Work in Progress: What Structural Correction Looks Like Mid-Session
- vutseloangelica
- Mar 3
- 1 min read

The images above are not traditional “before and after” photos.
They are work-in-progress images taken during the same session.
I did not capture a photo before beginning the treatment — sometimes clinical focus takes priority over documentation.
The first image was taken after treating the right side only.The left side had not yet been addressed.
The second image was taken minutes later, after both sides were treated.
The difference illustrates something important:
Structural correction produces visible change immediately.
When one shoulder sits higher than the other, the issue is rarely isolated to muscle tightness. It involves:
Scapular positioning
Clavicular alignment
Rib cage mechanics
Cervical spine adaptation
Fascial tension patterns
An elevated shoulder shortens the neck on that side, alters head positioning, and influences jaw and facial symmetry over time.
By correcting the shoulder girdle, we change the foundation that supports the neck and face.
This is why I approach aesthetic concerns through structural work.
Not by masking symptoms.Not by forcing surface changes.But by allowing the body to reorganize itself.
These images show that process in real time.




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