TSTM Blog syndicate

Archives - January 2012

January 30, 2012

Believe!!

 

Failures are made only by those who fail to dare, not by those who dare to fail.
~Lester B. Pearson

 

Stay true to your dreams. Stay true to yourself!!

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/30/12, 08:46 AM

January 28, 2012

TSTM Graduate Spotlight: Cyndee Good

 

 

Hi, my name is Cyndee Good. I graduated TSTM in April 2011, certified in Deep Tissue, Stone Therapy, and Myofasical Release. I'd like to share some encouraging news with all previous graduates and potential graduates. IT CAN BE DONE, YOUR DREAMS CAN COME TRUE, YOU CAN WORK YOUR PASSION! However, persistence, determination, a will to succeed, patience, and flexibility need to be graceful mingled within it all.
 
After graduation, I did some out calls for friends and also worked for a local massage establishment. They were great people, but they knew my passion and dream was to be on my own, so when opportunity came to me, although I was nervous and excited at the same time - I walked it out! I tweaked my business ideal, and opened my own place the day after Thanksgiving 2011. It is soaring, the perfect place for me, and clients are talking about me everywhere.
 
The lessons I learned, not just the anatomy and physiology aspect, have come in very handy and used all the time. Granted they were "make believe" but you can take it with you in the real world as well.
 
Everyone says there will come a day I have to expand and asks what will I do. Honestly, I don't know yet, I have some thoughts but until then, I am living in the now. In the very near future, I plan to expand my certifications to sports massage, craniosacral, prenatal, and cancer. These seem to have need in this area.
 
CARing Hands Therapeutic Massage is located inside Olympia Athletic Club in Maryville, TN - clients do NOT have to be members to be clients, plus if not members there are added benefits at no extra charge. You can find me on the web at www.caringhandstm.massageplanet.com , facebook http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/CARing-Hands-Therapeutic-Massage/178610938841917 , google places http://g.co/maps/ffje or email me at cyndee.caringhands@gmail.com for more information!
 
Blessings as you seek your dream!
You too can make your dreams come true. We are now enrolling in our March Day and Evening Massage Therapy Classes. Call 865-588-2324 for more information or download a Student Information Packet.

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/28/12, 03:38 PM

January 25, 2012

Cinderella Tissue

 

What is the most plentiful tissue in the body -- and the most ignored?

The answer is fascia -- the gooey, gliding stuff that holds you together. Fascia is a broad term for the extracellular matrix of fibers, "glue" and water surrounding all your cells, and wrapping like plastic wrap around muscle fibers and muscles, organs, bones, blood vessels and nerves -- and finally as a second skin around your entire body.

"Fascia is like the Cinderella tissues of the body," says Tom Myers, a leading thinker in integrative anatomy and author of Anatomy Trains. "It has been the most ignored of all the tissues in the body -- at least up until recently. Yet, fascia is critical to understanding the body and what it takes to keep your body functional and healthy all life long."

In recent years, the interest in fascia has surged. In 2007, fascial researchers and practitioners banded together to initiate the biennial Fascia Research Congress, where researchers and health practitioners can share new discoveries. (The Fascia Research Congress 2012 will be held in Vancouver in March.)

Understanding the elusive Cinderella tissues offers an important glimpse into important, yet not widely known, aspects of bodily health and function. Here are four fascinating facts about fascia:

1. All You Learned About "Muscles" Is Wrong

A primary lesson emerging from new research into fascia is that all we learned about muscles is wrong.

"That illustration in your doctor's office of the red-muscled human body is a body with its fascia cut away," says Myers. "It's not what you look like inside, but it's a lot neater and easier to study. And, it's the way doctors have been taught to look at you."

We commonly speak about the musculoskeletal system, and the muscles attached to the bones of the body. But according to Myers, muscles in fact don't attach to bones. Fascia does.

"Muscle is like hamburger; it can't attach to a bone," says Myers. "There's fascia going around and through the muscle. And when the muscle runs out, that fascia from the outside and the middle of the muscle spins into a tendon, just like yarn."

It may be useful for our thinking mind to dissect the body in to some 600 muscles and their tendon attachments to bones. However, the body doesn't think in terms of 600 individual muscles.

"Your brain does not think in terms of biceps and deltoids," says Myers. "There is one muscle that exists in 600 fascial pockets. Ultimately, the brain creates movement in terms of large fascial networks and individual motor units, not our named muscles."

2. Much More Than a Wrapping Material

Fascia is not just a passive wrapping material, but a live, biological fabric, which directs the traffic of forces around the body, and responds and remodels itself as forces change.

Some researchers, like Helene Langevin of the University of Vermont, suggest that the connective tissue network may function as a whole body communications system, which influence the function of all other physiological systems.

How exactly such a whole body network would be communicating within itself is as yet unknown, and there may be several pathways. Langevin has developed evidence, for example, that the fascial network may correspond to the network of acupuncture points and meridians. In this framework, acupuncture needles produce cellular changes that propagate along connective tissue planes.

A similar effect is created by the stretching of the connective tissue created by yoga poses or externally applied stretch and pressure during bodywork and massage.

3. Redefining Chronic Pain

In its healthy state, the fascial network stretches and moves without restriction. However, age, injuries, repetitive stress, poor postural habits and even emotional trauma can cause fascia to lose its flexibility and become tight and restricted.

This helps stabilize the body in the short term, but unfortunately, it also locks you into a chronic strain pattern that can be hard to correct. Think of it like wearing a thin silk suit. If you pull on one part of the suit, the tension patterns will show up throughout.

Fascial strain patterns translate through the entire body, and affect the structural network of the entire body. They may lie at the root of chronic pain issues like migraine headaches, chronic back pain, or fibromyalgia, or other pesky pain problems that just won't go away.

For this reason, bodywork techniques focusing directly on the fascia, such as Rolfing and myofasical release therapy, can sometimes stimulate tremendous physical and/or emotional release where other modalities come up short.

4. A New Understanding of Fitness

While we usually think in terms of fitness as strong muscles and cardiovascular endurance, we ignore fascia at our own peril. Having an integrated and well-trained fascial network is important not just for anyone engaged in sports, but for anyone wishing to retain a healthy and functional body throughout life.

When you train the body, the fascia is trained as well. However, it may not be the way you would want to train it. If your fitness routine involves mainly machines, you will not end up with a fascial network that is as strong, versatile and capable as you'd like, but rather a one-dimensional network that may respond less efficiently to challenges.

"Exercise machines are great for building individual muscles and terrible for training your fascia, because they train the fascia in one particular direction, one particular vector," says Myers. "You end up training fascia, which is not prepared for life, because life doesn't come at you right straight down the same vectors that the machines do."

In terms of training, Myers says, favor movement forms that involve a lot of variety in direction and load, which builds versatile balance and stability into your body. Yoga asanas are particularly useful for stretching the long chains of fasica in numerous directions ways, offering the kind of system-wide engagement it needs. Training too hard or repeating the same routine without variation can lead to fascial adhesions or injury.

 

Reference: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eva-norlyk-smith-phd/fascia_b_1207768.html

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/25/12, 11:42 AM

January 09, 2012

TSTM selected as the Best Massage School in Knoxville for 2011

 

The Tennessee School of Therapeutic Massage has been selected by the U.S. Commerce Association as the 2011 Best of Knoxville Award in the Public Colleges & Universities category.

“We are excited to have been selected as the Best Therapeutic Massage School in Knoxville for 2011,” said Adam Brown, president of Tennessee School of Therapeutic Massage. “This reflects our hard work and what we have to offer the community.”

The USCA “Best of Local Business” Award Program recognizes outstanding local businesses throughout the country.

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/09/12, 04:01 PM

January 03, 2012

Study Somatics to Become a Better Massage Therapist

 

Study Somatics to Become a Better Massage Therapist

I was reading an interesting article today in Massage Magazine about how to become a better massage therapist by studying and practicing somatics. So what exactly is “somatics?” According to The Free Dictionary (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/somatic), somatics is of, relating to, or affecting the body, especially as distinguished from a body part, the mind, or the environment; corporeal or physical.

 
To become a better therapist, one is supposed to work on the following 6 essential tools of self disovery:
  • presence

  • integrity

  • unbiased perception

  • contact

  • commitment

  • technique

Disciplines that stimulate embodied awareness such as vipassan meditation, conscious movement, Japanese martial art aikido, hands-on bodywork, Reichian breathwork and Gestalt are all examples given by the article.

Somatics teaches that high-quality body/mind function and awareness are central to the development and maintenance of psychological and physical integrity and well-being. It focuses on the connection between physical phenomena occurring in the body, cognition and human capacity. Many people are caught in mental habits of reaction, avoidance and belief, and physical habits of stress, fatigue and insensibility. The somatic process creates a more centered individual by working on conscious awareness and teaching the difference between thinking and sensation, seeing and imagining, self-consciousness and instinctive responsiveness.

Somatics Exercises to Try Now:

 

  • What does it feel like to live in your body right now?

  • Do you feel pain or discomfort anywhere?

  • Are you breathing fully?

  • Is your chest expanded or contracted?

  • Is your tongue relaxed or pressed against the inside of your mouth?

  • Does one arm swing more easily than the other?

  • Does your mind wander?

  • Notice the sensation of walking.... Are your feet turned in, out, or straight?

  • Is your stride short or long?

  • Is your lower back arched out or tucked under?

  • Try walking like a duck with feet turned out, then like a pigeon with feet turned in. Notice how the position of the feet affects the body.

 

Once you as a therapist are comfortable inside your body, the mind can quiet making it possible to be more present during each session.

 

Michelle Accola

Student Massage Therapist

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/03/12, 09:59 PM

January 02, 2012

TSTM Wins Award!!


2011 Best of Knoxville Award in the Public Colleges & Universities category by the US Commerce Association (USCA)!!

Posted by Lorie Warren - 01/02/12, 03:09 PM