Muscle Groups
...Adductors and Glutes...Any advise on how to handle this and how many of you work comfortably with these muscle groups?
Hi. I work the adductors - face up ... and the gluts - face down. Here are examples, but it can be modified to whatever you actually have to do. Hope it helps.
For the upper leg, start by warming up the tissue and making the client feel a little more comfortable by "rolling the leg like bread - back and forth under the sheet", then undrape professionally and warm up some more with some long, deep palmar and finger strokes, just so they get comfortable to your touch. Next "frog-leg" the client, with the drape in professional postion and begin to work into the internal thigh. I find this just gives the body a bit more of what it needs to accept the work which is coming next. Usually the above proceedures should only take a few mins. Next you can begin to get high into the adductors and work with thumbs or fingers at the insertions. The client can have underware on or off - usually off. You can cross-fiber effectively this way, and you can have the client cover their "private regions" with a hand if need be. I suggest making sure that the back side of your hads is the only thing that touches any unsuspecting regions and never the palmar surface. And of course, the plan is that nothing touches at all. The main thing is positioning yourself so that you can do the work without being too uncomfortable. As for the gluts, I will work them according to how I feel the client accepts it. That's one of those "you just have to get the feel of the client" things. Most of the adductor clients in my past have just needed the work and don't really complain about it. Many actually asked for it, and would state it was hard to find someone besides a Physical Therapist to "do the work". Usually they appreciate it if they are athletes in need. So -- gluts. I usually prepare the region, if the client is not someone I am used to working on, by kneading through a sheet first. Something along the line of: closed fists pressing alternately on the gluteal region. And you might want to throw in some gentle to agressive rocking from the side of the table with one hand on the lower back and the other starting on an ankle and moving up the leg with that "rolling proceedure" I mentioned a second ago. You can do that on both legs, one at a time, while rocking the lower back. It can get them a little more relaxed, as well as yourself. Then, onto the "kneading" and then you can add in elbow/forearm work of the gluts through the sheet.If you decide to undrape, you just keep the gluteal cleft covered and drape the leg professionally. I just do a little tuck under the thigh while they are *obviously*
face down. Now the one glut is uncovered and you can proceede to work flat handed up the leg over the glut and into the lower back -- you can do this with the knuckles and you can do this with the elbow/forearm combination. Sometimes, (let's say I am working the clients right) I will stand with a quite wide stance facing into the table from the side, so that I am pretty short to the ground, and will lean onto the client moderately with my left forearm over the gluteal cleft (forearm actually parallel with the spine - pretty much right in line with it *tries to give you a visual*), while working the clients right side with my right forearm/lebow combination. This does a few things that work with my body type. It braces me for deeper or lighter work, gives me more depth perception and allows the sacrum to "give a little", as well as locking that sheet in place so it doesn't slide away.Hope those give you a few things to work with. I like aralia's side lying position -- that's something new for me, and think I'm gonna try it sometime.Oh, and I also generally work with a sheet and blanket, like BJB-LMP, and pull the blanket across, so it bunches a bit over the clients "privates", especially when male, just to give them a little more "at ease with something covering them". However, working with a sheet really is fine to, you just bunch it some to give the feeling of "more coverage". You are working with athletes, so they may be hot natured and not like the blanket, so keep that in mind too.speters idea of finding a mentor is a great idea. If you don't have one, consider grabbing a massage student from a school in the area and working on them. They'll love it, because they are learning something new and getting some much needed work.terab gives some excellent advice. "Try not to feel too uncomfortable doing it because your client will sense it and it will make them uncomfortable."Good massage!