At iBliss, we help you

  • Understand pain: its trajectory and causes.

  • Prevent damage and degradation.

  • Revive tissues and retrain them.

  • Erase reflexes that escalate pain.

Pain is your friend!

Pain reveals rupture in continuum. When body cannot absorb impacts of stimulus anymore, it shouts out loud.

Killing pain provides instant “relief” but underlying problems keep compounding and cascading to neighborhood over time. It is akin to killing a messenger without even reading a message. Avoidance and masking reinforces unsustainable usage patterns and eventually continuous overuse cause:

  • Consistent and elevated pain levels, also known as chronic pain.

  • Significant loss of mobility, function, strength and flexibility.

At iBliss, we help you understand development of chronic pain and reverse it. Register for an upcoming webinar:

Chronic habits => Latent pain => Chronic pain

Muscles, fascia, tendons, ligaments, bones, nerves and many other elements act as a unit and adapts to your unique demands and the situation. Sitting on a chair too long, every single day, requires keeping neck and back straight. Mobility is favored over stability, by design and evolution, however. Well, extra stability comes at the cost of reduced mobility which causes your tissues to become stiff and strained over time. This is latent pain! Pain signals are naturally masked(i.e. inhibited) when you are in action mode or in stress and become apparent when you are resting.

Common causes of the chronic pain are:

  • Rigid, strained and dry tissues

  • Repeated taxing movements

  • Prolonged and/or incorrect postures

  • Excessive and repetitive mental stress

And it often worsens due to :

  • Slow and delayed response after tissue damage.

  • Ignoring pain during early stages of development.

  • Frequent masking with pain killers for quick “relief”.

Checkout our resource center to learn more:

Massage for regaining strength

Strength means swollen and hypertrophic muscles to many. Human body structure is lot less like a skyscraper and more reminiscent of a suspended air bridge or sailboat. A tensegrity human model depicts bones are suspended in air and strung together by muscles and fascia.

Under continuous and repetitive mechanical stress, tensegrity based structure adapts by deformation i.e. altering its shape. Imagine a plastic bag being gently and gradually stretched: it tends to remain stretched instead of coming back to original shape.

Massage can help

  • Release stiffness and tightness in muscles and fascia.

  • Hydrates “dried up” areas and revitalize them.