Cheap Massages
I've been going to regular physical therapy appointments to overcome my lower back pain, and my physical therapist recommended that everyone get massages at least once a month. Love it!
But then I remembered that we are tightening our belts and sticking to our budget so that we can continue to save money.
So I did some searching on Yelp and found a massage school that offers $35 hour-long massages (and you are prohibited from tipping, so it really is only $35).
I booked an appointment right away.
I have to say that you kind of get what you pay for. It was good, but not great. And I hate the unpredictability of not knowing who it's going to be every month and whether or not it's going to be good.
I might try out Massage Envy next month. Massages are $59.99, so I could pay about $70 with tip. That would be an extra $420 per year (more than the massage school). If I could see the same massage therapist every time, that might be worth it.
Or there's an independent massage therapist who offers three massages for $201 ($67/each), which would be about $540 more than the cheap massage school per year. Reading the reviews is pretty compelling.
Choices, choices!
4 comments:
This year I also started working in regular massage therapy into my schedule. I lucked out in that my neighborhood YMCA offers massage therapy for $20/40/60 30/60/90-minutes sessions. I believe this YMCA is the only one in the area that has this service, and I am sure this isn't a universal program, but I wonder if a local gym or community center near you offers a similar set up.
You should check your health insurance. My health insurance covers acupuncture and massage which I can get at the same place. And if I do it back to back they waive one of the co-pays. Depending on your insurance, I think they can also bill it is chiropractic. Personally I think it's an important part of healthy living. It feels like such a luxury but it is also helping me be healthy from day today
I highly recommend you find a chiropractor who is certified in the Active Release Technique. It is a very specialized soft tissue treatment that is considered the "gold standard". I would also look into Foundation Training (free videos on YouTube). Just my advice as a chiropractors wife!
Thanks for the advice, Everyone! You all are awesome!
Post a Comment