Give your clients something to do between sessions.
You already tell them to stretch and move more. Axial Reset is the daily spinal practice that fills the gap between appointments — five to fifteen minutes a day, guided, on their phone.
The two-week gap
You see a client every week or two. In that hour you free up tissue, lengthen what's tight, and send them out moving better. Then life happens — they sit, they slump, they brace — and by the next visit a good portion of that work has quietly reset.
Axial Reset is what they do in the meantime. A short, guided spinal session every day that keeps the spine moving through its full range, so the work you do lands on a body that's been kept loose instead of one that tightened all the way back up.
It complements your work — it doesn't replace it
- You handle the soft tissue. Massage, stretching, and bodywork do things a daily app never will.
- Axial Reset handles the daily reminder. The spine adapts to whatever it does most. Five minutes a day keeps "full range" as the default between your sessions.
- Together they reinforce each other. Clients who move their spine daily hold the gains from your table longer.
The philosophy behind it, in Dr. Bahan's words: don't chase pain — get rid of it, then keep the person out of it. Your hands do the first part. The daily habit protects it.
An easy thing to recommend
- No equipment. Your client just needs a bed or flat surface and a few minutes.
- Guided, every day. The app walks them through each session — nothing for you to teach or supervise.
- Personalized. Each plan is generated from a short intake, so it meets the client where their body actually is.
- Simple to share. Hand them a link or a QR code and they're set up in minutes.
Want to refer clients?
We're building a simple way for massage therapists and bodywork pros to recommend Axial Reset — including QR codes and referral links you can keep at your table. If that's something you'd use, email support@axialreset.com and we'll get you set up.
Axial Reset is a wellness practice, not medical care or treatment. It's meant to complement the work you do — not to diagnose, treat, or replace professional care.