Self-massage techniques for lasting mobility and real pain relief — using only the tools you already have.
Duration: 45–60 minutes | Date: Sunday, June 7 | Led by: Ariele Foster, PT, DPT, E-RYT 500 | Location: MINT · Adams Morgan, DC
Pain and restricted movement are two of the most common reasons people fall short of their training goals — not lack of effort, and not lack of motivation. Often, the real obstacle is fascial tension: tight, tender connective tissue that limits range of motion and keeps low-grade discomfort cycling through the same spots.
The good news is that you don’t need a standing appointment or a specialist on speed dial to address it. With the right technique and a few everyday tools, you can meet these issues in the moment — before they escalate.
What is fascia, and why does it matter for mobility?
Fascia is the web of connective tissue that surrounds and interconnects every muscle, organ, nerve, and bone in the body. When it’s supple and well-hydrated, it supports efficient, pain-free movement. When it becomes restricted — through overuse, underuse, injury, or stress — it can create local tenderness, limit joint range of motion, and contribute to the kind of persistent tightness that foam rolling alone doesn’t seem to fix.
Targeted self-massage works by applying sustained, specific pressure to fascial restrictions, encouraging tissue hydration and release. The emphasis here is on targeted: effective self-massage isn’t random pressure applied broadly. It’s a deliberate approach to specific structures — and learning the difference changes everything.
Increased mobility and decreased pain can come from self-massage techniques with everyday tools — if you know where to apply them and how.
About this workshop
Way of the Happy Fascia is an in-person workshop led by physical therapist and movement educator Ariele Foster, PT, DPT, E-RYT 500. In 45 to 60 minutes, you’ll learn a targeted framework for addressing tight or tender muscles effectively — at home, at MINT, or anywhere the need arises.
The session draws from Ariele’s broader curriculum, which has been taught to sold-out studios and online since 2013. This abbreviated version is designed to give you practical, immediately applicable tools without requiring any prior anatomy knowledge or equipment beyond what you likely already own.
What you can expect to learn: The workshop covers how to identify fascial restriction versus muscular tightness, which everyday objects work well as targeted release tools, how to apply effective pressure technique without overstressing surrounding tissue, and how to build a simple, consistent self-care routine you’ll actually use.
- FORMAT — In-person workshop
- DATE — Sunday, June 7
- DURATION — 45–60 minutes
- LOCATION — MINT · Adams Morgan, Washington DC
- LED BY — Ariele Foster, PT, DPT, E-RYT 500
- EQUIPMENT NEEDED — Everyday household tools — no specialized gear required
- WHO IT’S FOR — All fitness levels; no anatomy background required
Why MINT is bringing this workshop to Adams Morgan
Recovery has always been central to the MINT philosophy. The strength work you do in the gym, the classes you take in the studio, the reformer sessions — all of it compounds when your connective tissue is healthy and responsive. Self-massage is one of the simplest tools available to support that, and it’s one most people have never been properly taught.
Hosting Ariele is part of our ongoing commitment to making the expertise of movement specialists accessible to our members, not just on the clinic table, but in the everyday practice of training well and feeling good.
About Ariele Foster, PT, DPT, E-RYT 500
Ariele began teaching interdisciplinary yoga in 2001. After navigating injuries to her shoulder and hip, she pursued her doctorate in physical therapy, completing it in 2011. She approaches patients and clients through an integrative, yoga-informed lens — combining hands-on manual techniques, dry needling, and sustainable training progressions to return people to their full athletic participation. Her patients receive more personalized, in-depth guidance than in standard PT settings, and typically require fewer sessions as a result. Since 2013, her self-care curriculum has reached practitioners and movement enthusiasts in sold-out studios and online courses worldwide.
Frequently asked questions
Who should attend this workshop? Anyone who experiences recurring tightness, movement restrictions, or low-grade muscle pain — whether you’re a regular MINT member, new to structured training, or somewhere in between. No anatomy background is required, and no specialized equipment needs to be purchased in advance.
Is this the same as foam rolling? Foam rolling is a broad, general tool. The self-massage techniques in this workshop are more targeted — focused on specific anatomical structures and fascial restrictions, using objects you already own. The approach is more intentional, and the results tend to be more precise.
Do I need to be a MINT member to attend? No. This workshop is open to MINT members and the broader Adams Morgan and Washington DC wellness community. Check the registration link below for current availability.




