Making Thai Massage Healthier Part II - Avoid Snapping Elbows or Knees Backward

The previous two posts told a little about Thai massage and some of the benefits and pitfalls.
Some massage practioners say that Thai massage is an "energy-based" system, not a physical one. However, there are direct physical moves that bring direct physical change, both good and bad.
Many of the stretches of Northern style Thai massage can be helpful to restore length to tight muscles so that you can restore healthy body positioning. For example, in the photo at left, the legs are lifted upward so that the front of the hip is gently stretched. The practitioner puts their foot on the back of the the person's hip to prevent the lower back from being overly-arched by the stretch and to concentrate the stretch more on the front hip muscles. This is a beneficial stretch because the front of the hip is often tight from long sitting and faulty standing positioning. This Thai massage stretch restores length to the front hip muscles.
There are a few moves that are usually better to skip. Some practitioners may straighten your elbow or knee too quickly and too much, sometimes adding a forceful snap. The elbow and knee joints are not shaped to hyper-extend. Hyperextension means to go more than a normally straight position. Hyperextending the knee or elbow can damage the joint and strain the cartilage. In the photo, the knees are bending normally.
It is not usually healthful to snap a joint, especially repeatedly over time, to reach the end of its range of motion. Although many of us learned to do this in massage school, and were taught that the snapping and hyperextending motion has benefits, it is better to skip joint snapping, and do other moves that have benefit without harm.
Next:
Keeping Thai Massage Healthy Part III - Should You Do "The Blood Stop?"
Previous Fitness Fixer Posts on Thai Massage:
Changing Thai Massage to Be Healthier Part I - Avoid Pressuring Lower Back Discs
What is Thai Massage?





1 Comments:
At Thursday, February 08, 2007 4:07:00 PM,
Ramin said…
Hi Jolie, great post. I can tell from my own experience that there are a lot of people applying these techniques. However, when having it applied to oneself, most people can tell that this isn't beneficial - but most people will not tell their massage therapist to "not do something". So I hope some Thai massage practitioners will read this.
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