Southern Oregon Rapid Pain Relief

Southern Oregon Rapid Pain Relief Rapid NeuroFascial Reset is a neurologically based modality that quickly reduce pain, tension, and movement restriction.

By working with the nervous system and fascial network, Rapid helps the body release protective patterns and restore ease of movement

06/11/2026

What if pain relief could happen faster than you thought possible?
Give RAPID a try today and experience the difference.
50% OFF your first visit
Call or text Mara at 541-663-6896 to schedule your appointment
marasmassage.com

Rapid NeuroFascial Reset is a neurologically based modality that quickly reduce pain, tension, and movement restriction. By working with the nervous system and fascial network, Rapid helps the body release protective patterns and restore ease of movement

06/11/2026

What if headache pain relief could happen faster than you thought possible?
Give RAPID a try today and experience the difference.
50% OFF your first visit
Call or text Mara at 541-663-6896 to schedule your appointment
marasmassage.com

Rapid NeuroFascial Reset is a neurologically based modality that quickly reduce pain, tension, and movement restriction. By working with the nervous system and fascial network, Rapid helps the body release protective patterns and restore ease of movement

What if pain relief could happen faster than you thought possible?Give RAPID a try today and experience the difference.5...
05/24/2026

What if pain relief could happen faster than you thought possible?
Give RAPID a try today and experience the difference.
50% OFF your first visit
Call or text Mara at 541-663-6896 to schedule your appointment
marasmassage.com

What is RAPID NeuroFascial Reset?
RAPID NFR is a movement-based manual therapy performed over clothing that directly engages the nervous system. It works to restore stability in the body, reduce pain, and improve mobility—quickly and effectively.

What is a treatment like?
Treatment targets painful areas by combining precise tension with active movement. Sessions can feel intense as the nervous system is stimulated to restore normal function and reduce pain.
Please wear comfortable clothing that allows for easy movement. Sessions are results-focused and typically last up to 30 minutes.

What results can I expect?
Most clients experience noticeable progress during the first session. Many conditions resolve within approximately 6 to 8 treatments.
RAPID NFR is effective for a wide range of issues, including: migraines, whiplash, back pain, frozen shoulder, tennis or golfer’s elbow, TMJ, vertigo, carpal tunnel, sciatica, plantar fasciitis, knee pain, shin splints, bursitis, and more.

How is RAPID NFR different?
RAPID NFR does not “break up” tissue adhesions. Instead, it works by stimulating the central and autonomic nervous systems to change tissue tone, improve hydration, and calm the body’s stress response. This allows the body to heal naturally—often without the need for ongoing maintenance for the same issue.

Why Choose Rapid?
Clients choose RAPID because of the rapid response to treatment. This helps active individuals get back to life. RAPID is ideal for both acute and chronic conditions.

Why a 20 to 30 minute Rapid session can be more effective than a 90 minute massage. In my 40 year career I've done a lot...
05/21/2026

Why a 20 to 30 minute Rapid session can be more effective than a 90 minute massage. In my 40 year career I've done a lot of 90 minute deep tissue massages. Nothing compares to Rapid for resolving pain.

05/10/2026

What if inflammation is part of the solution instead of the problem? 👀

Get pain relief today!!
04/17/2026

Get pain relief today!!

Touch and Pain Just Got a New Map, And It Explains RAPID Better Than EverIn case you haven’t seen it already, the 2026 B...
04/01/2026

Touch and Pain Just Got a New Map, And It Explains RAPID Better Than Ever
In case you haven’t seen it already, the 2026 Brain Prize was awarded to David Ginty and Patrik Ernfors for helping uncover the cellular architecture of touch and pain.
What they helped show is that touch and pain are not one big generic system. They’re carried by different kinds of sensory neurons with different jobs, different endings, and different pathways into the spinal cord and brain. In other words, the body is not just feeling “pressure.” It’s processing very specific kinds of input in very specific ways.
What makes this Brain Prize work so exciting is that it helps explain something we’ve believed in RAPID from the beginning—-
not all input is the same.
These researchers helped uncover the cellular architecture of touch and pain, showing that different sensory neurons have different jobs, different endings, and different pathways into the spinal cord and brain.
Clinically, that matters.
Especially with chronic pain.
Because chronic pain is often not just about damaged tissue -it’s about a system that has become more reactive, more protective, and more efficient at producing pain.
That means the quality of the input we give matters.
A broad, generic pressure into tissue is not the same as a precise, high-salience input into a meaningful receptor-rich interface.
The nervous system may respond to those very differently.
That fits RAPID beautifully.
We’ve never believed we were chasing muscles or breaking up scar tissue. We’ve always believed in targeting specific high-yield structures and looking for meaningful change in pain, movement, and function.
This research doesn’t “prove RAPID,” but it does give us better science for understanding why precision matters so much clinically.
The better we understand touch and pain, the better we understand why the right input, in the right place, can change everything.

Touch and Pain Just Got a New Map, And It Explains RAPID Better Than Ever

In case you haven’t seen it already, the 2026 Brain Prize was awarded to David Ginty and Patrik Ernfors for helping uncover the cellular architecture of touch and pain.

What they helped show is that touch and pain are not one big generic system. They’re carried by different kinds of sensory neurons with different jobs, different endings, and different pathways into the spinal cord and brain. In other words, the body is not just feeling “pressure.” It’s processing very specific kinds of input in very specific ways.

What makes this Brain Prize work so exciting is that it helps explain something we’ve believed in RAPID from the beginning—-

not all input is the same.

These researchers helped uncover the cellular architecture of touch and pain, showing that different sensory neurons have different jobs, different endings, and different pathways into the spinal cord and brain.

Clinically, that matters.

Especially with chronic pain.

Because chronic pain is often not just about damaged tissue -it’s about a system that has become more reactive, more protective, and more efficient at producing pain.

That means the quality of the input we give matters.

A broad, generic pressure into tissue is not the same as a precise, high-salience input into a meaningful receptor-rich interface.

The nervous system may respond to those very differently.

That fits RAPID beautifully.

We’ve never believed we were chasing muscles or breaking up scar tissue. We’ve always believed in targeting specific high-yield structures and looking for meaningful change in pain, movement, and function.

This research doesn’t “prove RAPID,” but it does give us better science for understanding why precision matters so much clinically.

The better we understand touch and pain, the better we understand why the right input, in the right place, can change everything.

04/01/2026

In this episode, we spotlight Kevin Kooger’s work with RAPID NeuroFascial Reset (RAPID NFR)—a nervous-system–driven, movement-assisted approach designed to r...

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Medford, OR
97504

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