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Articles: massage
Below are the articles associated with this topic. Click on a title to read one.
A Brief History of Chair Massage by David Palmer
Chair Massage is fast becoming the most popular form of skilled touch on the contemporary bodywork landscape.
Ayurvedic Yoga Massage by Hamish Topp
This passive yoga stretching increases joint mobility and ligament flexibility and is thus an excellent tool for motor rehabilitation. In addition, ancient techniques involving the application of pressure with the feet at certain points in the treatment provides a very deep relaxation to the muscles and gives a strong stimulus to the blood circulation, thus delaying the ageing process.
Biodynamic Massage: A Truly Therapeutic Massage by Denise McCrohan
Biodynamic Massage works across a wide spectrum from deep muscular work, to connective tissue massage, to light energetic touch and work in the aura.
Body Massage Treatment A Holiday Treat by Jolanta Basnyet
A truly relaxing holiday for me is a holiday with body massage or any other form of natural treatments (not necessarily tactile).
Chinese Tuina for Acute Lumbar Strain by Zhou Tao
This article looks at the Oriental bodywork therapy of Tuina. This therapy is used to promote healing and relieve pain by increasing the circulation of Qi and blood. It can be likened to a form of massage where the pressure varies as does the rate of application.
Critical Bodywork Advice for Massage Practitioners by Gerry Pyves
This is a follow-up to the article Gerry Pyves wrote for Positive Health four years ago in which he launched NO HANDS massage. Since then, the technique has become the fastest growing bodywork approach in the UK. His concern was for the injuries sustained by massage therapists during the practice of their craft.
Dynamic Bodyuse in Massage by Andy Fagg and Darien Pritchard
Massage is about movement, both within the client but also on the part of the practitioner. Effective movement and bodyuse by the massage therapist can be a key to good treatment, both in terms of physical ease and creating appropriate atmosphere.
Eastern Approaches to Clinical Therapy by Gretchen De Soriano
This article illustrates the value of Eastern approaches to treatment in cases where individuals have acted as 'gatekeepers' to restoring their own health through making informed choices about the most suitable complementary therapy for their condition. This self-referral by the patient is termed 'higher order integration'.
Esalen Massage: Deep Connections by Lucia Appleby
Founded in 1962 by Michael Murphy and Richard Price to explore unrealized human potential, the Esalen Institute in California has consistently been at the forefront of new developments and discoveries in the fields of psychology and bodywork. As well as being a spiritual retreat and healing spa, the Institute offers workshops and lectures ranging from massage through gestalt to sustainable environments.
Exploring Integrative Massage Therapy by Asaf Rolef Ben-Shahar
Integrative Massage Therapy (IMT) is a technique that combines elements from different modalities, such as touch and massage, Reichian bodywork/body rhythms, neuro-linguistic programming and psychotherapy, hypnotherapy/trancework, stress management, movement, reflective listening, shamanic work (e.g. journeys, storytelling and healing) and meridian therapies.
Hawaiian Huna Massage by Rosalie Samet
Recapturing the long-forgotten wisdom of the ancient people of Hawaii, this type of bodywork has been practised in the healing temples by Kahuna Priests as a sacred rite of passage for thousands of years.
Holistic Massage by Sara Thomas & Lucy Lidell
In essence, massage is simply touch that is caring and sensitive – healing hands stroking and soothing, giving comfort and nourishment to the body.
Injury Prevention for Massage Practitioners by Lauriann Green
Now the good news: there is a great deal you can do to protect yourself from injury related to your massage work.
Injury Prevention Massage by Jennifer Longmore
Statistics estimate that about 1.2 million working people suffer from musculo-skeletal disorders and everyday about six workers give up their jobs because of RSI (Repetitive Strain Injury). Other common conditions are: Cumulative Trauma Disorders, Occupational Overuse Injuries, Work Related Upper Limb Disorder, Back Pain, Neck Pain, etc. Many of these injuries stem from demands placed on the body, improper posture, high stress levels, lack of exercise and weight problems.
Kahi Loa Traditional Hawai'ian Healing Massage by Cornelia Biegler
A healer and homoeopath, I had began to wonder if somewhere there was a healing system in existence that involved a hands-on approach, and provided individuals with an empowering philosophy at the same time. . .
Lomi Lomi Ka Huna Massage by Stephen Langley
This healing system is derived from the ancient Polynesian methods of restoring balance to the body, mind and soul (Huna). Through this treatment of the physical body, powerful healing is able to take place more quickly and completely on the physical, psychological and spiritual levels.
Manual Lymphatic Drainage and its Therapeutic Benefits by Anne Willis
MLD is a highly specialised form of massage, which uses light, rhythmical, very precise hand movements, pressures and sequences and requires the therapist to develop a great degree of skill, having an intimate knowledge of the workings of the anatomy of the lymphatic system.
Massage for Detoxification by Mario-Paul Cassar
Mario-Paul Cassar DO ND practices Osteopathy, Sports Therapy, Naturopathy, Massage and Bodywork Therapy. A respected author and established tutor with many years of experience in Massage Therapy and Bodywork, he has lectured in a number of colleges and centres in the UK, Europe and the USA.
Massage in Schools to Reduce Stress and Anxiety by Solveig Berggren
Soveig Berggren looks at how massage can be used in schools to relax and centre children. She started her first project in 1996 with a class of 10-year-olds in a school in southern Sweden.
Massage Techniques for Childbirth by Linda Kimber
Touch, in the form of a positive massage during labour, was an area I wanted to explore to determine whether it is a useful way of shifting the focus of active support away from the midwife and towards the birthing partner. The following article summarises a review I undertook of my practice of massage techniques in labour.
Massage Therapy for people with Cancer: A Practitioner's Experience by Louise Roy
In this article, Louise Roy describes her experience with one cancer patient and discusses the challenges facing massage practitioners. During training, many massage students are warned that giving massage to people with cancer might cause its spread. This is not, however, the belief of all experts.
No-Hands Massage by Gerry Pyves
Gerry Pyves describes how pain in his hands and wrists did not stop him from continuing with his massage practice. Instead, he developed the injury-free No-Hands Massage technique, which took ten years to reach its final form following monthly Professional Development meetings and feedback from over 100 clinically trained bodyworkers.
On-Site Seated Acupressure Massage by David Woodhouse
That which has generically become known in the Western world as 'On-Site Massage' has its roots in the Orient, as indeed do many other therapies.
RhythmMobility by Darien Pritchard
Darien Pritchard has been practising massage for 25 years, and describes how he developed the Rhythm-Mobility technique, having noticed how clients' often resist massage and are unable to let go. Exerting more force in massage in such cases is counter-productive as the body feels that it is under attack and its response is to tense up. He has found that using gentle vibration and rhythmical movements can bypass such reactions and simultaneously energize the client and encourage the release of deep tensions.
Sports Massage - A Therapy for All by Wrio Russell
Although the name 'sports massage therapy' suggests that it is only suitable for athletes and dancers, Wrio Russell, a qualified massage therapist and founder director of the London School of Sports Massage, dispels this myth and shows how it is also a therapy for 'ordinary' people.
Thai Traditional Massage by Maria Mercati
Touch is and always has been powerful medicine. It soothes, relaxes, comforts and heals. Massage is the means whereby touch is applied in diverse ways to achieve these effects. Thai massage represents the ultimate touch experience. At any entirely non-sexual level it involves the most complex physical interaction between giver and receiver of any form of massage practised at the present time.
The Healing Benefits of Oriental Massage by Maria Mercati
This article is about four different types of Oriental Massage: Tui Na, Shiatsu, Thai massage and Indonesian massage. Although these are all distinct forms of therapy with their own history and philosophy they have some common roots and are all holistic in that they regard the body as a whole and disease as an imbalance in the whole, not just one part.
The Massage Practitioner and the Medical Profession Then and Now by Su Fox
This article focuses on the changes over the years on massage techniques and requirements. The author says massage is no longer just a therapy of indulgence and pampering but one that people with chronic medical conditions choose to complement their medical treatments.
Whole Meridian Massage Therapy by Zhu Gang
This article focuses on Traditional Chinese Medicine body massage and the meridians, the route to promoting better blood and energy circulation and overall communication between the interior, exterior, lower and upper parts of the body.
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