Provider Spotlight: Meet Andrew — Intuitive Healer, Hands-On Therapist, and Lifelong Fixer


Back

We sat down with Taylor Pilates and Fitness's Andrew Kerr, a seasoned physical therapist and expert in manual therapy, to learn more about his unique approach to helping people move and feel better. With over 40 years of experience and a passion for hands-on, intuitive healing, Andrew brings something special to every session.

Q: Tell us a little bit about yourself and what drew you to this career.

I’ve always been a fixer. Even as a little kid, I loved taking things apart and putting them back together — whether it was blenders, bikes, or record players. I also love working with my hands: pottery, woodworking, gardening. My first degree was in psychology, and I learned a lot of things I didn’t want to do. But I also discovered that I needed to work with people. 

When I stumbled into a conversation with a physical therapist at a barbecue, something clicked. Physical therapy combined everything I enjoyed: working with my hands, fixing things (but this time, the human body), helping people, and — no suits or ties! After that conversation, I never looked back. I went back to school for my physical therapy degree, and here I am, over 40 years later.

Q: Your approach sounds different from typical physical therapy. Can you describe it?

Absolutely. Traditional physical therapy tends to follow a very linear, Western model: assess, diagnose, and prescribe a treatment plan. That never fully resonated with me. I’ve always preferred getting my hands on people and letting the body tell me where to go.

When I treat someone, I listen — not just to what they say, but to what their tissues tell me. It might start with a shoulder injury, but my hands may be drawn across the chest, into the abdomen, even to the opposite hip, depending on where I feel restrictions. One client came in with migraines; I ended up working deep in her abdomen, and that treatment directly influenced her headache symptoms. The body is interconnected in ways we often can’t see on paper.

Q: Can you explain some of the different techniques in your sessions?

I use a wide variety of tools depending on what a person’s body needs that day. This can include:

  • Myofascial release (addressing restrictions in the body’s connective tissue)
  • Manual therapy (hands-on mobilization of joints and soft tissues)
  • Craniosacral therapy (extremely light touch to release tension and improve flow)
  • Reiki and energetic work (non-touch or very light-touch energy balancing)
  • Posture training and education (helping clients understand body mechanics and self-care)

Craniosacral work, in particular, helped me learn to trust what I feel. It’s so subtle — sometimes applying no more pressure than the weight of a dime on your fingertips — but it taught me to listen to the body’s signals.

Q: Sounds like you teach your clients during sessions?

Absolutely. Education is a huge part of what I do. If clients understand what’s going on in their bodies, they can take better care of themselves. I help them understand what to do and just as importantly, what not to do — to keep their bodies happy.

Q: Is there anything else you want people to know about your approach?

I don’t come into a session with a rigid plan. Every person is different. I let my hands and the client’s body guide me. Sometimes, what seems like a minor issue leads me to uncover a much deeper, more important restriction elsewhere. My goal is always to listen, respond, and work with the body to help it heal.

Q: For people who’ve never experienced this work, can you explain what fascia is?

Fascia is connective tissue, and it's everywhere in your body — around every nerve, muscle, organ, under the skin, even around your brain. It’s like a continuous web that holds everything together. There’s not a single area of the body that doesn’t involve fascia.

Q: And what exactly is myofascial release?

Myofascial release is one of several hands-on techniques I use to release restrictions in this connective tissue. Restrictions can create tension or dysfunction that may show up as pain, limited movement, or other symptoms. Often, where you feel the symptom isn’t where the problem originates. The fascia is so interconnected that releasing one area can affect a completely different part of the body.

Q: You mentioned this isn’t like massage. How is your work different?

A lot of people assume I do massage because it's hands-on work, but it's very different. Massage typically focuses on relaxing tight muscles — and that can feel great, but tight muscles are often just a symptom. My goal is to find the source of the problem and release it. That’s why people might feel better for a few days after a massage, but the tightness often returns. When I release fascial restrictions, it creates more lasting changes in the body’s structure and function.

Q: How lasting are those changes?

Often quite permanent. I had one client who’d been dealing with debilitating hip pain for years — she had seen multiple practitioners with little relief. After just one session where I worked on her fascia, the pain was dramatically reduced within days, and it’s never returned. Because fascia is such a fluid, integral system — almost like an organ — when you free up restrictions, the body can reorganize itself in a much more sustainable way.

Q: Do people only come to you for injury or pain? Or is this something people could benefit from proactively?

Both. I treat acute injuries and long-standing chronic pain, but I also see people who feel generally “stuck” or restricted, even if they’re not in pain. Sometimes clients come to me because their Pilates instructor, like Ashley, notices limited movement patterns that could be improved. After I release restrictions, they move better. Some clients also come in monthly for ongoing maintenance. The truth is, I believe anyone can benefit — even people who feel pretty good — because everyone carries some degree of restriction they may not even be aware of.

Q: What’s one thing you want people to understand about your work?

What I do is unique — it’s not massage, not typical physical therapy, and not something you can fully understand until you experience it. I’m not applying a set protocol; I work intuitively with each person’s body to find and release what’s holding them back. It’s collaborative — my hands listen to the body and guide me where we need to go. And sometimes, that includes emotional components, too, because we carry tension in more ways than just physically.

Schedule a session with Andrew to experience his intuitive approach by calling or texting 303-472-6743 or book online at https://www.vagaro.com/andrewkerrptandmyofascialrelease/book-now