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.May/June
2002, Issue 97
On the Cover
Shiatsu:
Japan's Healing Hands-on Art
by Chris Cunningham
With
knees positioned on the floor, the shiatsu practitioner leans over
his clothed client, who is resting prone on a mat. The practitioner
slowly applies pressure with the balls of his thumbs along the length
of the client's spine. Fingers, palms and thumbs continue to walk
or dance along other body pathways, called meridians. The practitioner
gently presses his fingers into the client's scalp while she remains
motionless, serene.
Shiatsu is a type of Japanese bodywork;
the term shiatsu translates as "finger pressure." It is
a healing art steeped in Asian medical principles and techniques,
and its popularity as a healing therapy is growing in the United
States. A shiatsu session consists of pressure applied with the
balls of the thumbs, fingers and palms - and depending on the form
of shiatsu practiced, elbows, hands, forearms, knees and feet are
also used - to specific points on the body, in order to stimulate
the flow of energy and improve circulation throughout the body.
SpaMassage
News
Spa Training Targets
MTs
New Spa Reflects Texas
Spa Leaders' Marketing Tips
Types of Sessions Received At Day Spas
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In This Issue
Myoskeletal
Alignment Techniques
Part Three: Working Through the Dura Mater
by Erik Dalton, Ph.D.
Famous for their amazing ability to precisely
define complex anatomical structures, the early Greeks hit the nail
on its proverbial head when they labeled dura mater, the "tough
mother." Centuries later, massage therapists have come to understand
the important role dura mater plays in protecting the brain and
spinal cord. Interestingly enough many therapists are surprised
to learn that a variety of common neck, head and low-back complaints
actually originate from distortion of this sensitive membrane.
Dural torsioning, compression and impingement
often result in mysterious pain patterns that can mimic muscle spasm.
If the dural tube is both overstretched and twisted from myofascial
contractures, bony misalignment or spinal pathology, complex conditions
such as migraines, sciatica, thoracic outlet syndrome and scoliosis
can manifest. Sadly, these pain generators offer a major therapeutic
challenge to today's bodyworker who relies exclusively on conventional
myofascial modalities to help clients who present with these conditions.
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E
X P E R T A
D V I C E
by Charlotte Michael Versagi
Charlotte explain how to get started
in geriatric massage, and how to use paraffin.
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Pages
from History: The
Massage Chair
by Robert
Noah Calvert
David Palmer is the San Francisco
practitioner who created the world's first massage-specific chair,
the High-Touch Massage Chair, in 1986. I remember visiting the factory
in Santa Rosa, California, with David just a few months before its
debut to see the prototype. David was excited about how the chair
would revolutionize touch therapies, allowing anyone to get worked
on without taking off their clothes, and to receive a full-body
massage at nearly any location. His dreams have come true. Today
we find the massage chair being used wherever one's imagination
may take them.
Read the Full Article
R E
S E A R C H
Perineal
Massage May Reduce Third-Degree Tears, Labor Time
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A
Mission of Love
Earthwalk Takes Healing Touch to Children Around the Globe
by Lana Lensman
The volunteers of Earthwalk travel thousands of miles to
areas stricken with violence, crime and poverty, performing their
work amidst threats of terrorists and gunfire. Joining other missionaries,
they offer healing therapies to children living on the streets,
who come to food kitchens to eat. They travel to children's hospitals
helping the sick and to orphanages aiding the abandoned. In the
past nine years Earthwalk volunteers have reached out to more than
4,000 children throughout villages in Peru, Haiti and Russia.
They call their work a "mission
of love." Their objective is to love one child at a time, to
bring love to children throughout the world. It is not only about
the bodywork they perform; it is about touching children with compassion
and love.
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Research
Matters
by Janet Kahn, Ph.D.
Janet Kahn, Ph.D., shares what's happening in the area of massage
research and what the massage field can do for its advancement.
She discusses what might happen when connective tissue is stretched,
and research in this area that is pertinent to massage therapy.
Practice
Building: Solving
the C.E.U. Puzzle, Part One
by Sue Painter
How to Personalize Your Continuing Education Plan |
Body
& Spa: Color!
by Melinda Minton
Color is such a simple thing. We almost
take for granted the green of Spring, the orange glow of a sunset
or the magnificence of a rainbow - but color is much more than a
treat for our senses. In fact, many color therapists, and others
who incorporate color into healing, say that colors are actually
varying energetic frequencies that affect us on mental, emotional
and physical levels. Accordingly, the color of your sheets, the
color of your essential oils and the color modalities that you integrate
into your hands-on techniques or massage therapy sessions can all
have a profound effect upon clients.
Read the Full Article
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| Reader
Expression: What
calls you to massage? Readers
Respond |
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