Tag: pain

Pain, pain, go away

Do you tend to look away when the doctor administers a needle? Seems that if you can manage to look at your arm, without focusing on the needle itself, this will make the experience less painful, according to a study recently published in Psychological Science.

Leave a Comment February 11, 2011

Let’s hug it out

Seems like Ari Gold was onto something. Turns out hugging it out is like anaesthesia.  Touching or even just seeing a photo of a loved one is enough to lessen discomfort for women according to a small study conducted at the University of California.

Leave a Comment February 3, 2011

Anxiety reduction

Listening to soothing music in a softly lit room is just as relaxing as getting a massage when it comes to easing anxiety, according to a study published in the journal Depression and Anxiety. Over three months, both were shown to cut down anxiety by about 50 percent.

Interesting, but I’m not giving up seeing my RMT, Alfred Fong. I’ve been going to him for nearly a decade and I’ve yet to find a registered massage therapist I like more. If you don’t already have your own RMT on speed-dial, it’s worth finding one; here’s why:

(1) your RMT will come to learn where you store stress, how much pressure you like, what aromatherapy oil you prefer, whether you prefer to listen to flutes, Kenny G. or ocean waves, — so you’re not starting from scratch with every appointment.

(2) find a knowledgeable one and he/she will be able to help you out when  you do injure yourself. I know this firsthand — here’s my dirty little runner’s secret: I never stretch after a run. And it’s started to catch up with me; I occasionally get this numb tingling pain deep in the muscles in my derriere that, when particularly bad, spreads down the thigh making it impossible to walk. My bestie (she’s a fitness buff) identified it as piriformis syndrome (the pain comes from the sciatic nerve is being compressed). I couldn’t remember the name of it, though — all I could think of was piri piri chicken — but Alfred knew exactly what I was talking about, worked on those muscles and gave me stretches to do (still on the to-do list…). Compare this to an RMT my bestie had at a B&B who’d never even heard of this piri piri syndrome, as I like to call it.

(3) When you see the same RMT regularly, he/she will do what they can to fit you into their schedule when you’ve sneezed and pulled a muscle in your neck (yup, real story) so that you don’t have to be quite so Mr. Roboto-like for days on end.

That’s my case for finding an RMT. If you want to borrow mine, Alfred can be reached at 416-704-8685 (he works out of two locations in Toronto — a spa and a chiropractor’s office — but also makes house calls).

1 Comment March 11, 2010

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