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Massage is often regarded as a luxury or an indulgence. But in fact this form of treatment can have important and unique benefits.

3: Anxiety and Depression? Massage Could Be (Part Of) The Answer

Massage can help with anxiety and depression by altering the balance of chemicals in the brain. Cortisol is associated with a whole host of stress responses both physical and mental, and massage appears to lower cortisol levels,while elevating dopamine and serotonin, which are responsible for the effort-reward cycle and for general wellbeing or "feeling good". As a result, massage can increase the amount of serotonin in circulation and reduce reliance on SSRIs or augment their effects in people with anxiety and depression.

4: Improve Sleep Quality

Massage can help promote healthy sleep. We need deep sleep for mental and physical regeneration: no-one is exactly sure why, but we do know that plenty of good sleep is a vital component of overall good health. Loss of sleep can cause cognitive deficit equivalent to being over the drink-drive limit, for instance, as well as impacting everything form mood to muscle elasticity. And lack of sleep is virtually an American epidemic, so massage could practically qualify as a public health intervention, albeit the most individualise,d hands-on version ever. It's thought to work by increasing the number of delta waves in the brain, though again, no-one knows why. 

5: Improved Immunity

Like sleep quality, immunity is a function of general wellbeing and a deficit in immunity, a general background always-about-to-get-sick feeling, can be a sign that something's up behind the scenes or just a marker of poor general wellbeing. Massage can help improve immunity by both reducing stress and directly by increasing white blood cell count.

6: Reduce The Symptoms Of PMS

PMS is a distant myth to some; to others it's an all-too-intrusive reality that messes with minds and bodies for a week month or more. Massage can help minimise the effects of PMS, reducing feelings of bloating and mood swings.

7: Relief From Migraines

Migraines aren't headaches: believing that they are is a sure sign that you don't suffer from migraines. But their first, worst symptom is often a crushing headache with feelings of tightness or pressure, accompanied by vision disturbances and photophobia. Massage can reduce the number of migraines a sufferer has, as well as reducing the pain and duration of each one, and can be effective against stress headaches and cluster headaches too.

8: Beauty Benefits

As if being better-rested and in less pain wasn't likely to make you look better all by itself, massage can actually directly affect your looks by improving the flow of lymph to the facial tissues. According to Kimara Ahnert, a New York City skincare professional, "massage increases blood flow, which plumps up slack skin, encourages lymphatic drainage (the shuttling of toxins out and away from cells so that more nutrients can travel in) and adds vitality to a dull complexion and lacklustre hair."

9: Work With Other Treatments

Massage is a natural partner for hands-on health treatments like chiropractic, osteopathy or physical therapy. But it can also augment other treatments, including chemotherapy for cancer! No, massage can't cure cancer. But it does make the process of having chemo less awful by reducing the stress, pain and fatigue that accompanies it.

So there you have it. Massage does make you feel better, but it also makes you better: healthier, more relaxed and fitter.

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