Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anxiety. Show all posts

Friday, July 24, 2015

Massage for Health and Wellbeing

How Can a Massage Help My Health and Wellbeing? 

Aside from the fact that it’s a completely decadent and relaxing way to spend an hour, getting a massage is actually good for your health. When you take the time to book regular massages, you are taking the time to care for your body and your wellbeing. There are numerous positive side effects to massage that affect your entire physical being.

What Does Massage Therapy Help?
Massages are great for those who suffer from ailments that cause you to feel less than perfect. In fact, you might be surprised to know that it assists those who suffer from frequent headaches, sciatica, sore muscles, tension, mild anxiety, and even back pain.
It is great for those women who are expecting a child and experiencing a great deal of bodily strain. It’s great for those who are suffering from depression and other forms of illness that affect their mood and happiness. It helps to ease discomfort, improve your mood, and make you feel like an entirely new person.

The Benefits of Massage Therapy
Massage therapy is ripe with benefits. Not only can it help to improve your circulation, it can also help to lower or ease your stress. Stress is one of the most common health issues you can suffer from. It can cause a myriad of other health issues, and eliminating it through massage is a great way to help you feel healthy and strong. Additionally, it can help you ease muscle pain and relax. This can help with injury and recovery from injury.

Common Types of Massage Therapy
While there are probably hundreds of different therapy types you can choose from – just look at any spa menu and see for yourself – there are a few that are common most everywhere you go. These forms of massage include the Swedish massage that uses deep circular motions and vibration to relax your body, deep tissue massages that use slow movement and deep targeting to help with injury, and sports massages that are used to treat and prevent injury from participating in sports or sports related activities.

Tip:

Before you book your appointment, make sure your massage therapist is certified or licensed in your state and associated with the Associated Bodywork and Massage Professionals (ABMP) or the American Massage Therapists Association (AMTA). 



Remember, only receive massage therapy when you are well. 


If you don't feel well, reschedule your massage and consult a doctor. 


Roy is a New York State Licensed Massage Therapist and has worked in high end spa’s as well as rehabilitation centers. He is well known for his Relaxing Massage as well as his skill in Medical Massage and Sports Massage.To schedule your next appointment, contact Roy at 
631-375-0962 or email at

#anxiety  #backpain  #depression  #headaches  #sciatica  #stress  #tension  #wellbeing  #circulation 

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Your Immune System May Knead Massage Therapy


Finally - a reason to treat yourself to a massage, guilt-free. As massage therapy goes main-stream, medical researchers are uncovering more and more health benefits to lying down on the table. Because of these compelling benefits, it is time to consider massage therapy not as a luxury indulgence but as a form of medical treatment.

The benefits of massage are immediately obvious to anyone who's had one. A massage session calms you down, eases your anxieties, and even helps you sleep at night. Now a study, funded by the government's National Center for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine, finds that those sessions may help you ward off diseases, too.

 For a study published in the Journal of Complimentary and Alternative Medicine, the authors recruited 53 healthy adults between the ages of 18 and 45 and divided them into two groups: one that received a traditional Swedish massage, and another that received a session of light touch meant to simulate a massage but without any actual massage-therapy techniques. The Swedish massages were all performed by certified massage therapists to ensure uniformity. Each participant had an IV inserted into one arm for the duration of the massage and for a few hours afterward. Blood was drawn at various intervals to measure levels of various hormones and immune-system markers.

The authors were working under the theory that massage increases the body's levels of oxytocin, or "the love hormone," which helps regulate levels of hormones related to stress. They found that that wasn't the case. People receiving the "light touch" treatment actually experienced higher levels of oxytocin than the massage recipients. But unlike the light-touch group, the massage recipients saw significant decreases in stress hormones and increases in the body's production of various cells that boost immune-system response.

A single massage could help boost your immune system and help you better cope with stress, even if you're not sick or stressed out. "I'm really intrigued by our findings," says Mark Hyman Rapaport, M.D., professor and chairman of the department of psychiatry and behavioral neurosciences at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, who adds that he was an "incredible skeptic" about the benefits of massage therapy before doing this study. "I always wondered, what does it do that so many people claim to feel better afterwards?" he says. "We're finding that biological changes do occur as a result of even a single session of massage, and that these changes may benefit even a healthy individual."

While it may be enough for most people to know that getting a massage makes them feel better, regardless of what the biological effects are, Dr. Rapaport says that his findings could help advance the use of massage therapy in traditional medicine, which would be good news for people looking for more options to treat their medical complaints. "Based on data that have come out of a number of the surveys, a majority of Americans would rather go to an alternative practitioner than a physician and would prefer to have an alternative to traditional care," he says. The few studies on massage therapy that have been done have focused on specific complaints, such as back pain or anxiety, he says, but his research suggests that the therapy could be beneficial to people suffering from a wider range of immune-system disorders.


Remember, only receive massage therapy when you are well. 
If you don't feel well, reschedule your massage and consult a doctor.

Roy is a New York State Licensed Massage Therapist and has worked in high end spa’s as well as rehabilitation centers. He is well known for his Relaxing Massage as well as his skill in Medical Massage and Sports Massage.

Contact Roy at 631-375-0962 or email at roy@wavecrestmassage.com to schedule your next appointmenthttps://www.facebook.com/wavecrestmassage



#immunesystem  #massage  #anxiety  #alternativemedicine  #disease  #swedishmassage  #oxytocin  #lovehormone  #immunesystemdisorder