The top of her head looks like it was smashed by a board it's so flat never seen this shape of head before. The massage seems really nice. Very soothing.
@LilasRose1973 Yeah... they decided it would be best not to show the part where the therapist smashes the client over the head with a plank. The rest of the massage is very pleasant though.
@anaemia seeing now as medical professionals in the western world have made it mandatory to learn pressure points for massage and acupuncture, yes it is.
@Terra1311 There is no evidence that acupuncture has any medical benefit other than that of a placebo.
And the benefits of massage are confined purely to purely physical therapy, and as a remedy for depression. There is no science behind this. They misused the word in order to medically legitimise something that is purely pleasurable.
@anaemia Er... actually, there is more genuine science to support this than there is to support the benefits of pharmaceuticals. What does Glaxo SmithKline, Roche, Novartis and Pfizer have in common? Apart from being the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, they also share the fact that they have all been fined millions of dollars for falsifying drug test results. So much for the "science", eh?
@loneturtle1 If there is so much "genuine science" to support things like acupressure, chi and energy lines, then name one peer-reviewed study in one respectable journal that supports it. BTW, "energy levels" and such defy the laws of physics. There is no science in this, just pseudoscience.
@anaemia To a large degree you are right, but even the NIH has said that the problem is that it's very difficult to design testing protocols for treatment modalities that are highly subjective in their application. For instance, it's easy to study a vaccine: it's the same ingredients, the same dose, given the same way to a homogenous group of patients. But how do you test a procedure that must be - by definition - altered to fit each patient, moreover, how that patient is feeling on that day?
@anaemia P.S. Even with the normal double-blind, placebo controlled restrictions in place, acupuncture still did better than placebo in an NIH-sponsored test, especially for things like allergies and smoking cessation. While I do agree with you that most "alternative medicine" is a total crock, the older, more established traditions (like acupuncture) do appear to be sometimes/somewhat beneficial, even if they are based on fallacious understanding of physiology by our scientific standards.
@anaemia Ah, now you've gone a bit wrong: Actually, the benefits of massage are well-documented by scientific means. It lowers both blood pressure and cortisol levels. Yes, so does holding a purring cat or listening to classical music, but don't make the mistake of calling something unbeneficial when you merely mean that it's unexceptional.
@TransitiveSam I'm not saying that massage is beneficial. I find them quite helpful when suffering from insomnia and stress. But to say that it's a medical procedure is just incorrect. I wouldn't have a problem with these videos if they cut the bullshit and just showed them for what they are - relaxation treatments. But they insist on adding in this alternative medicine angle and misusing terms like "scientifically", which is where the problem lies, because people believe it.
Mee-grain? Just no.
outforbl00d 3 weeks ago
The top of her head looks like it was smashed by a board it's so flat never seen this shape of head before. The massage seems really nice. Very soothing.
LilasRose1973 4 months ago
@LilasRose1973 Yeah... they decided it would be best not to show the part where the therapist smashes the client over the head with a plank. The rest of the massage is very pleasant though.
loneturtle1 1 month ago
Comment removed
LilasRose1973 4 months ago
Comment removed
LilasRose1973 4 months ago
Thats a big ass forehead. Nice massage vid though :)
Bjdeezy 5 months ago
@Bjdeezy Which is it? Big ass or forehead?
loneturtle1 1 month ago
Scientifically, eh?
anaemia 5 months ago
@anaemia seeing now as medical professionals in the western world have made it mandatory to learn pressure points for massage and acupuncture, yes it is.
Terra1311 1 month ago
@Terra1311 There is no evidence that acupuncture has any medical benefit other than that of a placebo.
And the benefits of massage are confined purely to purely physical therapy, and as a remedy for depression. There is no science behind this. They misused the word in order to medically legitimise something that is purely pleasurable.
anaemia 1 month ago
@anaemia Er... actually, there is more genuine science to support this than there is to support the benefits of pharmaceuticals. What does Glaxo SmithKline, Roche, Novartis and Pfizer have in common? Apart from being the world's largest pharmaceutical companies, they also share the fact that they have all been fined millions of dollars for falsifying drug test results. So much for the "science", eh?
loneturtle1 1 month ago
@loneturtle1 If there is so much "genuine science" to support things like acupressure, chi and energy lines, then name one peer-reviewed study in one respectable journal that supports it. BTW, "energy levels" and such defy the laws of physics. There is no science in this, just pseudoscience.
anaemia 1 week ago
@anaemia To a large degree you are right, but even the NIH has said that the problem is that it's very difficult to design testing protocols for treatment modalities that are highly subjective in their application. For instance, it's easy to study a vaccine: it's the same ingredients, the same dose, given the same way to a homogenous group of patients. But how do you test a procedure that must be - by definition - altered to fit each patient, moreover, how that patient is feeling on that day?
TransitiveSam 3 days ago
@anaemia P.S. Even with the normal double-blind, placebo controlled restrictions in place, acupuncture still did better than placebo in an NIH-sponsored test, especially for things like allergies and smoking cessation. While I do agree with you that most "alternative medicine" is a total crock, the older, more established traditions (like acupuncture) do appear to be sometimes/somewhat beneficial, even if they are based on fallacious understanding of physiology by our scientific standards.
TransitiveSam 3 days ago
@anaemia Ah, now you've gone a bit wrong: Actually, the benefits of massage are well-documented by scientific means. It lowers both blood pressure and cortisol levels. Yes, so does holding a purring cat or listening to classical music, but don't make the mistake of calling something unbeneficial when you merely mean that it's unexceptional.
TransitiveSam 3 days ago
@TransitiveSam I'm not saying that massage is beneficial. I find them quite helpful when suffering from insomnia and stress. But to say that it's a medical procedure is just incorrect. I wouldn't have a problem with these videos if they cut the bullshit and just showed them for what they are - relaxation treatments. But they insist on adding in this alternative medicine angle and misusing terms like "scientifically", which is where the problem lies, because people believe it.
anaemia 3 days ago
that chair looks really uncomfortable though
AimeeBekkaNeate 1 year ago
Thanks for uploading more massage vids! I love all your other ones (Victoria especially)...and this one certainly doesn't dissapoint!
:)
TheBella111 1 year ago
What a beauty...
greyoldfellow 1 year ago 4
once again you have excelled - thanks kezzielegs!
brinjalibrinjali 2 years ago 21
love the soundtrack
DaughterUnderChrist 2 years ago 7
I was soooo waiting for this. Thanks.
Zummon09 2 years ago 5
This has been flagged as spam show
well it seems like you can't cure ugly tooth with indian head massage ^^
TheBigBauer 2 years ago
Come, such comments are hardly fitting.
KajiCarson 2 years ago 11