logo
flag   
Responsive Navigation
Keyword Search: in
Using your body effectively in massage
View article disclaimer and terms
Tags: hands free massage, forearm and elbow massage, strain free massage, swedish massage, effective elbow and wrist massage

This article has been viewed 4570 times.
Ask us a Question
Name
Email Address
Comments
Code ^

Most massage traditions don’t just use their hands for massage. The forearm is used in Hawaiian massage and many parts of Eastern Europe. The knees and feet are used in many Asian floor massages.

However Swedish massage and its derivatives have relied solely on the hands, with the potential for overuse and strain. Practitioners with long, slender and/or hyper-mobile digits (especially thumbs), those with slender/flexible wrists, and those whose clientele require a firm massage need to be particularly watchful about this.

Using the forearm and elbow 

‘Hands Free’ Massage has developed recently in western massage - using the forearm and elbow to deliver Swedish massage-style strokes, deep tissue techniques and mobilising stretches in massage sessions. There are two immediate benefits for massage practitioners - reducing strain on your hands while increasing your effectiveness in applying pressure (where appropriate). In the long-term, this can help practitioners to sustain their careers

Three main areas are commonly used:

The soft forearm (the bellies of the flexor muscles on the inner forearm) for broad sweeping strokes;

The hard forearm (the ulna) for firmer sweeping and pressure strokes;

And the elbow for very specific pressure.

The forearm can also be used as a substitute for the hands in many stretches and mobilising techniques.

Using your body

It’s also important to learn to use your body appropriately to support these tools - in the same way that you need to use your body to deliver power, fluidity and evenness to the work of your hands in ‘ordinary’ massage. However, there are two extra elements when doing ‘Hands Free’ massage on an ordinary height massage table:

Widening your stance and bending your knees more because you are need to get lower to the table than when using your hands;

And moving more in order to follow the client’s body contours with your forearm by ‘tilting’ it.

Working with sensitivity 

Using these tools in a massage session needs to be preceded by lighter strokes to prepare the tissues. Because of the power that can be delivered through these massage ‘tools’ with significantly less effort than using your hands, it’s easy at first to overdo the pressure (often without realising because of the ease of delivery). 

So it’s important to learn to use them skillfully and with sensitively - the deeper the massage the more carefully one needs to work to avoid brutalising clients. The elbow, in particular, has unfortunately developed a poor reputation among massage clients because of its use in a ‘gung-ho’ way - instead of in a controlled way, monitoring and adapting to the client’s responses.




By Darien Pritchard
All rights reserved. Any reproducing of this article must have the author name and all the links intact.

Author:

Biography: Darien Pritchard has over thirty years experience as a bodyworker, including twenty five of training massage professionals and twenty of teaching CPD courses for qualified practitioners. He has pioneered a focus on the practitioner's bodyuse as an integral part of massage training in the UK, including developing and promoting 'Hands Free' massage (the skillful use of the forearm and elbow to save the practitioner's hands. He co-authored a student textbook on Anatomy, Physiology and Pathology for Massage, and wrote the career-maintenance book on Dynamic Bodyuse for Effective, Strain-Free massage.

ALSO VIEW OUR
Training Courses
Total : (21)
   Title
Sort by Title A-Z
Sort by Title Z-A
Articles
(Total : 4)
  Title
Sort by Title A-Z
Sort by Title Z-A
Dynamic Bodyuse for Massage Practitioners
Freeing The Shoulders, A Common Area of Tension
Indian Head Massage - Don't understimate it!
Using Essential Oils in Pregnancy and Childbirth


Contact Form

Please use this form to contact Darien Pritchard
** This form is intended for those with genuine enquiries/questions.
 

Name
Company (if any)
Comments
Email
Phone
  To avoid misuse and spamming, please enter the verification code, shown below, to send your message. Thank you
 
if you can't read the image text to load another one.
Enter Code
 

Disclaimer and Terms. This article is the opinion of the author. WorldwideHealth.com makes no claims regarding this information. WorldwideHealth.com recommends that all medical conditions should be treated by a physician competent in treating that particular condition. WorldwideHealth.com takes no responsibility for customers choosing to treat themselves. Your use of this information is at your own risk. Your use of this information is governed by WWH terms and conditions.