Are you ready yet?

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - June 25th, 2011

I can’t tell you how many of my clients come to me at the point of absolute frustration with their health concerns. But admittedly I wonder why it takes them so long. Didn’t they feel the pain? How long was long enough to suffer? Why now? Why Me? Needless to say I ask them quite often and here is a synopsis of their responses.
“I didn’t want to be a baby about it” or “Its just a nagging pain” How long does it take to get tired of being sick or in pain? I thoroughly understand the not wanting to be a baby about it. If we were, we would be running to the Hospital for every little scratch. So we tuff it out. It’s time to get help
“I thought it would go away” is the lead answer to the question “didn’t they feel the pain?” The path to my table is often the same. It starts with something like a little pain showing up. Their physician diagnosis the problem and prescribes an Rx, or two,.. or three. Sometimes it goes away but in the ones that end up on my table it doesn’t. X-rays, MRI and CAT scans OH MY! The problem gets worse the bill gets larger and your not getting better.
“I’m at the end of my rope with this!” Is the conglomeration of responses to “why now?” After deciding to get care, exploring parts of the medical system they never wanted to know about. Spending thousands of dollars out of pocket and healthcare, and finally being told there is nothing they can do (I love this quote) “you’ll just have to live with it”. Better yet,.. the only response from day one, is surgery. You find your way to my table. You’ve been patient and now you’re ready to get better!
95% of my clients go away from the first session feeling better. Are they cured? I don’t cure!. My work supports the normal function of the human body and it works at its own pace! Its not an overnight success story either. It took you a long time to get where you are. It will take effort and time on both our parts to get you to a healthy place with your body. The biggest difference is that you start feeling stronger and healthier from the git go. Body Balancing does have some side effects, namely relaxation and lower stress levels. IF you can deal with those side effects than I can probably help you.
In the mean time, Stand up straight, take a deep breath, another glass of water and get a massage. The life you improve will be your own.


Maintain your equipment

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - June 22nd, 2011

Anybody that works with machinery of any kind will tell you any tool is only as good as its maintenance. Those that do physical Labor need massage therapy as much as the white collar professional. So it is with our creations as it is with us. These are two different reasons for the same maintenance.
Craftsmen are the epitome of the body in motion. They take from the learned activities and establish patterns of use and expertise in the creation of a product. Whether they are rounding up steer, creating a piece of furniture or even a stylish haircut they establish working patterns of muscular development. The body remembers these patterns and they become practice and effortless. Enter Stress! Stress in the craftsman can be burnt as energy, but can constrict and injure musculature like an irritating toxin. This is where repetitive injuries can establish. Massage therapy can flush and relax developed patterns of musculature so like oiling a car they run smooth and fluid.
Professionals do not necessarily always enjoy the benefit of the motion the human body demands. Yet they are no less in need of the flushing effects of massage therapy. High stress positions are the norm in today’s society. Easily 80% of us spend too much time in the classic “desk posture.” This static posture does not allow the musculature to move thus flushing or burning off the stress of deadlines and workload. This build up of stress in the human body slows mental function like sludgy oil does to a car. Studies show that mental effort improves 30% even after a short 15 minute chair massage. Those under regular deadlines are wise and healthier when they get regular massage work. It reduces stress held in the body and improves attitude.
So, stand up straight, take a deep breath, another glass of water and get a massage. Your equipment demands it!


Maintain your (you) equipment

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - May 5th, 2011

Anybody that works with machinery of any kind will tell you any tool is only as good as its maintenance. Those that do physical Labor need massage therapy as much as the white collar professional. So it is with our creations as it is with us. These are two different reasons for the same maintenance.

Craftsmen are the epitome of the body in motion. They take from the learned activities and establish patterns of use and expertise in the creation of a product. Whether they are rounding up steer, creating a piece of furniture or even a stylish haircut they establish working patterns of muscular development. The body remembers these patterns and they become practice and effortless. Enter Stress! Stress in the craftsman can be burnt as energy, but can constrict and injure musculature like an irritating toxin. This is where repetitive injuries can establish. Massage therapy can flush and relax developed patterns of musculature so like oiling a car they run smooth and fluid.

Professionals do not necessarily always enjoy the benefit of the motion the human body demands. Yet they are no less in need of the flushing effects of massage therapy. High stress positions that are the norm in today’s society. Easily 80% of us spend too much time in the classic “desk posture.” This static posture does not allow the musculature to move thus flushing or burning off the stress of deadlines and workload. This build up of stress in the human body slows mental function like sludgy oil does to a car. Studies show that mental effort improves 30% even after a short 15 minute chair massage. Those under regular deadlines are wise and healthier when they get regular massage work. It reduces stress held in the body and improves attitude.

So, stand up straight, take a deep breath, another glass of water and get a massage. Your equipment demands it


Pain: real, blocking and fear

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - April 17th, 2011

Pain is part of the experience of life. It must be felt and let go or it will linger forever. Easy statement to make when you’re not in pain right?! But easy or not its on the mark. Pain is not some esoteric concept for anatomical discussion. It can be crippling at a number of levels. WE do our best at blocking pain but holding it in only delays its release. Above all the worst thing is the fear of the pain itself. But what is “real pain?”

Real pain, is defined as: “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage. But not all pain is associated with “actual” tissue damage. Pain can linger long after (and often does) the actual tissue damage. Current scientific research says that there are no “specific” pain receptors as has been accepted in the scientific community. It is more a matter of intensity than type. Which may explain why gentle stroking of skin can block pain temporarily?

It is a handy skill that the human mind can block pain when necessary. It helps us get a job done when our muscles are sore. But it still has to be “felt” to be released and unreleased pain can and does alter body posture, habits and health.  In my experience the best pain relief comes from a strong mind, will and exercise. Drugs often take away our minds ability to focus and leave us adrift in a sea of pain after they wear off.

“At times the fear of a thing is worse than the thing itself.” In my practice I have often relieved painful adaptations for my clients. Only to have them get off the table and reestablish the old pattern before the new pattern can take old. They did this out of a very real fear of the crippling, mind numbing pain they came to see me to get rid of. When you are scared of pain, you hold your breath and tense up. Often times the old pain patterns are held in place or reestablished by holding the breath ie holding the pain. The best technique with pain is to breathe deep and relax. Relaxing opens the gates for a whole new set of stimulations to overpopulate the nerve signals with good stimuli rather than painful stimuli.

A great way to relax and break the pain cycle is massage therapy, specifically Body Balancing. Releasing the tissue is not enough. The body should be retrained with the natural breath cycle. Inflicting friction or muscle techniques on a body is really no different of a mentality than that of Rx. The breath is part of a cycle of measuring recovery and adjustment inherent in the body. Balancing the body with the breath makes all the difference physically, mentally and emotionally in the world.

So, stand up straight, take a deep breath, an extra glass of water, and get a massage. Specifically one that reintegrates the body and allows it to relax the pain away.


Relax and heal by meditating

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - April 14th, 2011

Your Body heals from a point of relaxation. And that’s a fact jack! There any number of ways to relax and heal. Massage being a personal favorite. But there comes a point where you must take control of your health yourself. You simply cannot run on adrenaline day in and day out without burning out. Meditation is not a religious or airy fairy mystical thing belonging to the New Age Fruitcakes. Meditation has very real benefits that can not only improve the quantity of your life but the quality of it as well. The most beneficial things for your health are cheap and easy to do and this qualifies under both. Lets take a look at meditation mistaken association with the mystical.
First of all Meditation is not just a mystical or religious thing. Meditation can be as simple and short as closing your eyes for a second, or as complicated as you want to make it. Yes, much of the history of meditation has been through yogi’s (not bear), mystics and priests. But the reality of it is that we all do it more often than we realize. Doing conscious meditation has some very real health benefits that can help you, me all of us.
The long and short of it is that meditation can calm your mind, lower your stress, slow your heart rate, levels, and improve circulation. With regular meditation your reactions to stress are more measured and less flying off the handle. Running your heart under constant burden will injure it. Heart attack any one? Our bodies are about 65% water/fluids. Restrict those fluids and the body soon gets sick or breaks. Relax and it heals and strengthens.
How to start? As I said Meditating is as easy as taking a second to sit back in your chair and close your eyes for a second. I have found that sitting back for 10 seconds at a time is an easy way to begin to meditate. Try it. (“After” you finished the article, hard to read with your eyes closed) Sit back in your chair, close your eyes and count 10 full (inhale AND exhale) breaths. Then, just go back to what you were doing. If you do this once an hour by the end of the day you will feel stronger than you usually do. If all you can do are a couple times a day, that’s fine too. Just start somewhere and make it a easy, healthy habit. Incidently, since you do this almost automatically on a massage table you have just discovered one of the reasons people like massage so much.

So, stand up straight, take a deep breath another glass of water and get a massage. The life you save may be your own!


Food, the poisons we consume

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - March 30th, 2011

Ewwwwwwww, yuck! Pflat! Ptooey! Would be your remarks if you actually knew about the processing of your food from seed to table. I am no expert on food and nutrition but my clients often show signs of toxicity and consider it normal. The lymphatic system is a major source of our body’s ability to detoxify

Detoxification is quite simply getting the yuck out. But what is the yuck really, and how does it get into our bodies? Well after a little research on our food production I gained a fearful understanding. Just covering the basics was enough to make me not eat for a week. Between genetic engineering, pesticides, fecal run off in the water supply, and hormones pumped into animals it was a fight to figure which was worse. Then you add in additives, preservatives and flavor enhancers and the food looks less like sustenance and more like a hardware store shelf. There my friends is your yuck! We are eating it, voluntarily!

But I thought to myself we have lived for thousands of years consuming our food and still survived. In all actuality we have only been consuming much of these poisons since the discovery of oil. (I am not blaming oil just giving a relative time index). All the changes we have made in the last 140 years were in the name of making things better. But what we have really done is increase our intake of poisons. Thank-god  the human body has the incredible ability to detoxify itself, and does so continually. But that is at optimum health. In most of us this ability is seriously compromised. With all the stress, and poor living habits most of us subscribe to, we are none of us in optimum health. So we store up the yuck in fat, spaces in the tissue and in our organs.

We truly survive our food more out of dumb luck and magnificent engineering than conscious effort. In the next article I will tell you about the miracle of lymphatics and how they keep us going, despite us working against them!


Lymphatics: Toilet to the Body

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - March 17th, 2011

Lymphatics: toilet to the body

In the last article I told you about the poisons we are taking in our body in the name of food and that the lymphatic system protects us from ourselves. But quite honestly if you even knew we had a lymphatic system you really don’t know what it does or how it helps us survive imbibing these poisons.

First of all the lymph system in the body is pervasive (present everywhere: spreading widely or present throughout something). It operates like water going down a mountain. Starts with small rivulets and eventually feeds into the ocean. Like that moving water it picks up yuck on its path and carries it along and away. It has fish and animals that eat the yuck floating along (humoral immune system). But it only carries so much of its volume in yuck, and the animals can only eat so much. If it gets blocked by beavers (muscle tension) then the draining slows. Not only at the dam but all the way up to the rivulet (tiny stream) and the yuck settles.

When toxins settle in an area like this the animals get sick. When it happens in your body, yep you guessed it, YOU get sick! Unfortunately it is not always enough for you to get real sick and purge. Sometimes it is just an insidious build up of toxins that sicken you so slowly you don’t notice until it is bad! Hence the rise in autoimmune disorders and cancers.

So it is obviously important to keep this fluid moving and as clear as possible and keep the beavers out of the flow. Next article I will explain how massage therapy but specifically Lymphatic drainage helps to keep the flow moving.

So until then, stand up straight, take a deep breath, another glass of water and get a massage. Your water will stay cleaner!


Vertigo

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - February 21st, 2011

The room spins off its axis, only nothing is moving. Your stomach lurches and the world feels like it’s upside down! No this is not the latest video game or an assessment of politics, its vertigo (although,…the politics thing…)! It happens without warning and there seems to be no protection from its world spinning effects. It hits you when you least expect it, and it’s all you can do to hold on till it passes. Read the rest of this entry »


Posture

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - February 21st, 2011

“In all animals great and small there is a point of ease, of minimal energy expenditure where everything just works right. That point is not at work in bad posture!” Locking your knees, rolling your shoulders forward, head sticking forward like a chicken are all examples of bad posture. They are also some of the worst harbingers of injury and bad health. Read the rest of this entry »


Shadow Syndrome of Chronic Venous insufficiency

By Gary Gammon LMT LLCC - February 14th, 2011

“In the shadows lurk the opportunistic seed of all the hell of our existence.” Illness and chronic injury rarely appear overnight and out of nowhere. They start small and then a sedentary lifestyle opens the doors for it to get worse. Such is the case of CVI (Chronic Venous Insufficiency) Read the rest of this entry »