vessels
• Recruit white blood cells
• Activate mast cells
• Signal macrophages
• Modulate inflammatory intensity

Local inflammation, therefore, begins as a neuro-immune event, not a purely immune one.

The brain directly regulates immunity

At the systemic level, immune activity is tightly regulated by autonomic pathways.

The vagus nerve and sympathetic nervous system influence:
• Cytokine release
• Inflammatory amplitude
• Fever response
• Immune cell trafficking
• Macrophage polarization (M1 inflammatory vs. M2 reparative states)

This regulatory loop is known as the Inflammatory Reflex — a neural feedback system that prevents inflammation from becoming excessive, chronic, or insufficient.

The immune system is neurologically supervised.

2. Regeneration Also Begins With the Nervous System

One of the most significant discoveries in modern biology is that tissue repair depends on intact nerve signaling.

Nerves actively stimulate healing

Sensory and motor neurons release growth and repair factors, including:
• NGF (nerve growth factor)
• BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor)
• IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor)
• GDNF (glial-derived neurotrophic factor)

These signals regulate:
• Fibroblast behavior
• Collagen organization
• Angiogenesis
• Stem cell recruitment
• Bone and tendon remodeling

Without appropriate neural input, repair becomes slower, weaker, or disorganized.

Neurogenic inflammation initiates regeneration

The early inflammatory response triggered by nerves is not a mistake — it is a repair signal.

When properly regulated, this brief inflammatory phase sets the stage for regeneration rather than chronic defense.

Denervated tissue heals poorly

When sensory input is reduced or lost, tissue commonly shows:
• Delayed healing
• Poor vascularization
• Inferior collagen quality
• Increased fibrosis

This explains why touch, movement, massage, and sensory stimulation accelerate recovery — they activate the same neural pathways required for organized repair.

3. Fascia: The Bridge Between Nervous, Immune, and Regenerative Systems

Fascia sits at the intersection of these systems.

It is:
• Densely innervated
• Highly vascularized
• Rich in immune receptors
• Mechanically responsive

When fascia receives mechanical input — through touch, movement, or stretch — it triggers a cascade of integrated responses:
• Fibroblasts alter shape and behavior
• Lymphatic flow improves
• Inflammatory signaling balances
• Mechanoreceptors fire
• Vascular endothelial cells respond
• Tissue hydration and pH normalize

Current fascia research consistently demonstrates this sequence:

Mechanical input → Neural signaling → Immune modulation → Tissue repair

Not the other way around.

4. Why This System Evolved First

From an evolutionary perspective, a nervous-system-first model of immunity is unavoidable.

Immune cells are powerful but slow and metabolically expensive. Neural signaling, by contrast, operates in milliseconds.

A system that relied on immune activation alone would:
• React too slowly to acute danger
• Waste energy on unnecessary inflammation
• Struggle to adapt to changing environments

By placing the nervous system at the front of the hierarchy, evolution ensured:
• Speed of response
• Energy efficiency
• Context-appropriate immune action

For prey animals like horses, this hierarchy is critical. Survival depends on rapid threat assessment, economical energy use, and the ability to recover without lingering inflammation that compromises movement.

5. Chronic Pain and Chronic Inflammation: When the System Gets Stuck

When neural signaling is disrupted — through injury, repetitive strain, postural compensation, or unresolved tissue stress — the immune system can become chronically activated even without ongoing damage.

Persistent threat signaling from fascia, joints, or viscera keeps the nervous system in a heightened state of alert, leading to:
• Elevated baseline inflammation
• Impaired immune resolution
• Stalled tissue repair
• Increased fibrosis
• Altered pain perception

In this state, inflammation no longer serves regeneration — it becomes self-sustaining.

This explains why chronic pain and chronic inflammation frequently coexist, and why purely anti-inflammatory approaches often fail. Without restoring normal neural input, the immune system never receives the signal that it is safe to stand down.

6. How Massage Therapy Supports the Immune System in All Horses

Massage therapy does not act directly on the immune system.
It works upstream, by regulating the nervous system that organizes immune behavior.

This is why massage benefits all horses — performance, pleasure, senior, young, sound, or compromised.

Massage helps by:
• Reducing ongoing threat perception
• Normalizing mechanoreceptor input
• Increasing vagal tone
• Balancing inflammatory signaling
• Improving lymphatic and microcirculatory flow

The result is not immune stimulation or suppression, but immune efficiency.

Because fascia is continuous, these effects are global rather than local, explaining why horses often show whole-body changes after localized bodywork:
• Calmer demeanor
• Softer movement
• Improved digestion and respiration
• Faster resolution of minor inflammatory challenges

Gentle, consistent input is most effective because it favors parasympathetic regulation and avoids triggering defensive neural responses.

The Order of Healing

The body heals in a predictable hierarchy:

Nervous system → Immune system → Regenerative system

Touch works not because it “fixes tissue,” but because it activates this sequence in the correct direction.

Practical Takeaways
• Calm, regulated horses heal faster than tense ones
• Sensory input matters as much as workload
• Recovery is neurologically active, not passive
• Touch, movement, and posture influence immune health daily

The goal is not to “boost” immunity, but to create the neurological conditions under which it functions optimally.

The Bigger Picture

The body does not heal by force.

It heals through order, timing, and communication.

When the nervous system accurately perceives safety, the immune system responds with precision, and regeneration follows naturally.

This is why effective care — whether through massage, movement, or handling — always begins with the nervous system.

https://koperequine.com/22-interesting-facts-about-the-equine-lymphatic-system/

Address

3554 S 1500 W
Vernal, UT
84078

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Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
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Friday 9am - 12pm

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