Massage Therapy vs Massage guns

Massage Therapy vs Massage Guns

Several Types of Massage

For more than seven years, I have offered a source of pain relief and relaxation for my thankful clientele. My office is locally known for having a diverse massage staff and we offer a broad spectrum of talents. We have licensed massage therapists who excel at pre-natal massage and some that offer thai massage. A couple of my massage therapists really focus on offering incredibly relaxing Swedish massage and tend to avoid offering deeper work. The rest of us are deep tissue specialists.

Deep tissue massage is a gray area term. It can be synonymous with orthopedic massage or medical massage. I am not implying that all those offerings are the same, but rather they are often interchangeable terms for clients. I will break down all the varied massage offerings in this field in another Massage Therapy Mondays post, but for now we are going to focus on a small slice of the industry.

The majority of clients that enter the doors to my office fall into two categories. They are either dealing with some sort of physical pain or they are athletes looking for assistance with recovery. Most of these clients come for an hour but some come for ninety minute sessions. The cost for these appointments is $75 and $105, respectively.

Benefits of massage

Injuries are commonplace. There are more causes and symptoms than I could ever list here so I will speak in generalities. We see a lot of instances of general pain in the neck, shoulders, back and hips. Knees and wrists also motivate people to contact us on occasion, but the main four are neck, shoulders, back, and hips.

The causes of the pain is a far more diverse and complicated list. First and foremost, we are unbelievably destructive to our bodies in today’s society. It is not that we live harder lives than our ancestors. It is the stress of modern life that lies at the root of so many issues. Maintaining our households, worrying about our children and/or elderly parents, and successfully negotiating our careers can leave our bodies under constant assault from a chemical called cortisol.

Cortisol Effects

The cortisol hormone is produced by your adrenal glands. It is known as the source of the “fight or flight” response. Beyond that primary function, it also serves to regulate a number of complex balances in the body such as blood pressure and metabolism. Without turning this into a biology and chemistry lesson, let’s just agree that is vital to life.

Cortisol becomes a problem when tissue is exposed to it for too long. While cortisol can help your body in a number of ways, it can also me destructive. Long term exposure to cortisol in the connective tissues can break those fragile organs down. It can weaken tendons and ligaments and damage protective organs like fascia. Every organ, bone, muscle, tendon, and ligament is covered in fascia. It is one singular and contiguous organ, akin to an internal skin. If you damage one area of your fascia, it can have consequential effects throughout your body.

Massage for Recovery

Athletes are everywhere. While many people instinctively think of professional football or baseball players when they hear the term, athletes are also runners competing in 5ks or marathons. Triathletes, who compete in multiple disciplines are athletes. People who choose to hike the Appalachian Trail or tackle all the High Peaks of The Adirondacks are athletes. Even those of us that regularly weight train at the neighborhood gym fall into the category of athletes.

Sports Massage
Sports massage can be in office or at an event

There are unique needs and dangers of constant exercise that a massage therapist is specifically trained to understand and negotiate. Trigger points, muscle fatigue, delayed onset muscle soreness, lactic acid, and plantar fasciitis are just some of the regular issues athletes come to us with.

Massage therapists have special training to work the common issues athletes experience. We can focus our attention on areas that require the work. There is a subtle balance the body must maintain in order to remain pain free or recover from injury, and massage therapists have the tools to facilitate that balance. Unfortunately, people are Increasingly turning to devices to address these issues.

Foam rollers have a long history

While I have been in the massage industry for nearly a decade, foam rollers were around long before me. Over time, they have become more and more sophisticated. Nowadays, they come in all shapes and sizes to address as many areas of the body as possible. The theory behind rolling is that one can loosen tight muscles by using their own body weight to knead the tissue in the same way you roll dough.

Assortment of foam rollers
Foam rollers come in many shapes and sizes to serve different areas of the body

For years, I have even suggesting foam rolling to clients as a complimentary option to maintain the success I have during the massage. A month between appointments is a long time and if rolling can help keep their quad muscles loose, all the more power to them.

The new kid on the block

Massage “guns” are a relative newcomer to the scene. A California chiropractor invented the massage gun to aid in recovery of his own back pain. Subsequently. he began using it on his clients and its popularity spread from there.

A massage gun is a tool that looks like an altered drill. It creates a repetitive compression against the body similar to a jackhammer. It functions at a high rate of speed and features a padded point of contact. The theory behind its use is that is will soften the tissue and aid in the removal of toxins and facilitate positive blood flow to the desired area. There is no doubt that the application of that device to some areas of the body can be a very pleasurable and therapeutic experience.

The massage gun has seen increased usage in the physical therapy field as well. When operated by a trained practitioner, it can be a fine ancillary tool in the box. Physical therapists and chiropractors have been using devices as part of their treatment plans for a long while now. However, I would make the argument that you cannot beat the trained hands of massage therapist when it comes to the soft tissue of the body.

Massage Gun
Massage guns use a repetitive compression to loosen tissue

Issues arise when individuals purchase a massage gun for themselves and use it at home without training or an understanding of the complex balance of the body’s musculature. Application of the gun to bone or areas of high nerve density can have devastating consequences. They could easily cause injury or make an existing injury worse.

Sometimes you need a pro

If you came across this article because you are injured and are curious if a massage gun can help, my emphatic massage is “I don’t know.” This article is not meant as a admonishment of massage guns in the marketplace. I am simply here to offer a cautionary warning.

If you are feeling pain that is causing discomfort beyond the normal, you should always seek attention from a trained individual. If you are experiencing issues with your soft tissue, consult a massage therapist like myself. We have experience in these issues and have an understanding of the general causes of pain. If someone comes to me with an injury that requires more than I can offer, I am quick to advise they see a doctor.

If someone chooses to address their own pain without any medical training with a massage gun, they are putting themselves at risk. Remember, many of our every day aches and pains originate from over-exposure to cortisol. A gun or a foam roller cannot address your stress, but the hands of a licensed massage therapist certainly can.

Christopher Hess, LMT

Time And Time Again – The Eternal Perfection of August And Everything After

Time And Time Again

No walls and a cheap stereo

The summer of 1994 will forever be the most remarkable and mind-altering period of my life. Several events happened during that summer which permanently altered how I viewed the world around me. Specifically, I found August And Everything After by The Counting Crows. Before that, I began to dabble pretty heavily in marijuana after moving in with some friends. It was the first time in my life I lived outside of my parents’ home. I was relegated to a small cordoned off area in the attic. As I recall, I didn’t even have four walls. The entrance was a sheet strung up to divide me from the greater attic space.

In that “bedroom” was a bed, a small television, a game system, and a cd player. I survived on peanut butter & jelly and ramen while trying to get by on a part-time, minimum wage salary. At the time, I worked at a video rental store called Video Factory, which was later bought by Blockbuster. I was long gone and serving our nation in The Marine Corps before that ever happened.

With my meager earnings and having bills to pay for the first time in my life, there was nothing left for entertainment or adventure. I did two things a lot that summer besides smoking pot: I skated until my wheels wore off and I listened to music. This was long before the days of mp3s players. If you wanted to listen to something, you brought the CD with you. I generally had one of two albums in my player that summer: Vs by Pearl Jam or August And Everything After by The Counting Crows.

Pass me a bottle, Mr. Jones

The Counting Crows are an anomaly in the music industry. They hailed from San Francisco and were inspired heavily by Van Morrison and the Grateful Dead in a time when the Seattle music scene was heavily dominating radio. Their first single, Mr. Jones should have been dead in the water when in debuted in February of 1994. The album was released in the fall of the previous year to little fanfare. Geffen records had signed the band after they filled in for Van Morrison at a Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

The music video for Mr. Jones was such a departure from other music of the time.

Mr. Jones was an instant hit, reaching number 2 on the Billboard Top 40. In hindsight, it is clear that a large swath of the music buying population was looking for something other than grunge rock and The Counting Crows were happy to give it to them. The song had a light aerie feel to it. It featured subtle Spanish beats and fast paced lyrics by Adam Duritz, the band’s front man. Duritz was also a contradiction to trends. He had a playful demeanor and featured meticulously maintained dreadlocks. His persona could not be any more different than other front men of the time like Kirk Cobain and Eddie Vedder.

She knows she’s more than just a little misunderstood

Mr. Jones had a more traditional musical structure with common verse and chorus arrangements. Their second released single shot that design out of the water. Round Here was a lyrical journey, telling a story so succinct that sounded as if Duritz could have just as easily been reading a poem at a local coffee shop. Round Here escaped the high pace and pounding beats that Mr. Jones introduced to the world. Rather, the guitar riffs and keyboard phrasing added a funky appeal with a much slower offering. With that said, this was also no ballad. It was a story of love and loss.

Click here to read about how Sundays are for Entertainment on The Daily Octane

I really enjoyed Mr. Jones, but I was 18 years old and looking for something different. At that point in my life I was on a journey of discovery. I had come out of high school, unsure of who I was, and I was looking to be as cool as possible. I was still jamming out to Pearl Jam’s 10 album and trying to get a taste for their follow-up, Vs. The first Counting Crows’ single was popular and I certainly heard it on the radio, but I did not run out and buy the album. That is until I heard the follow-up single, Round Here.

Bright colors and the lyrics

During that period of my life, I had not yet acquired the musical sophistication I have today. I was definitely a pop and rock radio guy. When I would buy an album, I would just play the tracks I knew over and over. The B-side songs seldom hit my ears unless I was too tired to get up and skip the track. That changed when I tore the cellophane off August And Everything After.

August And Everything After Cover Art
I have purchased this album several times over the years.

When I grabbed that CD from the shelf of the local record store, I was immediately struck by the cover. It was unlike any of the music I had been listening to for years. The album art was brightly colored and featured hand-written song lyrics on faded parchment. The band’s name and album title was sloppily written in pen.

I popped the disc in my player and hit play. The first track was Round Here. That was perfect. I sat on my floor next to the stereo and rolled a joint. Then something happened. The whole album began to play. Round Here was followed by Omaha. What in the hell was that? This new song, which to this day never received radio play was like nothing I had ever heard. It was timeless. It had instrumentation that felt like it was country, but still urban. Like Round Here, it was telling a story and ignoring the traditional song writing tropes.

I was hooked.

Oh Lord, I’m not ready for this sort of thing

I listened to the whole album that day, stoned out of my mind and soaked in sweat from oppressive heat in that attic space with no air-flow, let alone air-conditioning. After it finished, I slowly rose from where I was sitting and hit play again.

That summer I listen to August And Everything After incessantly. As I began to learn all of the songs, I could not stop myself from singing along. There was one song that made my voice swell more and more every time I crooned along with Duritz. That was Anna Begins. There was something about that song that strung a chord in my heart. I don’t know if it was the “on again, off again” relationship I was having that summer or simply the beauty of the lyrics.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rHZ7vthVoeg
I am somewhere in that crowd.

Whatever it was, that song is still my favorite track on that album to this day. The last verse of Anna Begins swells with energy. With back-up singers layered beneath him, Adam’s voice rises until it hits a crescendo. Then the band suddenly drops out and leaves Duritz to send us off with, “I’m not ready for this sort of thing.”

It was probably not the first listen or even the tenth, but there was once a time where I was singing along with Anna Begins so passionately that I wept. That had never happened to me before. I was so unbelievably caught up in the emotion of the song in that moment that is took my breath away.

I am feathered by the moonlight falling down on me

August And Everything After sends you off with A Murder of One. The song features an intense drum beat that carries you continually through with symphonic melodies that cannot help but elicit a trance-like state. As you are lulled into a sense of calm, Duritz suddenly leaves the band to do their own thing. He starts to ramble, ignoring the normal tradition of singing harmoniously with the rhythm of the song. He becomes a crow in his own right, flying above the music.

The last verse of A Murder of One features a continuous chanting of the word “change.” It implores the listener, or perhaps Adam himself, to grow within. Do not conform to the crowd. Do not be afraid to be yourself. You do not need to run with the pack. In nature, a grouping of crows is called a Murder. The message is that you can be alone and be ok. You can be a murder of one.

Thank you Adam and The Counting Crows. A young me in 1994 really needed that message and it was received LOUD AND CLEAR.

Because of August And Everything After, I have been a murder of one ever since.

Christopher Hess, LMT