Posts Tagged ‘feet stretches’

Tip of the Month: Techniques for Self Massage Part 1 – In a Chair

Friday, May 28th, 2010

The warm weather often brings with it more energy and desire to be more active: we spend more time outdoors, stay up later, hike in nature or around the city, dance more, bike more, etc. So it’s not unusual for our muscles to get fatigued and for our joints to cry out for attention, especially in these months when we are still transitioning into our full summer swing. There is nothing like a professional bodywork session for helping your body relax and rebalance, especially when dealing with injury or chronic pain, but there is a lot you can do for yourself to encourage release and relief at any given moment of the day.

More often than not it is when we finally get a moment to sit that we feel the strain, and many of us find ourselves at a desk for hours at a time, so here are some ideas for self-massage that you can do seated in a chair.

SELF MASSAGE, SEATED IN A CHAIR:

1.    For shoulders, neck and back: keep your feet flat on the floor and open your legs so there is a foot or more between your knees. Now let your upper body hang over your legs, with your head completely released to the floor. Breath deeply into your back. Then interlace your fingers and bring the hands to the back of your neck. Use the heels of the palms to gently squeeze up and down the neck, in a nutcracker fashion, then release the fingers and use the palms to slide down the neck, as if you were wiping water or lotion off your neck and down along the back of your skull towards the floor.

2.    For sore hips, thighs and feet: sit up and cross your right heel over your left thigh, just above the knee. Let your back relax back down for a moment and breath into the hip stretch. As much as possible, aim to keep both sitz bones even on the chair. Now sit up again and place the outer edge of your right forearm on your right thigh (your thumb should point up). Lean into the thigh and as you do so roll the forearm so that the palm comes to face up. Continue rolling up and down the thigh with the forearm, using your weight to create the pressure and thinking of moving the flesh away from the crease of the hip. You can also use your elbow to get deeper pressure: place the forearm on the thigh and as you drop your weight bend the arm so that the elbow drops into the thigh. Finally, use both hands to massage the feet – try using the knuckles or tapping with a fist so that you don’t fatigue your fingers. Use the hands to pull the toes in, push them away, spread them apart. Now release the right leg, shake it out, and repeat with the left leg folder over the right.

3.    For shins, ankles and feet: sitting up straight with your shoes off, use the heel of your right foot to rub the point at the top of your inner left shin, just below the knee. Rub this point for a few moments, then continue down along the inner shin, making sure the heel is between the bone and the muscle and not on the bone. Spend a few more moments and the point between the inner ankle and heel. Now cross the heel over and use it to rub up and down the out shin a few time. From here, continue down the top of the foot and spend a few moments at the point between the big toe and the second toe. Repeat on the other side.

4.    For fatigue, headaches and stress: sitting up, use the fingers of both hands (except the thumbs) to tap along the breastbone, up and down a few times. The taps are quick and light. Then allow the hands to split and travel along their respective clavicle, tapping just below the bone. Continue around to the back of the shoulders, up the neck, up the back of the head, spending as much time as you like on the head and covering the entire scalp. Continue to the forehead, tapping more gently now that you are on the sensitive face. Tap the temples, the jaw, the cheeks, the chin. When you finish, relax the arms, close your eyes and breath deeply for at least three breaths.

5.    For aching shoulders: Make a light fist with both hands, keeping the thumb free. Throw the right fist over the left shoulder to create a light pounding sensation along the back of the shoulder, then throw the left fist over the right shoulder. Use the momentum of the throw rather than any muscular effort to pound on your shoulders. Alternate sides and continue for as long as you like.

6.    For a sore low back: use the same light fists from the above exercise to rub your low back in a circular motion. Then play with different placements of the fist and different strokes – try using the knuckles to rub up and down, for example. Rub briskly to create heat, and make sure you breath as you do this. Stop well before you fatigue your arms.

Did you enjoy this tip? Did all this talk of massage make you realize that you’re due for a more serious tune up? Mention this tip and get 20% off a bodywork session through the end of June. As always, feel free to email me with any questions or comments, and if you’d like to work on creating a repertoire of stretches and exercises that are specific to your needs I am available for private sessions at super reasonable prices.  XO Ophra

Tip of the Month: Self-Care in the New Year, From the Ground Up

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

(Originally included in the Force and Flow newsletter, 1/4/10)

If one of your resolutions for the New Year is to take better care of yourself, may I suggest that you start with your feet? Your feet are the key to balance and alignment, to feeling grounded and to leaping to great heights. Since we know that body and mind are one, I’ll let you play with the metaphor. Meanwhile, here are a few excellent ways to attend to your feet – on the go, at rest, and as focused exercises.

Stretch: sit on your heals, with the toes tucked under and the weight on the balls of the feet. The more you allow the weight to fall towards the big toe and the torso to sit upright atop the heals, the greater the stretch. Be prepared for intense sensations if you haven’t done anything of the sort recently! Stay as long as you can bear it, breathing deeply and keeping your focus parallel to the floor and your peripheral vision wide. When you need to rest, un-tuck your toes and sit back on the heals again, stretching out the front of the foot. Alternate like this for 2-5 minutes (or more if you so desire : ), keeping the focus and the relaxed breath as you change from the one position to the other. You can do this as part of a stretching routine (recommended), but you can also do it while watching TV or a DVD.

Massage: You’ve probably all rubbed your feet with your hands at least once: do it often! Use your elbows, too – if you sit cross-legged on the floor, or in a chair with one leg crossed over the other, the elbows can be used to drop a lot more weight than the hands, and they can give your hard-working hands a break. The key to releasing tension in the feet is not so much kneeding as it is focused pressure and traction. Think of stretching the bones of the feet and toes apart, and circle the joints of the ankles and the toes to lubricate their movement. If you have bunions, do extra some extra stretching for the big toe. And tennis balls and foot rollers are always good props. Keep one under your desk or kitchen table and roll the foot out while sitting.

Walking Meditation: Since us New Yorkers have the priviledge of walking so much, and since we love to multi-task, here is something to do while transporting yourself from place to place. First of all, keep your focus parallel to the ground (vs. dropped) and your peripheral vision wide. Move your head around every once in a while to make sure it’s not stuck in any one place. Allow your internal focus to drop down to your feet and notice the texture of the ground – how hard or soft is it? How bouncy? Then choose a texture and imagine you are walking on it: i.e. dry sand (I’m headed to the beach right after this!), wet grass, melting snow (unless you’re by the beach like me, perhaps this one doesn’t require as much imagination these days : ), etc. Notice how your feet respond to the suggestion! Switch it up, don’t get stuck on any one texture too long, and then come back to trying to feel what the ground you are walking on “really” feels like.

Love,
Ophra