Navigated to 157: What Happens When the Body Lets Go? (with Werner Klingler)

157: What Happens When the Body Lets Go? (with Werner Klingler)

Nov 12, 2025
1h 7m

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Episode Description

πŸŽ™ What Happens When the Body Lets Go? Werner Klingler on Anesthesia, Altered States & the Physiology of Relaxation

What actually happens when the body "lets go" β€” in anesthesia, trance, or the deep relaxation familiar to hands-on practitioners? Til Luchau talks with Professor Werner Klingler, anesthesiologist, physiologist, and fascia researcher at Ulm University (Germany), whose work bridges clinical anesthesia, neuroscience, and connective-tissue research.

Drawing on decades of operating room experience, Dr. Klingler explains how different parts of the brain disconnect and re-synchronize during altered states, why the "freeze reflex" comes first, and how fascia's responsiveness makes it a living sensory organ rather than inert tissue. Fair warning: Werner gets wonderfully detailed about physiology β€” but stick with it, because he drops some genuine gems about autonomic "push-ups," why tears cleanse neurotransmitters, and what happens when children wake from anesthesia with wide-open pupils.

In this episode, they discuss:
- The "octopus model" of consciousness β€” why "altered state" is too simple
- The three pillars of anesthesia: unconsciousness, analgesia, and muscle relaxation
- How breathing and COβ‚‚ levels influence pH, drug effectiveness, and tissue tone
- Why warmth matters: how temperature shifts the load between muscle and connective tissue
- What "autonomic push-ups" teach us about resilience and cyclic training
- The freeze-then-flight reflex pattern and how it shows up under anesthesia
- How emotion and perception shift as anesthesia fades β€” and why some people wake up sad
- Whether sensation is required for bodywork to be effective (spoiler: tissue effects happen either way)
- Pre- and post-operative care: what bodyworkers can offer surgery patients
- Why fascia is alive β€” restructuring, remodeling, and central to our sensory and autonomic systems
- The FRECLS project: how practitioners can contribute to international fascia research

Whether you're curious about the neuroscience of deep relaxation, how anesthesia informs hands-on practice, or what happens when different "arms of the octopus" come back online, this conversation offers a rare clinical perspective on the states we work with every day.

✨ Resources
πŸ‘‰ Join the FRECLS project (Fascia Research Consensus and Liaison Statement): https://frecls.org/
πŸ‘‰ Fascia Research Society: https://fasciaresearchsociety.org/
πŸ‘‰ Video version: https://www.youtube.com/@AdvancedTrainings/podcasts

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✨ Connect with us:
Til Luchau – https://advanced-trainings.com | Facebook | Instagram
Whitney Lowe – https://academyofclinicalmassage.com | Facebook | Twitter

πŸ“§ Email us: info@thethinkingpractitioner.com

The Thinking Practitioner Podcast is intended for professional practitioners of manual and movement therapies β€” bodywork, massage therapy, structural integration, physical therapy, osteopathy, and similar professions. It is not medical or treatment advice.

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