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Buildings reflected in water — a visual metaphor for the question: Rolfing or massage, which is the right choice for you?
Two approaches. One reflection. Understanding the difference between Rolfing and Structural Integration versus massage can change how you think about your body entirely.

Rolfing vs Massage: What’s the Real Difference?

April 18, 2026 Posted by Craig Dunham Structural Integration

If you’re dealing with chronic pain, poor posture, or tension that keeps returning no matter how many massages you get — you’ve probably started wondering whether there’s something else out there.

That something is often Structural Integration, commonly known as Rolfing.

(Rolfing is a trademark of the Rolf Institute of Structural Integration. I am a graduate of the Guild for Structural Integration, one of two original certifying bodies of Dr. Rolf’s work.)

At first glance, Rolfing and massage can look similar. Both are hands-on. Both can feel good. Both work with soft tissue. But in practice, they are built on entirely different premises — and they produce different results.

Understanding that difference can save you years of chasing temporary relief.

What Massage Is Designed to Do

Massage — in its many forms, from Swedish to deep tissue to sports massage — is primarily a relief-based practice. It works locally, addressing the area that feels tight or sore. Its goals are:

  • Muscle relaxation
  • Improved circulation
  • Stress reduction
  • Short-term pain relief

For many people, this is genuinely valuable. Massage is excellent at what it does. The honest limitation is that it doesn’t change the underlying structure of your body. Once the session ends, your body tends to return to the same patterns — because those patterns are still there.

This is why so many people find themselves booking another massage two weeks later for the same problem.

What Rolfing (Structural Integration) Is Designed to Do

Rolfing — the common name for Structural Integration, the method developed by Dr. Ida Rolf in the 1940s — starts from a fundamentally different premise:

Your pain is often a symptom of how your body is organized in gravity, not just where it hurts.

Rather than treating the site of discomfort, Structural Integration works with the body’s connective tissue network (fascia) to reorganize the whole system. A practitioner doesn’t just ask, “Where does it hurt?” They ask:

  • How is the entire body aligned?
  • What compensations has this body built up over time?
  • Where is the actual source of this pattern?

The goal is not relief — it’s lasting structural change.

The Core Difference

If you take away nothing else from this article, take this:

Massage helps your body feel better. Structural Integration changes how your body functions.

Massage eases tension in a tight shoulder. Rolfing asks why that shoulder is carrying tension  — often somewhere entirely different, like the hip or the foot — and systematically works to change the pattern driving it.

Why Massage Relief Often Doesn’t Last

This is the question I hear from almost every new client in my Los Angeles and Santa Monica practice: “I’ve been getting massages for years. Why does the tension always come back?”

The answer isn’t that massage failed. It’s that massage was never designed to solve a structural problem.

If your body has spent years — or decades — organizing itself around an old injury, a postural habit, or the cumulative strain of sitting at a desk, those adaptations become hardwired into the fascial system. Massage can create temporary ease, but the underlying pattern reasserts itself.

Structural Integration addresses the pattern itself. Rather than working on tight, painful muscle as massage does, Structural Integration focuses on how the network of connective tissue aligns the structure — addressing the cause of chronic pain and tension, not just its symptoms.

The 10-Series: A Process, Not a Session

One of the most significant differences between Rolfing and massage is structural: massage is typically experienced as individual, as-needed sessions. Structural Integration is a process.

The standard entry point is the 10-Series — ten sessions that systematically work through the entire body:

  • Sessions 1–3: Opening the superficial layers of fascia
  • Sessions 4–7: Addressing the deep core structures and major misalignments
  • Sessions 8–10: Integrating the entire system for lasting functional change

Each session builds on the last. By the end, you aren’t just feeling better — your body has reorganized at a structural level. Clients consistently report standing taller, moving more easily, and experiencing relief from pain patterns that had persisted for years.

What the Experience Feels Like

Massage tends to feel immediately soothing, familiar, and relaxing. Many people drift toward sleep.

Rolfing feels more specific and intentional. The work is precise — sometimes intense — because it is engaging tissue that has been held in a compensatory pattern, often for a long time. There is often a quality of recognition to it: a sense that the work is reaching something real, not just skimming the surface.

Most clients find that the work becomes easier and more releasing as the series progresses, as layers of long-held tension begin to let go.

Which One Is Right for You?

Consider massage if you want:

  • Relaxation and stress relief
  • Short-term reduction in muscle tension
  • Recovery from acute physical activity

Consider Rolfing (Structural Integration) if you:

  • Have chronic pain that hasn’t fully resolved
  • Notice the same areas tightening up repeatedly
  • Have a history of injuries that were “treated” but never fully resolved
  • Want to address the underlying cause, not just the symptom
  • Are seeking longer-lasting structural change

Many people find value in both — massage for ongoing maintenance and relaxation, Structural Integration for deeper structural work.

Book a Session

A Note on “Deep Tissue” Massage

Deep tissue massage is frequently confused with Rolfing, and it’s worth addressing directly.

Deep tissue massage uses more pressure to reach deeper muscle layers — but it is still fundamentally a massage. It addresses muscular tension through pressure and technique. While deep tissue massage is defined by the depth, Structural Integration is a layered approach. That is a very important distinction. In addition to the fact that Structural Integration is a process, it is a process of integration and that requires understanding the appropriate depth to be working for a given session and contact.

Rolfing in Los Angeles and Santa Monica

If you’re based in Los Angeles or Santa Monica and have been relying on massage for chronic issues without lasting results, it may be time to consider a structural approach.

I’ve been working with clients in this area since 2007 — professionals, athletes, performers, and people who’ve simply been in pain long enough to want something more than temporary relief. The work I do is the original method of Dr. Ida Rolf, as taught through the Guild for Structural Integration.

Ready to find out whether Structural Integration is right for you?

A brief conversation can clarify a lot.

Book a Session

Craig Dunham is an Advanced Structural Integration practitioner serving Los Angeles and Santa Monica. A Guild for Structural Integration graduate, he has been in practice since 2007, training under direct students of Dr. Ida P. Rolf.

Tags: 10 SeriesChronic PainDeep TissueFasciaMassagePostureRolfing Los AngelesRolfing Santa Monica
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Rolfing, the Rolf Method & Structural Integration — Explained Clearly. Craig Dunham is a Los Angeles Advanced Practitioner of Structural Integration with a studio in Santa Monica. The Rolf Method of Structural Integration is the original, systematic process developed by Dr. Ida P. Rolf to align the body in gravity for lasting relief.

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