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New Year, Same Pain.

January 6, 2011

New Years resolutions often include diet and exercise promises, goals and ultimatums. The promise to start running again or to dust off the home workout equipment turned coat rack is as common as the often forgotten pain that returns to those who make it through the first month back to exercise. While a good personal trainer is aware of clients muscular imbalances and trains for balance first, most do it yourselfers push themselves to attain their former glory in their chosen sport. Often these people just pick a time they want to make or a number of reps they think means something, without taking into consideration how long it has been since they were fit enough to achieve their goal. I always tell my clients that balance is the most important first step in increasing physical stress loads on the body. Most of the pain I am successful in resolving is based on treatment planned to balance antagonistic muscles and tissues around joints. Most of these situations begin with a client that was a [insert sport] enthusiast for years who is familiar and used to a specific ailment (ache or discomfort) that accompanies the activity. PEOPLE!! Pain is not a sign of success! Pain and chronic discomfort are signs that something is wrong! Most people accept an uncomfortable feeling until it is so debilitating that it affects every aspect of their life. While I can accept that “no discomfort, no gain” is true when increasing the challenges presented to a body in transition to a stronger place, Pain simply means “Stop”. This year, break the cycle that ultimately ends with you giving up again by getting a session from a bodyworker that specializes in assessment and structural work. When muscles are balanced around joints, the muscles move efficiently- the way they were designed to move, and with more power, less fatigue and more flexibility. Your therapist should be able to accurately tell you which stretches you need and what muscles to strengthen. Any strengthening you do after balancing work will be more effective and will instantly pay off in your sport of choice. Avoid hip replacements and herniated disks by taking unbalanced undue stress on your body. Get rid of foot and leg issues by balancing the lower leg muscles. It’s your body. Get to know it better before pounding and taxing it by taking a few sessions with a trained professional. You will get stronger faster and most importantly without injury!

Massage for Everyone! by Kiambu Dickerson

December 11, 2010
My interest in writing about massage comes from the desire to increase awareness of the power of hands on therapy. Many of my clients lived with pain for years, exhausting every recommended solution before finally finding a type of bodywork they previously never heard of. In order to illuminate the options for and benefits of massage to someone living with discomfort or pain, the topic must be brought to light and the information made accessible. Massage is a form of  hands on Bodywork akin to the soft tissue compliment to the western medical practices of  Chiropractic or Osteopathy. Among the list of practices, bodywork used to reverse the poor postural habits that contribute to most chronic back and neck pain is comparably inexpensive to surgery and monthly prescriptions that mask the symptoms without resolving the issue. Bodywork encompasses many 100% renewable and “green” ancient as well as modern sciences usually overlooked by a prescribed pharmaceutical led medical model. The so-called secrets of fine tuning an athlete’s body for better performance are well-known by experienced structural bodyworkers but unfortunately only those athletes in the know; from the weekend warrior to the top seeded elite reap the benefits. Creating a more integrated self through education and awareness is an issue at the forefront of alternative medicine and wellness practices with Acupuncture, Pilates and Yoga  leading the way in the media. In my ten years of experience i have found that bodywork can often fill the gaps left by our current medical model as well as compliment alternative practices.
Massage gets the spots that you feel are “stuck” in yoga and relieves over worked gym muscles. Good structural bodywork helps us achieve physical balance and symmetry in a world that lends itself to entropy via gravity’s constant pull. Rehabilitation can be sped up through specialized scar tissue mobilization techniques and some surgeries have been completely averted through proper assessment and treatment.
Bodywork can be used to help almost anyone reverse their postural “bad” habits formed by repetitive motion and Long periods of immobility eg; sitting at a desk typing and using a mouse five days a week.
Though not everything can be resolved by musculoskeletal manipulation, the most common pains and aches as well as many idiopathic ones that doctors (although we need and trust them) simply don’t have the time or training to cure lie in the soft tissues.
Physical therapists and even most occupational therapists, Osteopaths and Chiropractors are more holistic western medicine practitioners often referred to pre and post surgery patient in pain. Any good therapist utilizes a wide referral base of health care professionals to assist with providing their clients the most appropriate therapy available. I receive referred patients of Orthopedic surgeons and Osteopaths, Chiropractors and even other bodyworkers. I likewise refer out to the appropriate specialist when I am unable to help. Bodywork must be considered in the time of the unaffordable health care crisis that is often a topic of debate throughout America.
With health and wellness on everyone’s mind nowadays, massage is an under utilized tool due not to lack of success rather lack of knowledge. Massage is written about in smatterings here and there but not in an in-depth way that highlights all the uses of hands on therapies and makes them accessible to the reader. I would like to help enlighten the masses and do my part to usher in a more holistic and all encompassing medical future in a world looking for better more appropriate answers to the same old questions underserved by outdated “modern” medicine.
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