bodyfix99.com

ABOUT US

The Go-To for Hard Cases

About R. Nicholas Berisha

My story didn’t begin in a polished downtown clinic. It began in Fort McMurray, Alberta — with people who push their bodies to the limit every day. I worked with clients doing 12–14 hour shifts, carrying deep fatigue, tightness, and injuries that kept coming back no matter what they tried. These weren’t “textbook” aches. This was real pain: stubborn, layered, and relentless — the kind that affects sleep, mood, work, and your entire life. Before osteopathy, I built a strong hands-on foundation through sports massage, reflexology, clinical stretching, Thai massage, and acupressure. I could help people feel better… but I kept seeing the same problem: Temporary relief wasn’t enough. People didn’t need another quick fix. They needed a full-body strategy that restores function — so the pain doesn’t keep returning. That’s when osteopathy clicked. I committed fully. I studied intensely at the London College of Osteopathy, completed my DOMP, and continued advancing my training so I could be more precise, more clinical, and more effective with stubborn pain patterns. Over time, something started happening: People began calling me “the go-to”. Not because of magic — but because I do what most don’t: I take my time. I assess properly. I connect the dots. And I treat the body as a system — not just a sore spot.

Member: Canadian Union of Osteopaths (CPMDQ)

Member: Canadian Union of Kinesitherapists (CPMDQ)

Designation: Osteopathic Manual Practitioner

Why My Work Gets Results (When Standard Care Fails)

Because persistent pain needs precise assessment, not generic protocols.

I look beyond symptoms to understand how your entire system is contributing to the pain.
Treatment targets the source of dysfunction, not just where discomfort shows up.
Sessions aren’t rushed—accuracy matters more than volume.
Designed specifically for pain that keeps returning despite standard care.
Restoring movement and balance leads to results that actually last.
Identifies hidden compensation patterns missed in standard care.