By Karrie Osborn
This article is from the Summer 2013 issue of Body Sense magazine.
Whether it is an aching back, recovery from an injury, a case of carpal tunnel syndrome, or a host of other debilitating physiological conditions, there’s no doubt massage and bodywork works to relieve pain. But once your therapist has helped you tackle your pain, do you quit calling? When the pain is gone, are you gone, too?
Massage therapy is highly effective for pain relief, but it is an amazing preventive therapy as well. Massage helps build and maintain a healthy body (and mind), it combats stress, and it works to keep the immune system strong. In short, massage can keep on working for you, even after the pain is gone.
Massage for wellness
If it’s been a while since you booked your last massage—because your pain is no longer an issue or your injury is fully rehabbed—you might want to consider massage for preventive care.
Massage can play an important role in a good health-care regimen. Just as you eat healthily, exercise regularly, and take your vitamins to ward off illness and maintain a fit body, you should consider making frequent massage a part of your wellness lifestyle.
According to Benny Vaughn, a sports massage expert in Fort Worth, Texas, one of the benefits of consistent and regular massage therapy is better flexibility. “This happens because regular and structured touch stimulus enhances the nervous system’s sensory and spatial processing capacity,” he says. “That is, the person becomes more aware of her body’s movement in space and becomes more aware of tightness or pain long before it reaches a critical point of mechanical dysfunction.”
As a preventive measure, frequent massage puts you more in tune with your body. “The consistency of massage therapy over time creates a cumulative stress-reduction effect,” Vaughn says. “The person becomes acutely aware of stress within her body long before it can create stress-driven damage.”
And the more massage you receive, the more benefits you reap. “Massage therapists know that people who get massage regularly demonstrate greater improvement and notice a reduction in pain and muscular tension, as well as an improvement in posture,” says Anne Williams, author of Massage Mastery: From Student to Professional (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2012).
“People regularly make a commitment to fitness,” Williams says. “People regularly make a commitment to changing their diet. The difference they’d experience if they regularly made a commitment to massage is mind-blowing.”
Stress is a Killer
Stress is more than just a word we throw around to describe the nature of our hectic day. Today, we understand that stress kills.
According to the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine, 60–90 percent of all US medical visits are for stress-related disorders. Chronic pain, headaches, heart disease, hypertension, and ulcers can all be wrought from stress. Many would argue that the best benefit of massage is its ability to reduce the stress in our lives.
From the perspective of daily living, think about the stress you felt at today’s meeting—now it’s hiding in your neck. Tomorrow that can turn into stiffness and eventually begin to affect other parts of your body. If you see your massage therapist for your regular session this week, the chances are good you won’t reach the tipping point. Think of massage and bodywork as a way to rebalance your body.
Noted researcher Tiffany Field and her colleagues from the Touch Research Institute at the University of Miami School of Medicine report that massage causes positive biological changes when it comes to stress. Through the course of more than 20 studies, these scientists found that massage decreases cortisol (a stress-derived hormone that negatively affects immune function and kills our immune cells) and increases dopamine and serotonin (the neurotransmitters most associated with emotional well-being).
Add to this the research that shows massage can lower your heart rate and decrease your blood pressure, and you have a mighty effective, nonpharmacological, stress-fighting tool that’s about as natural as natural can get.
A One-Hour Vacation and So Much More
You may no longer need to rehab that knee or work the scar tissue from your surgery, but don’t forget about everything else massage can do for you. Massage is the entire package, helping to heal body, mind, and spirit. Think of it as a one-hour vacation with amazing return on investment.
Whether it be maintaining joint flexibility, managing blood pressure, or enhancing immunity, massage works. From repair to relief and from recovery to relaxation, massage is a magnificent piece of natural medicine you should always have as part of your health-care routine.
Karrie Osborn is senior editor for Body Sense. Contact her at karrie@abmp.com.