structural alignment

Getting the Massage You Need, When You Need It

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010 | exercise, Health, health tips, Massage, nutrition, Seattle, stretching | No Comments

There are a few ways people think about getting a massage:

“I have a pain in my lower back and it won’t go away. I’m scheduling a massage.”

“It’s been a few months, and I’m feeling out of balance. Getting some deep tissue bodywork done seems like a great idea.”


Most times, people wait until their body sends them a clear message, and it’s usually connected to pain.

Maybe this is the message you’d hear if you listened more often:

“I want to make sure my body is in optimum shape, and getting a massage is part of preventative medicine. I know that regular massage treatments help provide greater freedom of movement, ease pain, and help me achieve a more active life.”

Many people aren’t so fortunate, and they’re disconnected from their bodies. I want you to listen to your own body, and feel the healthy energy flowing through it. Try to stay in touch with how your body feels, not just every so often, but stop and listen at some point every day. For some people, seeing or feeling is a better way to picture this getting in touch with the body. Whatever works for you, let your mind guide you.

Listen to your body when it reminds you of the pain, stiffness, and lingering pain that it feels. Maybe you have pelvic or low back pain, or there’s stress you feel from a past injury. If it takes time to gain more freedom of movement after an injury, give yourself time, but work with your body, learn to move again and feel how your body responds as it heals.  Our bodies were designed to help themselves and heal themselves, but nature can only go so far without intervention. Nature wants healing hands to help nurture bodies to a more healthful state.

Stretching before running or taking a long walk is important. Making healthy dietary choices as often as you can is vital. Choosing to receive a high-quality massage treatment to help you through Seattle’s autumn months is an idea worth acting upon.

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Receiving a Healing Massage in the autumn

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 | Featured, Health, health tips, Massage, Seattle, stretching | 1 Comment

Hello Seattle.

The calendar says we’re still in summer (for a few days), but the chill in the air makes it feel like we’re already in autumn.

One thing your body may be telling you is how the colder weather reminds you of your body’s stiff areas, uncomfortable tightness, and old or new injuries that need some massage therapy care.

In the hot weather our muscles and ligaments expand, and this jello-like effect is what we experience throughout the summertime. We move easier and walk faster, with the sun in our hair and the warm weather on our skin.

When the first few cold snaps occur, our joints and muscles feel a stiffness that we haven’t felt all summer.

A massage therapy session can help to restore the body’s natural flow, and help to restore your structural alignment that has gotten out of place from bad habits, overuse, and just pulling a muscle the wrong way.

Yes, your body can be restored to a more active-friendly mode of being. And of course, you want your body to act like its spring or summer, even though the calendar says we’re in autumn.

Let’s try something.

Stand up and stretch to the side, first one way then the other.

See if you can locate the tight spots that feel as if you haven’t used them in months. These are the areas where deep tissue massage work can help loosen up problem areas or old injuries, and create the freedom of movement you want.

Joints and cartilage need to have work done on them so they don’t become rigid and stuck in the same rut, kind of like the way minds need to be exposed to new ideas and concepts to they can stretch out.

Improved circulation, being able to move in ways you couldn’t (even the day before), and getting the blood moving to joints and stiff and sore muscular problem areas—all of this helps your ongoing healthy body movements.

Stretching more freely, and sleeping more soundly, are two of the immediate benefits that you’ll receive from getting an early seasonal massage.

So, hopefully this will remind you to come into my Capitol Hill massage clinic and receive that well-deserved massage you’ve been putting off for a while.

After all, a new season is just around the corner…

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Finding the Deep Center of Gravity (Part 1.)

Saturday, April 10th, 2010 | Groin Injury, Massage, networking | No Comments


Let’s face it, we all want to feel better. As a massage practitioner I know this fact in a deep way. Clients come to me with a long list of stresses, strains, pains, aches, and just plain old built up body tension.


No only do I understand this, but the bodyworkers I often network with know this as well. People want to feel better, in every part of their body. Even in certain areas it might be difficult for them to talk about. Pain that comes up when they stretch or move a certain way that shouldn’t be so painful.


One thing that I’ve been discussing with my fellow healing profession workers is my shift in focus to groin and pelvic injury treatment.

Since this is a delicate subject, even talking about it with other massage practitioners can be like opening a can of worms that either calls for a lengthy discussion or becomes a conversation stopper.

You never know.

In our society, the genital region is taboo and working around this highly charged area is something most massage practitioners and bodyworkers just do not do. And I get it. I completely understand why groin and pelvic work isn’t all that popular with my fellow massage practitioners.


Let me put this out there: People truly need this type of elemental and integrative body work. So much of our culture’s stresses and long-term pains are held onto in the pelvic region.

Who knows if it began with the repressed way we’ve held things inside for generations, and it may date back to the whole formation of this great big crazy body of a country (the body inside our own minds, the body politic, the bodies of all these humans around us we come into contact with), but healing and release needs to happen more often.

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Massage Therapy School

Location

747 North 90th Street
Greenwood, WA 98103

My office is actually a house that's been converted to a healing space with 4 treatment rooms.
Surrounded by other quiet and residential homes, my space facilitates deeper levels of relaxation in this peaceful Seattle Neighborhood.

I share it with 4 other healing practitioners of different disciplines.

Contact

206-465-6344 massage@sierrafaye.com

Schedule

Tuesdays: 11-8

Wednesdays: 11 - 8pm

Fridays: 11-6

Saturdays: 11-6

Parking

There's free parking everywhere!

Sometimes there are crews of road and utility workers along N. 90th doing projects that affect the flow of traffic.

If you cannot find parking in front or on the block you can park on Linden or Freemont streets and walk.

Directories for Bodywork and Healing

Specialities

*Treating soft tissue injury of the low back, hips, groin and pelvis.

*Deep pressure massage that heals and doesn't hurt
*Light pressure massage that heals on deep tissues

*Empowering clients to give feedback and get the massage they really want