쉐도잉 연습: Deep Tissue Massage Basics: Working with the Whole Body - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Hi, everyone.
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I'm Ian Harvey, massage therapist.
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This is the second video in this series on deep tissue massage basics.
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Last time we talked about how to make contact, how to apply pressure.
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This time we're going to talk about how to work with the whole body in a three-dimensional way.
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If you'd like to skip ahead to the demonstration or to any other part of this video, click down in the table of contents.
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For me, part of deep tissue massage is working with the whole body in a meaningful way.
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It's working broadly, because I feel like just working with what's most available and what's easiest is a superficial way of interacting with the body.
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When I think deep, I think profound.
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A profound way of working with the body is coming at it from a lot of different angles and from different positions, and just acknowledging that entire human.
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Something that I want to avoid as a massage therapist is leaving my client feeling cut up into pieces.
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This is your bad shoulder.
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This is your good shoulder.
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Instead, I want them to leave with a new sense of interconnectedness.
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I want them to feel connected, not dissected.
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To do that, I use long flowing strokes, and I make sure to consider the three-dimensionality of the body, the fact that this chest connects to the scapula, the fact that the anterior pelvis connects to the posterior pelvis, and that all these parts work together.
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If we work with a client in a way that doesn't acknowledge that three-dimensionality, it can feel like a very flat massage.
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So today, once we get a client on the table, we're going to talk about how to increase that feeling of connectedness and to increase that feeling of three-dimensional work, not just of the work we do, but the way that we move their body.
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So I've got Shelby here with me today.
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I've got some jojoba oil as well.
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I always forget to mention that.
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When I'm working with a body and I'm doing deep tissue and I want it to feel profound, what I don't want to do is just work with the areas of the body that are most accessible.
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A mistake that I see sometimes is over focusing on these erector muscles along the spine because they are accessible and because they tend to be an area that people like to have worked.
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I want to get away from just this one area of the body.
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I definitely want to do work along the spine, but this time I'm going to draw up along both sides of the torso, creating some fascial traction along the sides of the lumbar region, along the sides of the thoracic region, and including the cervical and occipital region.
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Basically, with most of my strokes, especially my introductory ones and the ones that I use to reintegrate the body, I want to thoroughly contact everything that's available to me, not just what's easiest to contact, not just those erectors.
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For instance, as I'm working with this leg, it might be tempting to just work with this most accessible region, but there's all sorts of excellent stuff, excellent contact that can be made with the lateral calf and the lateral thigh.
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That might mean sinking down further into my stance.
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I connect my body weight with the table so that it takes some of that pressure off my back.
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Then I give the rest of that body weight to this mother hand and to this working hand, allowing me to not feel any stress on my back at all.
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Being low like this and being anchored into the table, being anchored into my side allows me to redirect my pressure to those less frequently accessed areas.
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My second tip for working with the body in a three-dimensional way is, even when I'm working with these areas that aren't normally touched or when I'm working with the areas that are more frequently contacted, I don't want to work with them in a two-dimensional way.
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I don't want to just go in this one direction.
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That can become a little monotonous, and there are more stimuli that we can be giving to these parts of the body.
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As I'm working, I don't want to just work up and down, up and down.
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I want to introduce some rotation, some ringing.
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I want to do some lifting, showing the body what it's like to have this muscle lifted away from the underlying structures.
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As I compress into this IT band region, I can direct some of my pressure inward, creating some fascial torsion.
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That brings me to my third point, which is that we can use the movement of the body to tell the client more about how this body is put together, to tell them more about the three-dimensional dynamic nature of their body.
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So, as I'm working with this upper leg, I can be introducing some movement just by rocking down here at the calf.
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And you can pick up parts of the body and move them as you work.
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Sometimes when I'm working with this hip, I'm right near that SI joint, I like to create some movement at the femur just by rotating in and out using this low leg as a lever.
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You can do this while working with the hip.
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You can do this while working with that IT band, creating some rotation as you travel.
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You can change the muscle as you're working on it just by manipulating this limb.
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Right now, I'm doing kind of a moving pin and stretch for these hamstrings.
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Just having a limb in a different position as you work on it can make that work feel different.
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Just if you want to add some variety, pick that limb up as you work with it.
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Finally, work with body parts that don't receive a lot of specific attention.
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I can't tell you how happy I am when I go and get a massage and they specifically acknowledge my scapula.
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There's so much good stuff here.
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There's so much good musculature and good fascia to work with.
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There's infraspinatus.
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We can come around to the side and work specifically with these teres muscles.
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We can dip in just above that spine of the scapula and work with supraspinatus.
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Just in general, other places that tend to get just the tiniest bit of contact.
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I'm talking about the hips, making sure to work with the SI joints, the feet.
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The feet can sometimes get 30 seconds of work, which is always just intensely disappointing for me as a client.
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The chest, especially outlining the areas along the clavicles, even things like the scalp and face.
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That's not something that you need to include with every massage, but it can be something refreshing.
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It can be something new for that client.
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If a client comes in asking for stress relief, for work with their anxiety, make sure to make contact with that scalp.
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Make contact with the abdomen.
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Work specifically with those areas of the body that are very frequently either skipped, or just given the tiniest bit of contact.
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By acknowledging those areas of the body, by working with them in a dynamic way,, with the sides of the body and by working with even these areas that receive frequent contact, by working with them in ways other than just up and down, you can tell the client the story of their body.
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They can leave this massage feeling more interconnected than how they came in.
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They can have a greater feeling of connection to any part of their body that might have some pain.
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All right, guys.
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That was my second deep tissue massage basics video.
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If you like that one, you might like the first one, which you can see up in a little bubble there.
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Thanks to all my Patreon supporters.
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You guys allow me to do what I do and to teach on my own terms.
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I really appreciate it.
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If you'd like to see what the whole Patreon thing is about, you can click on the link down in the description.
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Let me know what you think.
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Let me know what you'd like to see next.
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Consider subscribing, and I'll see you next time.

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이 수업에서는 전체 몸을 대상으로 하는 심부 조직 마사지의 기본 원칙에 대해 배웁니다. 마사지 치료사가 고객의 몸을 다룰 때, 서로 연결된 모든 부분을 인식하고 다루는 방법을 알아보게 됩니다. 이 과정은 고객이 느끼는 연관성을 증진시키고, 각 신체 부위를 보다 깊이 있게 이해하고 접촉할 수 있게 합니다. 깊고 의미 있는 마사지를 통해 전체 인체를 3차원적으로 바라보는 방법을 익히고, 일방적인 접근에서 벗어나 다양한 각도와 방법으로 몸을 다루는 기술을 연습합니다.

핵심 어휘 및 구문

  • 심부 조직 마사지 (Deep Tissue Massage)
  • 전신 (Whole Body)
  • 연결성 (Connectedness)
  • 외회전 (Rotation)
  • 근육 (Muscle)
  • 접촉하다 (Contact)
  • 압력 (Pressure)
  • 몸의 움직임 (Movement of the Body)

연습 팁

이 비디오에서 보여주는 마사지의 속도와 어조를 효과적으로 따라하며 연습하기 위해, 일단 중간 속도에서 시작하시길 권장합니다. shadowing 방식을 활용하면, 배우고자 하는 내용을 나의 발음과 음색을 바탕으로 반복할 수 있습니다. 일단 비디오의 내용을 충분히 이해한 후, 비디오와 함께 연습하면서 발음과 억양을 조정해보세요.

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연습이 진행됨에 따라, 자신감을 가지고 다양한 표현을 사용하며 이야기할 수 있도록 하세요. 이러한 접근 방식은 신체 언어와 동작을 포함하여 깊은 참여를 이끌어낼 수 있는 유용한 방법입니다.

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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