Saturday, January 17, 2026

Polyvagal Acupuncture®: An Integrative Path to Nervous System Healing - Revised

© 2025 J. Moffitt. Registered U.S. Copyright Office. Polyvagal Acupuncture®.

Note: Regrettably, I have had to remove half of the integrative material from the blog due to trademark and copyright infringement by a local medi-spa.  Email for a link to the password-protected student material. I left as much as I could.

Polyvagal Acupuncture ® (PVA) and its twin modality Polyvagal Massage (PVM)™ is an integrative technique I developed out of necessity—born during a time of crisis, refined through clinical application, and grounded in both traditional Chinese medicine and modern neuroscience.

Friday, January 16, 2026

The Neurological Architecture of Parenthood: Trauma, Reflexes and Autonomic Inheritance

A Clinical Framework for Polyvagal Acupuncture (PVA)® and Polyvagal Massage ™

Introduction: Defining the Architecture of Trauma

Trauma is an internal physiological state that overwhelms the system. When a stressor exceeds the buffering capacity of the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS), the brain bypasses verbal processing and hard-codes survival responses into motor reflexes and connective tissues. The "score" appears in densified fascia and retained primitive reflexes, which cannot be "talked" away.

These embodied imprints become especially significant during periods of profound physiological change—such as pregnancy and birth. Nowhere is the body's capacity for neurological adaptation—and vulnerability—more evident than in the transition to motherhood.

Friday, January 9, 2026

Primitive Reflexes and Their Role in Nervous System Development

© 2025 J. Moffitt. Registered U.S. Copyright Office. Polyvagal Acupuncture®.

Primitive reflexes (PRs) are foundational components of the human nervous system, and serve as essential building blocks for complex motor and cognitive functions. These automatic, involuntary movements are present at birth and were thought to integrate as the child matures, usually by the age of 8. Controlled by cranial nerves in the brainstem—a primitive part of the brain—these reflexes maintain a balance between the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems to support motor movement, decision-making, and emotional regulation. When PRs remain reactive (retained) or reemerge later in life, they disrupt vagal nerve signals and leave the body in a heightened state of arousal, with higher levels of stress hormones along the HPA axis.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Primitive Reflexes in Clinical Practice: Autonomic Dysregulation, Fascial Bracing, and Developmental Retention

© 2025 J. Moffitt. Registered U.S. Copyright Office. Polyvagal Acupuncture®

Primitive reflexes (PRs) are involuntary motor responses that establish foundational postural tone, orientation, and motor-sensory coordination during early development. These reflexes should integrate as higher cortical control matures. When they remain active—or reactivate in the context of trauma, emotional stress, neuroinflammation, or structural compromise—they produce persistent motor patterns that disrupt movement, stability, and autonomic regulation. 

In clinical settings, retained PRs do not present abstractly. They express through specific, reproducible fascial bracing patterns, muscle spasticity, and sinew channel fixation. These patterns impair functional mobility, destabilize postural tone, and often correlate with elevated sympathetic drive, reduced vagal tone, and impaired cranial nerve regulation.