How we read your body and give it back the movement options it has been missing. Three stages, one order, every time.
First we scan — how you stand, how you move, and where your range stops short, described as adaptation, not failure. Then we release — hands-on work plus a short home routine to settle the tissue that has been working overtime. Then we repattern — simple daily drills and gym adjustments that teach your body to own its new range. Everything below describes the method, not any one person’s results.
Observation, not diagnosis
Before we change anything, we watch. The scan is a structured look at how your body has organised itself. None of it is a medical diagnosis — it is a set of observations we use to build your plan, and everything we note is treated as a smart adaptation your body made for a reason.
Your own report opens with the single measurement we most want to improve. We pull that number from the movement battery — never from a photo or thermal image — and it sets your starting stage.
What we measure & aim for
This measured part of the scan drives your plan. We test how far each region moves, both sides, and compare. The lowest number becomes the one we build around. Your own figures live in your personal report.
| What we test | What it tells us | Range we aim for |
|---|---|---|
| Shoulder rotation & reach | How freely the shoulder turns and lifts | Full overhead, even side to side |
| Trunk / pelvis rotation | How your mid-section rotates each way | Balanced left and right |
| Hip rotation & opening | How the hips turn in and out | Room inside and outside |
| Straight-leg raise | Back-line and hamstring length | A comfortable, repeatable range |
| Hip extension | Whether the front of the hip opens | Thigh in line with the body |
| Grounding | How well you settle weight through a foot | Steady, even contact |
Thermal imaging shows where you run warm or cool and supports what the movement battery found — it is always provisional and reviewed before anything is finalised. Gait breaks a single stride into eight phases to see how your pelvis, spine and arms cooperate.
Tissue · hands-on · the system underneath
Once we know your pattern, we map which muscles have been doing too much and which were left out of the job. We settle the overworked group so the quiet group can finally join in.
We only release tissue that is genuinely overworking. Releasing a muscle that is already switched off makes the pattern worse — so the map, not habit, decides what gets worked.
Between sessions you get a short, specific self-release routine — a ball or roller on the areas your map flagged, with a clear cue for each. A few quiet minutes most days beats one long session once a week.
The deepest release happens on the table. Hands-on manual therapy, focused soft-tissue work and cupping are matched to your movement pattern, so the work you receive is the work your scan asked for. This is where stubborn tissue lets go fastest.
Drills · gym · progress
Release opens the door; repatterning keeps it open. You get three to five short drills chosen for your stage and pattern. Early on they live on the floor, led by your breath. As your range becomes reliable, they stand up and start to look like the things you actually do. Each drill in your report comes with a short video and a clear dose.
Stage 1 earns the range. Stage 2 and Stage 3 spend it — we don’t ask your body to spend range it hasn’t earned yet. You move up only when your key measurements say you are ready.
You don’t stop training — you train smarter. We adjust how you set up your lifts so the work reinforces your new pattern instead of feeding the old one: stance, foot position and small set-up tweaks, with a left-and-right option where it matters.
We retest the same few movements that mattered most, on the same surface and in the same state, so the comparison is fair. After about four sessions we reassess and adjust. Consistency is what compounds.
One assessment gives you the full picture — and a personal report in your private portal within 48 hours.
This page explains the LASRR Method in general terms. It is educational, contains no individual client information, and nothing here is a medical diagnosis. The scan is structured observation; the repatterning work is movement education. For diagnosis or medical treatment, see a licensed physician — this work supports your care, it does not replace it.
Disclaimer: Just a friendly reminder: I’m a Certified Massage Therapist (CMT). I also hold a Master of Science in Physical Therapy and am a licensed physical therapist in the European Union — but I am not a licensed PT in the United States. This is a movement-support plan, not medical treatment. Built from session findings, physical-therapy science, hands-on experience, and AI-assisted assessment. Always consult your doctor if something doesn’t feel right.
Michail F. Vamvatiras · CMT (CAMTC #88526) · CBS · KTP · MScPT (physical therapy licensed in the EU, not the US) · LA Sports Recovery / VitaKinesis LLC · 2260 Centinela Ave, Los Angeles · (760) 999-0064