The Benefits of Frequent Massage and Bodywork
Help Yourself to Health
What exactly are the benefits of receiving massage or bodywork treatments?
Useful for all of the conditions listed below and more, massage can:
• Alleviate low-back pain and improve range of motion.
• Assist with shorter, easier labor for expectant mothers and shorten maternity hospital stays.
• Ease medication dependence.
• Enhance immunity by stimulating lymph flow—the body’s natural defense system.
• Exercise and stretch weak, tight, or atrophied muscles.
• Help athletes of any level prepare for, and recover from, strenuous workouts.
• Improve the condition of the body’s largest organ—the skin.
• Increase joint flexibility.
• Lessen depression and anxiety.
• Promote tissue regeneration, reducing scar tissue and stretch marks.
• Pump oxygen and nutrients into tissues and vital organs, improving circulation.
• Reduce postsurgery adhesions and swelling.
• Reduce spasms and cramping.
• Relax and soften injured, tired, and overused muscles.
• Release endorphins—amino acids that work as the body’s natural painkiller.
• Relieve migraine pain.
A Powerful Ally
There’s no denying the power of bodywork.
Regardless of the adjectives we assign to it
(pampering, rejuvenating, therapeutic) or the
reasons we seek it out (a luxurious treat, stress
relief, pain management), massage therapy can be
a powerful ally in your healthcare regimen.
The incredible benefits of massage are doubly
powerful if taken in regular “doses.” Professionals
at the Touch Research Institute at the University
of Miami explain the more massage you get, the
greater benefits you reap.
Here’s why:
Experts estimate that upwards of ninety
percent of disease is stress related. And perhaps
nothing ages us faster, internally and externally,
than high stress. While eliminating anxiety and
pressure altogether in this fast-paced world may
be idealistic, massage can, without a doubt, help
manage stress. This translates into:
• Decreased anxiety.
• Enhanced sleep quality.
• Greater energy.
• Improved concentration.
• Increased circulation.
• Reduced fatigue.
Furthermore, clients often report a sense of
perspective and clarity after receiving a massage.
The emotional balance bodywork provides can
often be just as vital and valuable as the more
tangible physical benefits.
Profound Effects
In response to massage, specific physiological
and chemical changes cascade throughout the
body, with profound effects.
Research shows that
with massage:
• Arthritis sufferers note fewer aches and less
stiffness and pain.
• Asthmatic children show better pulmonary
function and increased peak air flow.
• Burn injury patients report reduced pain,
itching, and anxiety.
• High blood pressure patients demonstrate
lower diastolic blood pressure, anxiety, and
stress hormones.
• Premenstrual syndrome sufferers have
decreased water retention and cramping.
• Preterm infants have improved weight gain.
Research continues to show the enormous
benefits of touch—which range from treating
chronic diseases, neurological disorders, and
injuries, to alleviating the tensions of modern
lifestyles. Consequently, the medical community
is actively embracing bodywork, and massage is
becoming an integral part of hospice care and
neonatal intensive care units. Many hospitals are
also incorporating on-site massage practitioners
and even spas to treat postsurgery or pain
patients as part of the recovery process.
Increase the Benefits with Frequent Visits
Here’s the beauty of bodywork: its benefits are
compounded when massage is utilized as
a frequent therapy. The more you get, the more
it does.
Taking part in this form of regularly-scheduled
self-care can play a huge part in how healthy
you’ll be and how youthful you’ll remain with
each passing year. Budgeting time and money
for bodywork at consistent intervals is truly an
investment in your health. And remember: just
because massage feels like a pampering treat
doesn’t mean it is any less therapeutic. Consider
massage appointments a necessary piece of your
health and wellness plan, and work with your
practitioner to establish a treatment schedule that
best meets your needs.