Our Story
A different kind of practice begins with a different kind of practitioner.
Anthony Guidotti, DO, LMT is a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine and licensed massage therapist. He has spent over a decade studying how the body holds tension, compensates for injury, and resists or allows change. That study began long before medical school.
As a child, Anthony began training in martial arts. The discipline of learning how to move correctly, how to generate force without strain, and how to read another body in motion drew him to the arts. That early education created curiosity about what the body does beneath the surface.
That curiosity led him to Qigong and Taiji, both of which he has studied and taught for over a decade. These practices added a different dimension to his understanding, not just how the body moves, but how it breathes, holds, and releases. How chronic tension accumulates not from single events but from years of patterned response. How stillness and attention can be as therapeutic as technique.
He trained in massage therapy at the Costa Rica School of Massage Therapy and has been a licensed massage therapist in Pennsylvania since 2018. He holds a degree from the Pennsylvania State University in international politics with minors in psychology, global studies, French, and Asian studies, an academic background that shapes how he listens to clients and thinks about health as something that exists in a person's full context, not just their physical symptoms.
Anthony's massage clients brought him to medicine. Working over years with people managing chronic pain, nervous system dysregulation, and the physical weight of sustained stress, he kept encountering the edges of what he could understand. He wanted to go deeper into the underlying mechanisms — the tissue behavior, the neurological pathways, the reasons one person responds to touch and another doesn't.
He enrolled at the Idaho College of Osteopathic Medicine, where manual medicine is woven into clinical training from the first year. He graduated as a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine and is currently in his first year of residency in family medicine.
That training gave him a clinical framework for understanding the body's connective tissue system in detail — how the continuous web of fascia that runs throughout the entire body can become distorted, restricted, or changed through injury, posture, repetitive strain, or stress. How identifying a specific point of fascial tension and working it precisely is often more effective than broader general work. This is the lens he brings to every session at The Wuji Space.
All services here are delivered in his capacity as a licensed massage therapist. He does not diagnose conditions, recommend treatments, or practice medicine in this setting. His medical training informs the quality of his attention and the depth of his understanding. The work itself is massage.