Friday, June 26, 2009

Communicating with your Massage Therapist

Whether you have never received professional massage before or if you have received years of therapy and are trying out a new massage modality, communicating with your massage therapist is very important. 

Both the massage therapist and the client are responsible for how well each massage session goes. Here are some ways that you, as a client, can communicate effectively with your therapist to get the massage session you want, need and are paying for.

Set the Expectation

Before each session, your massage therapist and you should discuss a minimum of three things:
  1. How you are feeling overall
  2. What specific outcome you'd like to result from your session
  3. What, if anything, has changed about your needs
New clients will be setting these expectations with a massage therapist for the first time in addition to completing a new client intake form, but returning clients should always go through this process, as well.

A good therapist will ask probing questions before each session, so they can custom design each session for your needs. But you should be clear about what you want before you get on the table. you will automatically be more satisfied with your massage session when you get off of it.

Don't be Quiet

While most massage sessions are designed with relaxation in mind, clients should always speak openly and honestly with their massage therapists. It doesn't matter when. Don't wait until the end of the session to speak up - especially if something hurts.

A good massage therapist will ask you a few questions during your session to ensure your comfort - especially if you are a new client. They might ask anything from whether the pressure is good while performing a certain stroke to whether you are warm enough. Be specific when providing feedback.

Since the client is as equally responsible for directing the session as the massage therapist is, a lack of communication during a session that is not going as you would like it to will certainly lead to an unpleasant massage experience.

Prepare for the Future

A good therapist will always ask you how you feel after a session. It is not a rhetorical question. It is an opportunity to communicate.

When your session is over, be sure to give your massage therapist constructive feedback about how the session went. You don't have to know what it is the therapist did to tell them what felt good or didn't feel good, and if you tell them what you liked, you'll be sure to get more of it in your next session.

It is also important to ask questions that will help you prolong the effects of your massage. For example, if you are having a certain kind of pain, your massage therapist should be able to analyze your posture and discuss possible stretches that might help you between sessions.

Your massage therapist is there to help you feel good, and just like in any relationship, it is a two-person job. If you feel like you have communicated effectively with your therapist and you would like to see more come out of your sessions, you should consider finding a massage therapist that you are able to connect with both through bodywork and verbal communication.

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Beyond Massage: Stress and Survival


According to the American Psychological Association, 54 percent of Americans say they are concerned about the levels of stress in their lives, and the same percentage say they are concerned about the effects stress has on their health.

Massage is One Way

Swedish massage is an excellent way to cope with stress. By the nature of what it is - a quiet time during which nurturing touch is administered by a professional massage therapist - it reduces anxiety and promotes calmness. People who receive regular massage sleep better and are able to handle stress more readily.

But massage is external resource, something to seek outside ones self.

Digging Deep is Another

However, there are many survival stories - people who go down with a torpedoed ship, break their leg alone on a mountain in the middle of nowhere, and so on - that indicate humans have an internal resource. In Deep Survival accident journalist Laurence Gonzales writes about the "thought behavior" that allows certain people to pull through some of the most stressful situations possible.

An LMT's Top Three Thoughts

Gonzales provides twelve steps to surviving stressful situations. Many times, massage clients who are going through stressful situations of any degree are at their lowest when they make it to the table. Massage therapists can provide relief through touch, and though it is out of the scope of practice of a licensed massage therapist, LMT, to counsel, the client can certainly participate in the process of relief. Clients: consider the following three steps.

  • Think, Analyze and Plan: Survivors organize. They assess the situation and formulate a plan to handle it. Emotion only plays a role in this set insofar as it might be helpful to the overall plan. (Another of the steps is using your anger). By devoting their energy to problem solving, survivors are able to keep motivated and stay focused on surviving.
  • Enjoy the Survival Journey: Approach the stressful situation as you would a challenge or a competitive sport. In other words, make surviving, dealing with your stress, a game, not a chore. A deadline, a divorce, an accident, an illness - whatever it is - it is still part of your life. You might as well enjoy it.
  • Do Whatever Necessary: Here is a good analogy for "doing what's necessary": Through chemotherapy cancer patients nearly kill themselves to live. They value life enough to risk it. Whether or not you are dealing with stress on that scale, the principle still applies. Do what it takes to get through.

Check out The Twelve Rules of Survival that Gonzales says each survivor uses to get through the most horrible accidents life. Apply them to your stressful situation. Then, book a massage.

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