I had a couple days of ergonomic hell; hunched over a laptop working on a time intensive project in a horrible chair at a public library, followed by falling asleep at 3am on my couch with my head in a very awkward position. Woke up and felt like my neck was going to 'give' ... showered carefully, then when I turned my head as I was toweling my hair it 'gave' ... not sure how to describe this except that it hurt like bloody hell. Sharp, intense pain radiating from the base of my skull down my shoulder blade that took my breath away. Could barely move my head, had to use my hands to cradle my head as I laid down and spent the next 48 hours in agony, popping ibuprofen and Tylenol. This has happened before - it's usually some innocuous movement following a period of stress/anxiety/bad ergonomics, but this time was really, really bad. Any idea what this might be? Muscle/bone/nerve? I tend to think it's some type of internal muscle cramping
Several years ago I went to a chiropractor for a back issue. He adjusted me and also spent a good deal of time massaging out hard muscle lumps from my neck. I felt like a new man after him - but shortly after he fixed me up he retired. I went to a couple chiros since then and they were a joke compared to what I was used to by 'my guy'. None offered any type of massage and their adjustments were laughable compared to the way 'my guy' twisted me into pretzels.
I'm no longer in pain but I have stiffness in my neck and shoulders that is exacerbated by my job (IT industry). I felt such amazing relief by 'my guy' so I've been looking around for a chiro. But then I thought, maybe it was his massaging that really helped me the most, so maybe I should see a MT... I figure, this being a MT forum the answer will likely be obvious, but I was wondering if the issue I described above could be alleviated by an adjustment vs. massaging.
Separate from this issue, I'd like to get a good massage once or twice a month. I'm from the Buffalo area - any advice on how I could find a good MT in my area? Must a MT be licensed? What about a MT student? Not sure I can muster up $70+tip for an hour, which is what the local salons charge, and I figure students or the unlicensed may be a little more affordable.
I've perused Craigslist but it seems like those offerings specialize in a little more than I'm interested in ...
First post, please be gentle..
Several years ago I went to a chiropractor for a back issue. He adjusted me and also spent a good deal of time massaging out hard muscle lumps from my neck. I felt like a new man after him - but shortly after he fixed me up he retired. I went to a couple chiros since then and they were a joke compared to what I was used to by 'my guy'. None offered any type of massage and their adjustments were laughable compared to the way 'my guy' twisted me into pretzels.
I'm no longer in pain but I have stiffness in my neck and shoulders that is exacerbated by my job (IT industry). I felt such amazing relief by 'my guy' so I've been looking around for a chiro. But then I thought, maybe it was his massaging that really helped me the most, so maybe I should see a MT... I figure, this being a MT forum the answer will likely be obvious, but I was wondering if the issue I described above could be alleviated by an adjustment vs. massaging.
Separate from this issue, I'd like to get a good massage once or twice a month. I'm from the Buffalo area - any advice on how I could find a good MT in my area? Must a MT be licensed? What about a MT student? Not sure I can muster up $70+tip for an hour, which is what the local salons charge, and I figure students or the unlicensed may be a little more affordable.
I've perused Craigslist but it seems like those offerings specialize in a little more than I'm interested in ...
First post, please be gentle..