Specialist treatment · Blackpool
One of the most subtle and profound approaches in osteopathic medicine. Working with the body's own rhythms to release deep tension, support the nervous system, and restore a capacity for stillness that many patients have not felt in years.
Book a SessionUnderstanding the approach
Craniosacral therapy is a gentle, hands-on approach that works with the craniosacral system — the membranes and cerebrospinal fluid that surround and protect the brain and spinal cord. Practitioners are trained to perceive and work with subtle rhythmic movements that express through the whole body, listening for areas of restriction, strain, or reduced vitality and encouraging the system back towards balance and ease.
It is one of the most subtle branches of osteopathic practice, developed from the foundational work of William Garner Sutherland — a student of Andrew Taylor Still — who spent decades exploring the relationship between the cranium, the sacrum, and the rhythmic expression of life through the body's tissues.
"Allow physiologic function within to manifest its own unerring potency rather than apply a blind force from without."
William Garner Sutherland · Founder of Cranial OsteopathyThe touch used in craniosacral work is exceptionally light. Sessions often feel very different from conventional osteopathic treatment — quieter, more inward, and sometimes profoundly relaxing. Patients frequently report a deepening sense of stillness during treatment that continues to unfold in the hours and days that follow.
David has undertaken additional postgraduate training in cranial osteopathy through the Sutherland Society — the UK's leading professional body for the teaching and development of cranial osteopathic practice.
The Sutherland Society upholds the original biodynamic approach to cranial work as developed by William Garner Sutherland and refined through subsequent generations of osteopathic practice. It represents a commitment to depth, precision, and ongoing professional development in this demanding field.
This is not a weekend certificate in craniosacral technique. It is a sustained programme of study in the classical osteopathic approach to cranial work, grounded in anatomy, physiology, and clinical application.
Clinical applications
Craniosacral therapy is used across a wide range of presentations. It is particularly well suited to conditions where the nervous system is involved — whether through direct irritation, chronic tension, or the accumulated physical and emotional load of stress and trauma.
Craniosacral work is highly effective for headaches arising from tension at the base of the skull, upper cervical restriction, and the sensitised nervous system patterns that underlie recurrent migraine. Many patients who have not responded fully to conventional treatment find significant relief.
Chronic stress produces sustained patterns of tension that become embedded in the body's tissues. Craniosacral therapy works directly with the autonomic nervous system, encouraging a shift from the sympathetic fight-or-flight state towards the parasympathetic rest-and-repair state that genuine recovery requires.
Trauma — whether physical or emotional — leaves a trace in the body's tissues. Craniosacral therapy is particularly useful in the post-acute phase of whiplash, head injury, and shock, where the nervous system remains sensitised long after the initial injury has resolved.
Persistent symptoms following concussion — including headaches, brain fog, fatigue, and sleep disturbance — often have a craniosacral dimension that conventional management does not address. Gentle cranial work can support recovery where other approaches have plateaued.
The temporomandibular joint has an intimate anatomical relationship with the cranial base, the cervical spine, and the dural membranes. Craniosacral therapy often produces significant improvement in jaw pain, clicking, and restriction — particularly where the problem has a postural or tension-related component.
Deep fatigue — the kind that sleep alone does not resolve — often reflects a nervous system that has been under sustained load. Craniosacral therapy can support recovery from burnout by working with the body's regulatory capacity at a fundamental level.
Where neck pain has a significant nervous system or fascial component, or where structural osteopathic work has reached its limits, craniosacral work can access and release deeper layers of restriction that respond poorly to more direct techniques.
Difficulty sleeping — particularly where this is driven by an inability to switch off — often reflects an overactivated nervous system. Many patients report improved sleep quality following craniosacral treatment, sometimes within the first session.
Your session
Craniosacral sessions are unlike most hands-on treatment. If you have only experienced more active osteopathic or physiotherapy work, this may feel very different — and that is part of its value.
Your first session begins with a thorough consultation covering your history, current symptoms, and what you are hoping to achieve. For standalone craniosacral sessions, this includes understanding the broader context of your health — physical, emotional, and lifestyle factors all shape what we find and how we work.
You will remain fully clothed and lie comfortably on the treatment table. The touch is exceptionally light — often just the weight of a few grams. David will work through different contact points, typically starting at the feet or the base of the skull, listening to the body's rhythms and gently encouraging areas of restriction towards greater ease and motion.
Responses vary widely and are entirely individual. Many patients experience a profound sense of relaxation, warmth, or stillness. Some become aware of sensations in areas seemingly unrelated to where the hands are placed. Occasionally patients notice an emotional release, which is a normal and often therapeutic response. Some feel very little during the session and notice the effects afterwards — in how they sleep, how their pain has shifted, or a quality of ease that was not there before.
It is common to feel deeply relaxed following craniosacral work. Some patients feel a temporary increase in symptoms in the first 24–48 hours as the body integrates the treatment — this is a normal part of the process and typically settles quickly. Allow yourself time after a session rather than rushing straight back to a busy schedule.
How we work
Craniosacral therapy can be offered in two ways. The right approach depends entirely on your presentation, your history, and what you are coming in for.
Dedicated session
For patients whose primary need is nervous system support, post-trauma recovery, chronic headache, or deep fatigue, a dedicated craniosacral session allows the full time and attention to be given to this work. There is no structural osteopathic treatment — the entire session is craniosacral.
This is also the preferred approach for patients who have found structural treatment to be too stimulating, or who are at a stage of their health where gentler work is more appropriate.
Combined approach
Where a patient is receiving ongoing osteopathic treatment for a musculoskeletal problem, craniosacral techniques may be incorporated into the session where clinically appropriate. This might be used to address the nervous system component of a chronic pain presentation, to work with the cranial base in a patient with neck pain and headaches, or to complete a session that has involved more active structural work.
This is not a formula — the decision to integrate craniosacral work is made in response to what is found during each assessment.
Session fees
Craniosacral sessions follow the same fee structure as standard osteopathic appointments. There is no additional charge for craniosacral work.
New to the practice
Initial Assessment & Treatment
Up to 60 minutes
£60
Returning patients
Follow-up Session
30–60 minutes depending on need
£50
Session length for craniosacral work is guided by the clinical need on the day rather than a fixed time. We will never rush the work. No sign-up to treatment blocks — you book one session at a time.
If you are not sure whether craniosacral therapy is right for you, call us and we will talk it through honestly before you book.