Massage & Bodywork

November/December 2011

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Q & ART Here's a passage from one of my favorite anatomy teachers, Gil Hedley, that reinforces what I've heard from every medical and anatomy expert I've checked with regarding the safety of working distally: "From an anatomical perspective, you can do damage in any direction with bad work, and you can do good in any direction with appropriate contact. If you are a machine programmed to touch, like one of those massage chairs, that might be a case where it would be best to set the program in a particular direction, as the power to discriminate is absent. But in a conscious practitioner, working with a generally healthy client, the direction that's best to work in is the direction that gets results."1 Although there are, indeed, many reasons for working in a proximal direction, there are many other benefits when it comes to not limiting yourself with hard and fast rules. It's really pretty simple: I often get excellent results working distally. Most of the problems that our clients present with are a result of short and tight muscles that cause pain or prevent proper movement. It just doesn't make sense to bunch these muscles by always pushing them into further shortening. Especially for deep work, it just plain feels better to work in a distal direction. Here are some of the advantages of thoughtful, distal stroke direction: • Since most muscles attach proximally in order to exert force proximally, working distally lengthens short muscle fibers and fascia for lasting relief from contraction which limits joint function and causes discomfort. • It frees and lengthens nerves that have shortened along with the muscles. • It decompresses joints and releases tight ligaments for better osseous function. • Possibly the most important benefit is that working distally helps train our clients to override protective holding and reprograms movement patterns as they release in the direction of lengthening and relaxation. Both practitioners and clients love this technique because it lengthens the entire leg and decompresses the hip. Very little effort is used to sink deeply into the hamstrings by leaning with your body weight (it also works fine for quadriceps and the iliotibial band). After sinking, all the energy is directed by pushing off the right leg in a distal direction, while the left hand applies force downstream at the ankle or lower leg. This affords a great stretch all the way down from the quadratus lumborum to the ankle, while decompressing the hip, knee, and ankle. So, by all means, continue working proximally with clear goals, but rest assured that you can also safely work in the opposite direction to achieve additional benefits. As with all of our work, the key to effective therapy— and the fun of creative thinking—is to let the needs of our clients dictate our therapeutic practice. School of Massage and is the author of Deep Tissue Massage: A Visual Guide to Techniques (North Atlantic Books, 2007), which has been translated into seven languages, and the seven-volume DVD series Deep Tissue Massage and Myofascial Release: A Video Guide to Techniques. Visit his website at www. deeptissuemassagemanual.com. Art Riggs teaches at the San Francisco NOTE 1 Gil Hedley presented the most exciting anatomy class I've ever experienced, and I highly recommend his teaching and DVDs. Check out www.gilhedley.com. Extending the arm above the head while lengthening the triceps away from its origin can provide decompression of the shoulder, as well as free abduction. If joint mobility is limited, you can support the arm with a pillow. tune in to your practice at ABMPtv 33

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