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Side position is great for accessing the Gall Bladder meridian (involved with whole body muscle tension), Temporalis, Masseter, Scalenes, Levator Scapula, shoulder ROM, lateral ribs, lamina groove of upper side, QL, Gluteus Medius and Minimus, TFL, Vastus Lateralis and Iliotibial Band, Peroneal muscles, and inner thigh and calf of lower leg. If you use compression techniques (Shiatsu) through the sheet, you don't have to fuss around with the draping.
KD
http://www.ralphstephens.com/seminar_description.htm
I remember when I first became a massage therapist. I had studied a traditional shiatsu massage that was done on a thin futon on the floor. Shortly after I began working in a clinic that did not want me working on the floor. They wanted me working on a massage table. I told them I didnt know how to massage very well with the client on the table. The lead therapist said to me. A good massage therapist can massage anyone in any position. Anyway, I learn a lot from DVDs. In the above link Ralph Stephens has a very good DVD on side lying massage. Buy it and watch it a half a dozen times. And you wont have any problems. Its good to remember that EVERYTHING IN THE BEGINNING IS DIFFICULT.
Thank you, Gordon and Kathleen. Kathleen, everything that you have posted was in the article. I have to do A LOT of studying.
Thank you! My job holds workshops with the Lead Therapists, and this will be my next topic to go over. Side-lying techniques. More importantly draping. I have a hard time getting that under control. I learn better by watching then doing before I start working on clients.
Side lying is great for hip work! You can get to everything from there. You may also have a client who cannot be prone or supine for comfort reasons (allergies/congestion, elderly, injury) so this is a good option.
I use side lying for hip work, lateral quads and hamstring work, MFR around the ITB, and more. I will have clients wear shorts or yoga pants, depending on what I need to do. Then the need for draping disappears!
I'd never massage anyone side lying unless that was the only way they could be comfortable. No need other wise.
Just my opinion. But I can get to those lateral muscles easy enough without going to side lying.
Gordon J. Wallis said:
I'd never massage anyone side lying unless that was the only way they could be comfortable. No need other wise.
it really depends on the patient's needs. certain injuries may favor side lying positions over prone/supine, so it all just depends. as any good therapist would, it's best to have a chat with your patient before the massage to understand their needs, pain points and then cater your massage style to best fit their needs.
Thank you everyone!
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