How the Feet May Influence the Brain, Mental Health and Human Potential
For thousands of years, reflexology has been practised as a holistic therapy — working specific areas of the feet to influence corresponding parts of the body. Traditionally, much of its support has come from clinical observation, practitioner experience, and client outcomes.
But what if modern neuroscience is beginning to show us why it works?
Emerging research into vagal tone, the prefrontal cortex, and functional MRI imaging is opening fascinating conversations about how stimulation of the feet may influence brain activity — and potentially support emotional regulation, motivation, recovery after stroke, and mental wellbeing.
This article explores that evolving bridge between ancient touch therapy and contemporary neuroscience.
The Foot: More Than Just a Mechanical Structure
We tend to think of the foot as a weight-bearing structure — bones, fascia, ligaments, arches. But neurologically, it is something much more profound.
The sole of the foot is densely packed with sensory receptors. These receptors transmit information to the brain in as little as 25 milliseconds. That’s faster than conscious thought.
From an evolutionary perspective, the foot is a primary “threat detection” organ. Long before we had complex reasoning, our survival depended on sensing terrain, instability, danger, or sudden changes in environment. The feet constantly send feedback to the nervous system about safety.
Safety — or perceived safety — is central to nervous system regulation.
And this is where reflexology becomes especially interesting.
The Vagus Nerve and Vagal Tone
The vagus nerve is the longest cranial nerve in the body. It connects the brainstem to the heart, lungs, digestive system and many other organs. It plays a key role in the parasympathetic nervous system — our “rest and restore” state.
Vagal tone refers to how well the vagus nerve is functioning. Higher vagal tone is associated with:
- Better emotional regulation
- Improved heart rate variability
- Reduced inflammation
- Stronger stress resilience
- Greater social engagement
- Enhanced mental wellbeing
Low vagal tone, on the other hand, is often linked to chronic stress, anxiety, digestive disturbances, and inflammatory conditions.
Traditionally, vagal tone has been supported through:
- Breathwork
- Meditation
- Cold exposure
- Chanting and vocal toning
- Safe social connection
But could the feet also influence vagal pathways?
Some reflexology traditions have long mapped a “vagus reflex point” on the medial (inner) aspect of the big toe (which is an area I activate in my reflexology treatments following an advanced reflexology course). While anatomical mapping does not suggest a direct physical vagus nerve ending in the toe, what is emerging is something perhaps more intriguing:
Stimulation of specific areas of the foot may influence brain activity, which in turn affects vagal regulation.
This is an indirect, but potentially powerful, pathway.
Kevin Kunz and Functional MRI Research
Reflexology researcher and practitioner Kevin Kunz has been collaborating with neuroscientists using functional MRI (fMRI) to explore how reflex stimulation affects the brain.
In one notable finding, stimulation of a specific area on the pad of the big toe appeared to activate up to 28 distinct regions of the brain.
That’s remarkable.
Functional MRI measures changes in blood flow — indicating neural activity. When certain reflex areas were stimulated, regions associated with sensory processing, motor control, emotional regulation, and executive function lit up.
This suggests that the foot is not merely a passive structure — but a neurologically rich gateway.
Even more compelling are preliminary observations involving stroke patients. Areas of the brain previously considered “inactive” (dark) or less responsive showed activation (lighting up) following reflex stimulation.
Now — we must be cautious here. Activation on fMRI does not automatically mean restored function. However, the implications are significant. Stroke rehabilitation is one of the most expensive areas of medical care globally. If reflex stimulation can support neural activation and plasticity, even modestly, that is worth serious exploration.
There has even been interest in how reflex stimulation might support neural regulation in extreme environments — including discussions around long-duration space travel.
From anecdote toward evidence — this is the journey reflexology is beginning to take with an important event happening on 12th May 2026 this year. On this day, Dr Stefan Posse, the lead investigator on the Neural Pathways of Applied Reflexology fMRI research project, is scheduled to give an oral presentation of preliminary results from this research to a large scientific audience — reportedly in front of thousands of attendees. The announcement has been shared by several reflexology community sources, indicating this is expected to be a global scientific stage for the work.
While the specific conference name hasn’t been confirmed in publicly available listings yet, the timing and format strongly suggest it is associated with a major neuroscience or neuromodulation conference that takes place in the United States in May 2026.
An oral presentation (as opposed to just a poster) is a significant opportunity in scientific conferences — it means the research has been selected by peer reviewers as noteworthy enough to present live to attendees. That would be a big step for reflexology research going from anecdotal community interest toward broader scientific visibility.
The Prefrontal Cortex: The Brain’s CEO
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) sits just behind the forehead. It is responsible for what we might call “executive function”:
- Motivation
- Task management
- Decision-making
- Impulse control
- Emotional regulation
- Future planning
- Social behaviour
When the prefrontal cortex is functioning optimally, we feel focused, purposeful and measured in our responses.
When it is underactive — which can happen under chronic stress — we may experience:
- Impulsivity
- Procrastination
- Brain fog
- Emotional reactivity
- Difficulty completing tasks
- Low motivation
Stress shifts activation away from the prefrontal cortex and toward survival centres, such as the amygdala. In simple terms: when the nervous system perceives threat, executive function goes offline.
If reflex stimulation can help regulate the nervous system and improve vagal tone, it may indirectly support healthier prefrontal activation.
And this is what the imaging research is beginning to suggest — that specific reflex points may influence cortical regions involved in executive control.
For clients struggling with burnout, overwhelm, trauma history, or chronic stress patterns, this possibility is deeply encouraging.
Neuroplasticity and the Power of Touch
The brain is not fixed. It is plastic — meaning it changes based on input and experience.
Every sensory signal we send into the nervous system contributes to neural mapping. Touch, especially intentional, regulated, therapeutic touch, sends powerful signals of safety.
Safety allows the nervous system to shift from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) dominance into parasympathetic regulation.
When the system feels safe:
- The prefrontal cortex comes back online
- Digestion improves
- Inflammation reduces
- Emotional processing becomes possible
- Healing capacity increases
Reflexology, when delivered with presence, attunement and regulation, may offer:
- Rich sensory input
- Rhythmic parasympathetic signalling
- Brain activation through specific foot maps
- Emotional containment and grounding
It is not merely “foot massage.” It is neurologically informed sensory therapy.
The Foot as a Sensory–Emotional Bridge
Kevin Kunz describes the foot not just as a sensory organ — but as a survival interface.
Think about it:
- The foot grounds us.
- It connects us to the earth.
- It determines balance and orientation.
- It detects instability before we consciously process it.
If the foot feels unsafe, the nervous system may register threat before the mind can rationalise it.
In trauma-informed work, we often begin with grounding practices. The feet are foundational to grounding.
When we stimulate and regulate the feet, we may be influencing deep survival circuitry.
This could explain why clients often report after reflexology:
- Feeling calmer
- Sleeping more deeply
- Experiencing emotional release
- Feeling clearer mentally
- Noticing improved digestion
- Reduced anxiety
What was once labelled “anecdotal” may be part of a larger neurophysiological story.
Reflexology and Mental Health Support
While reflexology is not a replacement for medical or psychological care, it can be a powerful complementary support.
Given what we understand about:
- Vagal tone and emotional resilience
- Prefrontal cortex function and executive capacity
- The stress response and inflammatory pathways
- Neuroplasticity and sensory input
Reflexology may contribute to:
- Anxiety management
- Burnout recovery
- ADHD support (through executive function activation)
- Post-stroke rehabilitation support
- Trauma recovery (as part of a regulated therapeutic plan)
- Stress-related digestive disturbances
More robust clinical trials are needed. The field is still emerging. But the direction of inquiry is promising.
From Anecdote to Evidence
For many years, reflexology has lived in the realm of complementary therapy — supported by client testimony and practitioner experience, yet often dismissed by mainstream medicine.
Now, with collaboration between reflexologists and neuroscience researchers, we are beginning to see imaging evidence that the brain responds measurably to reflex stimulation.
Functional MRI provides an objective lens.
This does not yet prove every traditional reflex map. But it does suggest that the foot–brain connection is real and measurable.
The next frontier lies in:
- Larger clinical trials
- Controlled studies
- Longitudinal stroke recovery research
- Mental health outcome studies
- Exploration of vagal tone metrics (HRV studies)
Science moves slowly. But it is moving.
A Balanced Perspective
It’s important to stay grounded.
We cannot claim that reflexology “cures stroke” or “repairs brain damage.” That would be irresponsible.
However, we can say:
- The foot is neurologically rich.
- Stimulation of specific areas activates measurable brain regions.
- The nervous system responds rapidly to sensory input from the feet.
- Vagal regulation is central to health.
- Prefrontal cortex activation influences mental wellbeing.
And reflexology sits at the intersection of these systems.
That intersection deserves thoughtful exploration.
What This Means for You
At MindBody Oasis, reflexology is offered not simply as a relaxation treatment — but as part of a wider understanding of nervous system health.
When you lie down for reflexology, your body is not “switching off.” It is engaging in deep neurological communication.
Your feet are speaking to your brain.
Your brain is speaking to your organs.
Your nervous system is re-calibrating safety.
In a world that constantly pulls us into urgency, over-stimulation and cognitive overload, therapies that support vagal tone and prefrontal regulation are not luxuries — they are foundations for sustainable wellbeing.
The Future of Reflexology
We are standing at an exciting threshold.
Ancient practice.
Modern imaging.
Neuroscience.
Human touch.
Neuroplasticity.
Space exploration.
Stroke recovery.
Mental health support.
What was once intuitive is beginning to be illuminated.
As research continues, we may discover that the humble foot holds more neurological influence than we ever imagined.
And perhaps reflexology’s greatest gift is this:
Not just relaxation.
But regulation.
Not just comfort.
But connection.
Not just anecdote.
But emerging evidence.
The feet may be closer to the brain than we think.