When wellness experts Lynda Solien-Wolfe, L.M.T., and CG Funk got together a couple of years ago to figure out a way to educate more people about the benefits of massage therapy, they brought to the conversation a combined half-century of experience in the massage and spa fields.
What resulted was the identification of a truth that is powerful in its simplicity: Receiving massage makes people happy.
Caption for headshot mashup: Lynda Solien Wolfe (l) and CG Funk (r).
Now, Wolfe, who is vice president of massage and spa for Performance Health, and Funk, former vice president of industry relations and product development for Massage Envy Spa, have just launched their Massage Makes Me Happy Initiative, sponsored by the Global Wellness Institute, a nonprofit organization that educates the public and private sectors about preventive health and wellness.
The initiative will promote massageโs ability to benefit recipients on the physical and emotional-mental levelsโor, more simply, to make people happyโthrough education, advocacy and global awareness.
โPeople are coming around to, โ[Massage] helps me feel good,โ but they donโt know why,โ Funk told MASSAGE Magazine. โThey relate it to a physical aspect, like, โMy back doesnโt hurt me as much anymore,โ but they donโt relate it to, โI feel calm, I feel relaxed.'โ
The initiativeโs mission is to promote awareness of the positive benefits of massage, to consumers as well as to medical, spa and wellness professionals, by using the message of happiness.
More specifically, those involved in the initiative will create a global platform and rallying cry around โMassage Makes Me Happyโ; consolidate existing clinical research and support new research for deeper integration of massage into wellness practices; encourage storytelling of the benefits of massage; and promote massage and massage careers worldwide.
Massage & Happiness
โCan we prove that massage makes you happy?โ Solien-Wolfe asked rhetorically. โThe research supports it. Your mood levels change, your pain levels go down.โ
Research conducted so far indicates that massage therapy lessens depression, especially in pregnant and post-natal women and in cancer patients (those populations have been studied more than have others) also diminishes anxiety and pain, and spurs the release of oxytocin, a โfeel-goodโ hormone, among other benefits.
Tiffany Field, Ph.D., has led much of that research since 1992, via the Touch Research Institute in Miami, Florida, which she founded and directs. Field is also one of the founding members of the Massage Makes Me Happy initiative.
โOur first plan is to compile the research that already exists and be able to highlight studies on pain and depression,โ Solien-Wolfe said, adding that the group plans to promote how massage really does create happiness in a human beingโs life.
โWe havenโt seen anyone focusing on this, and we thought it was a big missing piece of the puzzle,โ she said.
Promoting Massage
The initiative will also help promote massage and massage careers by elevating the perspective of massage work itself, Funk said.
โThere is still a perspective out there of โIโll get a massage, but I wouldnโt want my daughter be a massage therapist,โ so by helping consumers understand the deeper aspects of massage through happiness and happiness markers, career promotion can be dovetailed into that,โ she explained.
Funk added that sheโd like to see massage therapists have more pride in their professional identity, and more young people make massage therapy their first career choice.
Another way the initiative will support massage therapists in their careers is by including spa owners and directors in the educational componentโnot as teachers so much as students, Solien-Wolfe said.
She explained that massage is a huge money-maker for spas worldwide, yet the real health benefits that come from receiving massage therapy can get overlooked or are sometimes not fully understood by the people who own and run spas.
โWe noticed there was a big gap in the things and topics and subjects and conversations that came up around spa and wellness businesses and initiatives, and the actual work being done every day by trained massage therapists,โ Funk explained.
The beginning conversations about the initiative will take place at the Global Wellness Summit in Palm Beach, Florida, Oct. 9โ17, an event often heavily attended by spa and wellness personnel.
Get Involved
What does all this mean for massage therapists? First, the initiative offers the opportunity to market oneโs massage services in conjunction the first annual Global Massage Makes Me Happy Day on March 20, 2018. (Which is the same day, not coincidently, Solien-Wolfe said, as the International Day of Happiness.)
Massage therapists can also support the initiative by signing up on the instituteโs page dedicated to it, and follow the initiativeโs progress on Facebook.
Along with Field, additional founding members are Brian Paris, executive vice president of Living Earth Crafts/Earthlite Massage Tables; Karen Short, senior vice president of Marketing & Sales for Universal Companies; Tim Dunphy, brand and category senior director for Performance Health; and Heather Zdan, vice president of marketing for Scrip Companies and Massage Warehouse.
According to Funk and Solien-Wolfe, right now their team is putting information out on social media, promoting a press release about the initiative, and seeking corporate sponsors. They said additional information about the initiativeโs action items would be released in the near future, as conversations take place and membership grows.
In the meantime, get a massageโand get happy.
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