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Deeper barefoot massage using one foot

If you use your feet like your hands to massage, with intention, then your ashiatsu massage will not only be more therapeutic, but you’ll find your session time fly by faster. Getting specific in your barefoot massage and paying attention to details will make your ashiatsu session stand out from others’.

When I worked at a chiropractor’s office years ago, there were 2 other ashiatsu barefoot therapists there.  Doc told me once that my barefoot massage was way deeper than the others’ – and it had nothing to do with our strength or size.

How could that be?

I worked more deeply because I worked with intention and thought about the muscles I was accessing. Instead of fluffing over the QL, I’d glide in from the side, pivot, dig, explore. Ask yourself, “Where does it attach? What does it do? How can I access it the best? Which part of the foot should I use?”

Reviewing your anatomy definitely will help with your massage, because you’ll learn where the best path is to the muscles and that will, in turn, make you more specific in your work.

What part of the foot should you use?

It depends on a number of things:

  1. what part of the client’s muscles you’re trying to work
  2. your flexibility and body mechanics
  3. what your intention is

For instance, if you are trying to work the QL, the heel makes sense because it’s soft and round, and most clients won’t appreciate a toe jammed in there. The whole foot is too big to work between the iliac crest and the 12th rib.

However, maybe you’re trying to get to something trickier like the levator scapula. A heel may be the best tool, but it depends on if you are seated or standing. Exploring your flexibility and being willing to try different moves with different parts of your feet will make your ashiatsu session more specific and detailed.

Instead of just mindlessly effleuraging with your feet, we ask that you think about what you’re doing. In hands-on massage, you go lighter to deeper in pressure.  Perhaps you’d use a forearm, palm, elbow,  or thumb for certain parts of your client’s body.

Need help with figuring this all out?

We’re here for you. Consider taking a Revitalize (aka Refresher) class to get your existing barefoot massage skills up to par.

Or even better, our Intermediate class will teach you more specific ways to use your feet while your clients are in supine and side body positioning. If you’ve only taken the beginner ashiatsu barefoot massage class, that’s not enough: keep going. In our Intermediate class, we will teach you more specific ways to use your feet while your clients are in supine and side body positioning.

Take your barefoot massage to a whole new level by working specifically. You may be surprised at how your clients will remark on how much better your ashiatsu session is.

If you use your feet like your hands to massage, with intention, then your ashiatsu massage will not only be more therapeutic, but you’ll find your session time fly by faster. Getting specific in your barefoot massage and paying attention to details will make your ashiatsu session stand out from others’. When I worked at a chiropractor’s office years ago, there…