Table Thai Yoga Massage enhances all your bodywork approaches by integrating Stretching, ROM, Therapeutic Pressure Points, and of course a bevy of massage therapy possibilities.
This is THE CLASS TO TAKE if you want to amaze your clients with refreshing stretching techniques and harness the interconnectivity between the fascial and neurological systems.
In this webinar course, you’ll discover:
- Unique Theory and Approaches of Thai Massage
- How Yoga adaptations to all bodywork enhances the experience for givers AND receivers
- Dozens of simple, easy, and fun ways to stretch, mobilize, and massage client’s with minimal effort and maximum positive effect

Therapeutic Benefits Table Thai Yoga Massage
- Releases local and systemic musculoskeletal aches and tension
- Relieves most all joint discomfort like that found in the low back, neck, shoulder, hips, knees, feet, hands, elbows, and wrists
- Reorganizes fascia (see Facilitating Fascial Flow below for more)
- Stimulates cardiovascular, lymphatic (immune system) and synovial fluid (joint lubrication) circulation (of blood, lymph, and synovial fluid)
- Improves range of motion, flexibility, and functional movement
- Reestablishes circadian rhythm, body clock, and homeostasis
- Boosts energy, mood, and enhances “lom” along the “sen”
- Decreases stress and reduces anxiety
- Relieves headaches and so much more!

Course Objectives:
- Grow a foundation of Thai Yoga Massage stretching approaches and to generate profoundly healing therapeutic techniques.
- Enjoy body mechanic modifications that avoid over-efforting, muscling, and repetitive stress injuries in favor of working smarter, not harder.
- Discover how reorganizing fascia has both therapeutic physical and psychological benefits.
How Table Thai Yoga Massage Uniquely Facilitates Fascial Flow
One of the main features of therapeutic bodywork is utilizing approaches to realign disorganized fascia. Disorganized fascia (once referred to by the inaccurate and anachronistic term “scar tissue”), refers to misaligned, ischemic (lack of blood), or asymmetrical orientation of soft and hard tissues (muscles, joints, bones, etc.) that lead to and perpetuate pain and suboptimal mobility. Pressure alone can assist in fascial reorganization, however, to exponentiate therapeutic resets, it’s recommended to add movement in addition to pressure. Stretching combined with massage therapy strokes revolutionizes the typical 2D approach of bodywork to transform it into the arena of 3D, accessing more planes of motion, greater proprioceptive engagement (sensory neurons in our joints), and lead to more thorough and long lasting benefits. Explore how blending massage, ROM and stretching amplifies the positive results of all your therapeutic sessions.