Who would benefit from Biometric Massage?

BioMetric Massage is for people wanting the most from their massage experience. See list below & find out if this unique massage system is for you.

BioMetric Massage benefits:

  • Office workers – subject to sitter’s syndrome – chronic, tight shoulders, stiff necks & low back pain.
  • Weekend Warriors – subject to over-zealot’s pain – sore muscles & stiffness from recreation.
  • I.T. People – subject to manageritius – anxiety shoulders, mid-back discomfort, carpal tunnel.
  • Athletes – subject to injuries – pains, strains & sprains.
  • Attorneys – subject to – “pain in the neck.”
  • Domestic engineers – subject to – multi-taskitius.
  • Technicians – subject to repetitive stress injuries.
  • Sales associates – subject to the middle-man crunch.
  • Students - subject to exam tension.
  • Teachers - subject to getting over-extended.
  • Nurses - subject to compromised backs.
  • Mechanics - subject to getting twisted & torqued.
  • Bus drivers – subject to road-rage stress.
  • Construction workers – subject to tired wrists & hands.
  • Engineers – subject to designer’s dilemma.
  • Yogis & Yoginis – subject to ‘over-confident-with-movement’ syndrome.
  • And just plain people – subject to all of the above from time to time.

Throughout history people have used massage for natural, non-invasive healing.

Some people believe that the true origin of massage is human nature itself. As humans, we have a natural instinct to rub a sore area of the body. Massage may be the oldest and simplest form of medical care.

  • Egyptian tomb paintings show people being massaged. In Eastern cultures, massage has been practiced continually since ancient times.
  • A Chinese book from 2,700 BC., The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Internal Medicine, recommends “breathing exercises, massage of skin and flesh, and exercises of hands and feet” as “the appropriate treatment for complete paralysis, chills, and fever.”
  • Massage was one of the principal methods of relieving pain for Greek and Roman physicians. Julius Caesar was said to have been given a daily massage to treat neuralgia.
  • “The physician must be experienced in many things, ” wrote Hippocrates – the father of Western medicine – in the 5th century BC, “but assuredly in rubbing for rubbing can bind a joint that is too loose, and loosen a joint that is too rigid.”
  • Studies in hysteria, postulating that what we did not or will not confront in our lives would be buried in our bodies’, were behind Sigmund Freud’s use of massage therapy to treat hysteria.

Who would benefit from BioMetric massage? YOU

The physiological benefits include improved blood, lymph, hormone and enzyme circulation, decreased muscle tension and general relaxation. This leads to removal of waste products and better cell nutrition, normalization and greater elasticity of tissues, deactivation of trigger points, and faster healing of injuries. It all adds up to relief from soreness and stiffness, better flexibility, and less potential for future problems.