Robyn Moug
PT
Robyn Moug
Physical Therapist with 33 Years of Manual Therapy Experience and Clinical Specialization in Myokinesthetics
Thirty-three years of clinical practice change how a therapist sees a body on the table. Patterns that look complicated to a newer clinician — the way an old shoulder injury reroutes itself into the opposite hip, the way a decades-old surgical scar quietly reorganizes the fascia around it — read as familiar to someone who has watched thousands of cases unfold. Robyn Moug has been practicing physical therapy since 1993, and the depth of her work shows up in the kinds of cases other providers refer to her: the long-running, the diffuse, the ones that don’t resolve to a single structure.
Robyn doesn’t push the body where it isn’t ready to go. Her sessions tend toward layered, multi-modality work.The patients who benefit most are those whose problems don’t fit neatly into a single technique and who have learned the hard way that aggressive intervention is often the wrong tool for chronic, layered presentations.
Her clinical specialization is Myokinesthetics, a soft-tissue technique that clears impingement in the peripheral nervous system along a single nerve pathway, thereby having a specific impact on the nervous system as it assists the body to adjust and remove compensatory movement patterns. It pairs naturally with her work in Frequency Specific Microcurrent (FSM), where she practices alongside Kathryn Matsubuchi as part of Synergy’s iCare program — an offering most Spokane clinics don’t have access to. She is also a Craniosacral Therapy practitioner, trained in the Upledger lineage on which Synergy was built.
Beliefs Behind My Therapeutic Approach
“The cases that look the most complicated usually aren’t. They’re old patterns the body never finished sorting out — and the work is meeting them gently enough that the system feels safe to let them go.”
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Specializations
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WHO I HELP
Built for the Cases That Don't Fit a Single Diagnosis
The patients who land on my schedule tend to be the ones whose pain has more than one source. Old injuries layered on top of newer ones. Surgical scars driving symptoms in unrelated areas. Chronic patterns that don’t resolve to a single muscle or joint. After three decades of clinical work, those are the cases I see most clearly — and the ones I’m most confident I can help.