Rhythmic Water Massage

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My boyfriend and I are heading to California on a short break at the end of September (San Francisco to be exact). We are planning on hiring a car and spending two or three days out of the city.On another forum I use someone recommended staying at the Auberge Du Soleil in Napa Valley for dinner. Well it looks breathtaking, and I naturally headed straight to the Spa section of their website. Where I came across this treatment that sounded unlike anything I have seen before:
Rhythmic Water Massage 60 minYou are held securely by the nurturing support of your practitioner, who guides you in a rhythmic flow of massage and gentle stretches. Swimwear is required.
Is this anything anyone has heard of before, or even experienced?ThanksMat xxx
 
Rhythmic Water Massage

Yep - its Watsu, without a doubt
 
sounds like Watsu performed by a non-Watsu-certified practitioner - otherwise they'd call it Watsu, or at least "Watsu - Rhythmic Water Massage".I suppose someone would start watering it down one day, unable to attend training  due to time/money/whatever, so just figure out what to do themselves.I hope it is something different to Watsu and they've been doing it for years without knowing about Watsu. I know people do add things to a technique and then teach that and it can be a valuable addition, but often the initial essence gets lost.  I think hot stone massage is a prime example of that - LaStone (and some of the others) are so much more than a massage using hot rocks, but a lot of people offer hot stone massage and it is just massage with hot rocks.
 
Fozzyo,  I checked out the website for the spa and you are indeed a lucky dude!  What a lovely place!  Hope you have a wonderful time!As a WATSU practitioner, I agree with melb that rhythmic water massage is probably just WATSU done by a non-WATSU person.  I bet it'll still be wonderful ----  Even within WATSU, there are new variations being developed constantly (like with LaStone)...... some are glorious adaptations and delightful contributions to the work.  One of the things I loved about WATSU training was the acceptance of creativity in the student.  It took me a long time to get certified and I saw some tightening of the standards during my process ---- more requirements for hours, more focus on mastering the basic moves, etc.  But ---- still allowing for the individual to adapt and change the flow once the basics were mastered.I hope you have a fabulous time --- guess I am just jealous!
 
Rhythmic Water Massage

You might be interested to know that Harbin is a short jaunt up the road from Napa. It's the place where Watsu originated, situated in a beautiful, serene wooded area a little away from Middletown. There are natural hot/ warm/ cold springs there and a really nice vibe.I had my first Watsu there, and was in tears by the end. A truly heartening experience.
 


This is something that sound interesting.....so its stretches as well as massage and water. :?:

Sincerely,
CaringHandsMss :)
 
rythmic water massage

Hi, Just letting you know there is an article in massage & bodywork oct./nov. 2005 that addresses water therapies. It all sounds wonderful! They do talk about Watsu, water dance, healing dance and jahara which was developed in Europe, as watsu was being developed in USA. I'd love to experience all of it! :D
 


lovely_day, thanks for mentioning that.

I am going to add the article here, in case they remove it from the net for some reason. Hope it helps. :)

From: http://www.massageandbodywork.com/Articles/OctNov2005/Water.html
Water, Watsu, and Wellness

By Karrie Osborn

Is it our shared bond with water that draws us longingly to a hot bath, a cool ocean, or a warm pool? Is it our chemical connection that brings us to water when we need replenishing or a chance to reclaim our health?

The potential for health and healing through water is unbounded: rehabilitating from knee surgery in a hospital pool, giving birth in water at home, recovering from the traumas of abuse in an aquatic energy session, and rejuvenating the skin with a thalassotherapy bath are just a few of the realized opportunities. But what else awaits us in the depth of water’s healing heart?

As research begins unraveling some of the mysteries water holds, we’ll begin to understand the true power of this liquid gold, especially as we continue to discover its new applications with bodywork. For now, let’s take a look at what we do know about this life source and its healing potential.

Dr. Water
When we talk about water and water therapies, we use words like “nurturing,” “enveloping,” “warm,” “peaceful,” “safe” — “womblike.” And it’s no wonder. Water may be the most maternal source of all, giving birth to so much life on this planet.

Yet even though we rely on it for our very existence, we rarely give water a second thought. It is such an intrinsic part of our lives, but we seldom stop to appreciate all that it offers or to understand all that it is.

We’re largely made up of water — anywhere from 50 percent to 75 percent, depending on muscle mass and age. Without it, we can’t sustain life longer than three days, we age more quickly, incur disease more readily, and watch our bodies break down more rapidly.

When we use it in the context of an external therapy — a bath, a pool — water does amazing things, both physiologically and psychologically.

Because it surrounds every part of the body at once,
it creates an enveloping touch that is both intimate and calming, regardless of the modality with which it’s being used. And aside from feeling good, being in the water is good.

Even without any other elements added to the mix, the benefits of simply being in the water are astounding. “The main benefit is being out of gravity,” says Theri Thomas, Watsu instructor and board member for the Worldwide Aquatic Bodywork Association (WABA). “Within 15 minutes of being out of gravity, muscles can go into a deeper place of relaxation as they get the signal they no longer need to support the body.”

In that same vein, being weightless in the water allows for better mobilization of the spine, Thomas says. For people with crippling disabilities, water gives the body freedom otherwise unknown on land, an important piece in healing body, mind, and spirit.

Thomas says being in water also increases depth of respiration, decreases rate of respiration, decreases heart rate, and calms the sympathetic nervous system. The latter is especially important in our culture, she says, where people are in “fight or flight” mode all the time. Add massageplanetfeine, stressed adrenal glands, and overscheduling, and most of us need something to bring us gently back to earth. “The time the body is most in balance is when it is in the water,” she says.

Immersion in water also affects the lymph system, decreases edema and joint compression, increases blood to muscles, and increases range of motion. These are the very actions necessary to really prepare
tissue for mobilization, Thomas says. “As a result, you get more out of an aquatic bodywork session.”

Additional benefits from being in the water include improved digestion, enhanced immune system response, deep relaxation and peacefulness, and an opportunity to replace debilitating holding patterns in the body.

From Whence We Came
Even without understanding all the physiological implications, ancient cultures have long known the healing powers of water. In fact, from ancient spa traditions comes the “taking the waters” philosophy, where healing pools were an integral part of art, culture, politics, and especially medicine.

Explains spa historian J. Paul de Vierville, Ph.D.: “Taking the waters is a phrase that holds mysterious connotations from a simpler, ancient time ... Taking the waters was, and is, a physical venture into healing, cleansing, and rejuvenation.”1 He says the ancients believed taking the waters cleansed the body, relaxed the heart, refreshed the mind, and purified the soul.

Dating back before written history, this philosophy of health was much more than just bathing. Taking the waters back then meant as much about art, dialogue, music, and socialization as it did about a bath. This spa culture, de Vierville explains, was an integration of experiences with health and rejuvenation at its core.

Many ancient civilizations appreciated the therapeutic value of water, de Vierville says. Egypt, India, Crete, China, and Mesopotamia all “utilized the waters, especially for religious rituals and healing rites.”2

The Greeks, and then the Romans, understood water’s therapeutic value and incorporated it into the earliest versions of healthcare. While ancient Greek society built public baths in conjunction with gymnasiums to facilitate sound bodies and sound minds, Romans largely utilized baths as a social and political activity.

Most cultures have created traditions of health or spirituality based on water at one time or another. Look at the Russian bath with its Siberian shamanic origins, which involves a hot vapor soak followed by a cold plunge. The Dagara people of West Africa partake in an annual reconciliation ritual that involves being dunked in the local river by a healer as a means of washing away negative energy. And, of course, Christianity has long looked to water for the cleansing baptismal.

De Vierville says global discoveries are proving that water has been a healing tool for thousands of years. At a site of ancient mineral springs in France and Germany, archeologists have found Bronze Age artifacts including drinking cups and votive fragments.

Large public baths of old exist only in miniscule pockets in the Western world today. But, even though the philosophy is largely lost, the medicinal elements of taking the waters is not. And that’s why we still see everything from hydrotherapy and vichy showers to floating and Watsu, as larger spas around the country keep the taking-the-waters herieforum.xxxe alive in their own ways.

Watsu and Harold
We couldn’t have a discussion of modern-day water therapies without first recognizing Watsu and its creator, Harold Dull. It’s been 25 years since Dull took his knowledge of Zen shiatsu and his appreciation of water and combined them into something unique in the world of bodywork, something that incorporated powerful and passive stretches, gliding movement, holding, centeredness, and breath.

In the midst of a Watsu “Silver Anniversary” celebration, where water therapy enthusiasts gathered from around the world to share their work, Dull sat down to share his thoughts on aquatic bodywork and Watsu specifically.

Besides being a therapeutic tool, Dull says Watsu is also a personal growth tool — for both client and practitioner. It allows people to go to a place within themselves for both introspection and deep healing, he says, and a big part of its success relies on trust.

“People need to be floated,” Dull says matter-of-factly, 25 years after he started floating his Zen shiatsu students in pools at Harbin Hot Springs in California. In the floating process, you are more than being touched — you’re being held. And that’s what so many of us are missing, he says. “We’re not being held enough. Holding puts you at a different level than touching.” When people are being held in the context of Watsu, “they can accept that kind of closeness,” Dull says, and benefit from it. What makes Watsu unique is the way it “realizes the potential in that closeness.”

The physical closeness that is created in Watsu allows practitioners to work with strength and fluidity. “Closeness allows us to do strong stretches,” Dull says. “Holding them allows us to do stronger stretches.”

The closeness also allows practitioners to connect to their client’s breath at a deeper level. “In stillness, we can really feel their breath and let water move us in the breath we share with them,” he says.

Breath and presence are key factors in Watsu, just as they are for most land-based modalities, but there is something different when it’s applied in water. From the breath pattern comes the movement.

Thomas, who’s spent 25 years teaching aquatic bodywork, calls Watsu a dialogue, creating movement in the moment. “The water creates an immediate bond,” she says. While the energy in our bodies connects and communicates on land, Thomas says it’s much more direct and immediate in water.

“It also allows people a connection with themselves,” she says. The goal is for the practitioner to “hold the space” so the recipient can find her own way. “Many people haven’t had the opportunity to have that safe space, to be encompassed or embraced.”

As part of that, clients are free to go to any level they need to. “It’s a combination of being held and being free — not having someone do something to you.” The resulting “connection of being,” or “sense of oneness,” Dull says, is a common benefit of the work.

Another benefit is how Watsu seems to utilize all the elements water encompasses. In a 2001 study conducted at the State University of Campinas in Brazil, Watsu recipients were asked about the effects this work had on them. A 37-year-old physical therapist wrote: “Watsu provided me the opportunity to surrender, to permit myself to be touched and cared for, and, at the same time, to be able to feel light, relaxed, and free as a child. This freedom and surrender I experience during a session brings more balance and strength to live a better life outside the pool, more lightness and ease, and a greater access to my intuitive side.”3

Admittedly, Watsu is being well accepted in spas around the world. And the more people who witness the work, the more people who understand its potential. “People who watch it get a sense of the spirit of it,” Dull says.

Linda de Lehman, an international Watsu instructor from Italy, says the beauty of Watsu is that “the entire body receives a massage, even if not by our hands. The water accompanies and accentuates our touch.” On her way to teaching the modality this year in nine countries and five languages, de Lehman says Watsu can take you to another place. “Silently floating, weightless, and being held — it often allows the receiver to access her own sense of divine innocence and oneness with everything that we are all born into.”

Watsu clients continue to report that the modality allows them to quiet their minds, an important step toward introspection and self-actualization. “Water definitely has the availability to lend itself to altered states,” Thomas says. “It’s not the agenda of the work, it’s just part of what’s happening.”

Aquatic Bodywork Partners
While Watsu is the most well-known of the therapies that fall under the definition of aquatic bodywork, it by no means is the only one out there. Several other variations of bodywork in water exist, each with its own focus and direction, including water dance, healing dance, and jahara.

At the same time that Watsu was being born here in the United States, water dance was being developed independently in Europe by Arjana Brunschwiler and Aman Schroter. Water dance, which incorporates elements of aikido, somersaults, dance, dolphin and snake movements, and massage, has more of an underwater focus and works on a whole different dimension, Thomas says. It slows the heart rate and breathing more than other therapies and can create a very deep state of relaxation.

Healing dance is a bridge halfway between water dance and Watsu, Thomas says. Developed by professional ballet dancer and choreographer Alexander Georgeakopoulos in 1990, healing dance is all about the movement. In fact, Thomas says, “the movement is the medicine.” As the body flows through 20 different spiral and wave movements above and below the water, rhythm pervades the experience to integrate the body and release blocked energies.

The specific work of jahara, from Brazil, relies on the principles of support, adaptability, expansion, effortlessness, and invisibility, Thomas says. She calls the work quiet and meditative, while also utilizing pressure points, consistency, and precision. Dull says jahara was developed more for clinical conditions and is often found in the paradigm of aquatic rehabilitation. Within the work, gentle traction to the spine leads to an expansion in the body.

Thomas says aquatic bodywork can be applied at any range of the spectrum ­— from very clinical work to a “deep, heart space connection.” It all depends on what’s appropriate for that client and that practitioner.

The Energy of It All
Regardless of how you use it therapeutically, water can’t help but be energetic. It’s vibratory in nature, and that’s what makes it so healing as it resonates with the water that lives in our tissue, blood, and brain.

In the world of aquatic bodywork, energy plays an important role, even if not always stated. Its power in the healing model, however, should not be underestimated.

Diane Tegtmeier, an aquatic energy bodyworker, says the clients she works with in water seem to respond more readily to her energy work than her land-based clients. “On land, I carry the same intent, but in the water it is enhanced,” she says.

Having integrated energy work with social work for 10 years prior to training in Watsu, Tegtmeier has seen her clients migrate from land to water. “It seems like clients can go into deeper levels of awareness in the environment of the water,” she says. And they recognize and appreciate that.

“It seems the water itself and the energetic field of two people in such intimate contact in the water allows the consciousness of the recipient to expand and go deeper than, in my experience, what happens on land,” Tegtmeier says. “The control of the mental process seems to let go more easily to allow the consciousness where it needs to go for healing.”

But why is water so healing as a therapeutic partner? “It’s womblike, it’s vibration, all of that and then something else,” Tegtmeier says. “Dr. Emoto’s work (read further for a discussion of Masaru Emoto’s research on the hidden messages in water) gave words to what it is I’ve experienced from the beginning — water has a specific crystalline quality, a specific polarity, allowing it to both store and magnify energy. So, if I’m taking someone in my arms with the intention of healing, the water medium in which I work seems to potentiate our intention, while also inviting the client and me to move into dimensions of consciousness that can take us to primal sources, like the womb,” she says.

“Water takes us to a more primal state where we are more vulnerable to the energy around us. If that energy is coming from a practitioner who has nothing but intention and holding the space for you, the transformative potential can be phenomenal.”

As with any modality, care must be taken with particular clients: the young, the pregnant, the elderly, the diabetic, the heart-compromised. But even more important is respecting the power of the medium.

“Water calls us to a higher standard of awareness as a practitioner,” Tegtmeier says. “Because a person can enter a womblike state, their consciousness goes to that womblike state. You’re activating that vulnerable fetus awareness, so anything in their environment can have greater impact. Half my clients say the sessions are like being in the womb. That means they’re impressionable. Whatever happens is going to go deeper. Because of the power of water, you have to be careful of pitfalls.”

Tegtmeier explains therapists need to have their own issues in order to be able to deal with the client’s needs. “If a client contacts a place of emotional pain, even physical pain, and the therapist is not emotionally prepared to deal with that, the results can be harmful. The personal and professional development of the therapist is as important as any other skill they bring into the water.”

On the Waterfront
Standing on the foundation of what’s already been built, what might we see if we could peek into the future of water as a therapeutic tool?

Pain/disabilities/chronic conditions
Potentially the biggest opportunity for water therapies to shine will be in the realm of pain, disabilities, and chronic conditions. Because of the weightlessness, the relaxation response, and the care both water and therapist provide, people who otherwise couldn’t “trust” their bodies are able to do so in water.

“Due to the principles of buoyancy, hydrostatic pressure, aquatic resistance, and floating in 94–96 degree water, a body has the profound invitation to relax and surrender to the peaceful sensation of being completely surrounded by a very familiar element,” says Cameron West, former director of the Easter Seals Community Aquatic Programs in Ventura, Calif. She says because of our watery composition, the body has a natural connection to water and can more easily find homeostasis, or balance, within it. “It feels like it is home,” she says.

When utilizing Watsu with pain patients, West says there is a “dance of peacefulness” that happens, allowing patients to “move out of their connection to pain and into a more wholesome relationship with themselves.”

Children have been another beneficiary of water therapies. Aquatic bodywork has also been successfully used for children with a variety of disorders and injuries, including orthopedic issues, congenital and birth defects including spina bifida and autism, brain and spinal cord injuries, and a range of neurological disorders.

Fibromyalgia sufferers have also found relief with aquatic therapies. “Watsu works really well with stress-related diseases,” Dull says, including fibromyalgia. Thomas agrees, “Straight across the board, fibromyalgia patients get huge relief with aquatic bodywork. They need deep work to get rid of holding patterns, but they can’t get deep work on land.” In water, however, with the absence of gravity, fibromyalgia sufferers can find release of deep holding patterns without painful effects.

“Any chronic pain does really well with water modalities,” Thomas says. “And for patients who have either paralysis or amputation, a stroke, or any sort of debilitation of the body, to experience normalcy in the water is a huge part of the healing process. To be able to feel beautiful movement is very liberating.”

That’s why pain clinics are incorporating more aquatic therapies, like Watsu, into their programs and why physicians are seeking new pain-relief avenues in places like water. “Doctors are looking for places to refer their chronic pain patients,” Thomas says. Aquatic bodywork is offering them the answer.


Floating and Liquid Sound
Even though sensory deprivation has historically been the means to higher consciousness for indigenous peoples around the world, floating is a modern-day avenue toward that goal. Despite being somewhat globally introduced to the film-going public in the early ’80s via the now cult classic Altered States , floating as a mainstream therapy is relatively new. Float tanks have been showing up not only in spas, but have had a presence in the training rooms of professional football teams, fitness centers, and even universities.

Today’s floating technology has changed drastically from its beginnings; now, even in-home tanks have internal lighting, emergency alarms, sound systems, and regulating thermometers. Most float tanks require less than a foot of salt water to keep floaters buoyant and strain-free.

Benefits of floating are said to include physical and mental relaxation, rejuvenation, clarity of thought, an integration of the left and right hemispheres of the brain, and a quickened process for healing injuries. One of the biggest benefits reported by those who’ve tried this therapy is the quiet that’s achieved with complete sensory deprivation and the resulting sense of peace and calm that remains.

Taking floating to even another level is Liquid Sound. Developed by Micky Remann in the spa town Bad Sulza, in Thuringia, Germany, Liquid Sound is the experience of floating in a warm pool as it is being fed with an underwater symphony. Music is piped through under-water speakers as floaters waft quietly atop the water. It’s up-and-coming in the world of classical spas and certainly pays homage to the taking the waters philosophy.

***

The bricks on this road of aquatic bodywork have only just been laid; there is much work to be done on the path ahead. “There’s a lot of potential in the work still to be fully realized,” Dull says. We must remember that 25 years is but a blink in the eye of complementary therapies, and there are so many questions to ask, especially as other modalities begin manifesting in water.

Tegtmeier says that regardless of what we want to call the work, the most important thing to remember when working with water is the power of intention and everything else you bring into the water with you. “There’s something about the nurturing quality of water that resonates in something deep within all of us, and it is healing,” she says. “And whether someone calls what they’re doing Watsu or physical therapy or hydrotherapy, that doesn’t matter as much as the intention that’s carried into the water and the space with the client.”


References
1 De Vierville, JP. “Taking the Waters,” Massage & Bodywork, February/March 2000, 13.
2 Ibid.
3 “What does Watsu mean to you,” information regarding State University of Campinas, Brazil via personal correspondence with Harold Dull, July 2005.

Resources
Worldwide Aquatic Bodywork Association — http://www.waba.edu

School of Shiatsu & Massage at the Watsu Center, Middletown, Calif.; http://www.learnwatsu.com; 800/693-3296

Watsu: Freeing the Body in Water, by Harold Dull (2004, Watsu Publishing)

The Book of Floating, by Michael Hutchison (2003, Gateways)

The Hidden Messages in Water, by Masaru Emoto (2004, Beyond Words Publishing)

Masaru Emoto — http://www.masaru-emoto.net and http://www.hado.net

http://www.wellnessgoods.com/messages.asp


Share your thoughts! Click here to send a letter to the editor and let us know what you think. Your letter may be used in an upcoming issue of Massage & Bodywork magazine.

Sidebar from the article:
Can Watsu Tame the FMS Tiger?
A recent, as-yet unpublished study out of New Zealand suggests Watsu may offer some relief for fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) sufferers. At Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Rotorua, researchers compared the effects of Watsu and AIX massage (a full-body massage under jets of warm water) on a small group of women diagnosed with FMS. What they found was Watsu had a “clinically and statistically significant effect” on calming the pain.

The study’s author, Kieren Faull, writes that although the results were limited to the four subscales of physical function — bodily pain, vitality, physical function, social function — “two of the other subscales (mental health and role emotional) had results for treatment variance that were close to significant.” Faull goes on to say that the effect sizes for Watsu were “extremely large, particularly for bodily pain, which suggests strongly that there is some fundamental additional effectiveness within Watsu.”

In interpreting the positive results, Faull says that the “technique” of Watsu may not be all that’s at work here. Because Watsu training focuses not only on technique, but on therapist self-awareness and self-understanding, practitioners are able to respond to the client on multiple levels. “This major component of Watsu training may enable the Watsu therapist to combine elements of a number of roles traditionally carried out by different professions.” For more information on this study, visit http://www.qehealth.co.nz/home/
research_reports.htm.
 
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    Saturday at 🌴😎🌅𝓗𝓸𝓵𝓲𝓭𝓪𝔂 𝓢𝓹𝓪🌅😎🌴3517 Kennedy Rd, Unit 4, Scarborough ☎️𝟰𝟯𝟳-𝟮𝟰𝟳-𝟭𝟭𝟵𝟵☎️: AMY & MAGGIE. AMY is an attractive young lady with larger breasts and a nice bottom. She has outstanding oral skills, and is very popular. Don’t miss out on her special skills! Maggie is sweet, slim and very talented. 🌴😎🌅HOLIDAY SPA🌅😎🌴 3517 Kennedy Rd, Unit 4 (Kennedy Rd & Steeles Ave E)
  16. SugarLoveSpa:
    Saturday at ❤️💙 💜⎝𝗦𝗨𝗚𝗔𝗥 𝗟𝗢𝗩𝗘 𝗦𝗣𝗔⎠💖💗💘: CHRISTINA, LUNA, SARA & TIFFANY. 1270 Finch Ave W (at Keele St), Unit 18. North York. CHRISTINA is Spanish, C Cups, 5'3", tall & nice curves, very open minded. LUNA is a slim, VERY PETITE and capable Vietnamese beauty, nice natural 34C Cups. Luna can do everything. SARA is a beautiful Thai lady with C Cups, 160 Cms and 50 Kgs
  17. wilson holistic centre:
    💕💕Beautiful Korean girl working at 382 Wilson Ave 💕💕☎️☎️416-840-0071❤️❤️
  18. wonderspa:
    🌺welcome to wonder spa☎️416-5000-800,L6a4H8,. 4young beautiful girls working everyday(open long weekend),Ensuit shower available 🍅,new friendly nice girl CiCi,providing oil deep tissue to relax massage and nice body slide,back work.more experience ,🍅nice Vietnamese Amy is very good looking,big breasted sweet smile,open maid,everything she can provide,really popular girl,must try🔥
  19. Red_Pearl_Spa:
    ♥️💋4385 Sheppard Avenue east, unit 5❣💋🔺💋🔴Saturday,♥️🌹🔴 Tammy, full body treatment by an amazing attendant. 💥💞 Kelly today for an amazing treatment... 5'5", long light brown hair, at least C's 💋☎️ 647 352-1588☎️
  20. SpringGreen.:
    The weeked is here .New spanish tina💋💋Bunny miya,angel and tina are available today.These busty attractive girls provide a high level of service with a smile. call and text message ask questions thanks 💋💋647-891-0699 call and text quentions thanks 💋💋
  21. gold__rose__spa:
    💐🏵1536 Warden Avenue 💓💞💋Saturday, 💗💘 Sophia,💋 tall .and slim, toned and in shape, nice boobs, very white, smooth skin. customer service oriented. Pretty and friendly 💝❣ Fifi, solid body, strong, very firm treatment, 💐🌹📳 647 346-8086📳
  22. bnwellness_wilson:
    We have 4 young girls are working today, young sweet Michelle 25’s with curve body open mind and young cute Kitty 26’s with curve body open mind, young flirty Yoyo with 36DD curve body open mind 30’s and nice GFE Lina are providing deep tissue massage, pls call 4163985777 book appointment and walk in always welcome,back entrance and parking available, 350 Wilson Ave North York
  23. Annie Spa:
    🎉🍒ANNIE SPA🎉🍒 ✅7-1001 SANDHURST CIRCLE✅ 👌SCARBOROUGH ON M1V 1Z6👌 ☎️ (647) 891-9688☎️ ☎️ (416) 291-8879☎️ (FINCH & MCCOWAN) OPEN 9:30am to 9pm MONDAY to SUNDAY 🔥✅NEW MANAGEMENT💯NEW GIRLS🔥🔥 🔥GORGEOUS NEW YOUNG ASIAN GIRLS - TODAY’s ROSTER INCLUDES: 🔥 Judy😘🔥Our new Asian massage girl Judy is a vision of refined sensuality, with a graceful figure and smooth, flawless skin that radiates warmth and allure. Her striking black hair frames her delicate features, and her poised
  24. Double_Tree:
    💗4271 Sheppard Avenue east 💞💋💘Saturday, 💞💋 Nina,💓 tall and full build, very experienced touch that will relieve all stress. 💞💋  Xixi, 💌medium height and build and nicely curved. Pretty, dark hair to shoulder. over the top finish+.❣💗 📞 416 293-5071📞
  25. Lulu_Villa_Spa:
    Mia new Vietnamese sweetheart girl with amazing personality Yuki Sweet Singaporean Girl Bella She is Mexican Gorgeous face Elena Vietnamese girl Cici Cute Vietnamese Girl ☎️647- 446-0886
  26. Lulu1980:
    Phoenix Blossom Spa 🌹🌹🌹 Three girls every day 🔥🔥🔥 5124 Dundas West Street, Etobicoke ☎️ 416-817-3366 👍 New❗️New girl Angela ,so young Petite and pretty😋 open service 😜😜 Sexy girl Suki deep massage 😘😘😘😘 Hot and sexy body very provocative service 😍😍😍😍❤️ You are welcome to make an appointment at any time or walk in directly through the back door. We have ample parking spaces available
  27. DareDevil:
    Blackpink Wellness ♥️♥️90 Marycroft Ave. Unit #2, Vaughan, 🍭🍬ON L4L 5Y1 (647) 395-3188. BEAUTIFUL AND SEXY GIRLS TODAY: 🌹New Indian Girl, New Girl Lila, RMT Rose and Beautiful Tiffany on duty🌹.
  28. DareDevil:
    ARIA WELLNESS ♥️♥️ADDRESS: 360 HWY 7, UNIT #6, RICHMOND HILL,647-222-5683 ♥️♥️(PHONES CALL ONLY, NO TEXT'N AVAILABLE) ♥️TODAY'S Schedule!♥️ Loaded lineup with Beautiful Girls : Sexy Faye, Magical Mia and Work out🏋🚴💪 Babe Amy! SPECIAL PROMO 30 MINS 2 GIRLS ONLY $70 🌹🌹**TODAY'S PICKS OF THE DAY IS 🍭🍬MIA AND AMY🍬
  29. luckywellness:
    Lucky Wellness Center 4379721888 295 Eglinton Ave E,Unit 7,Mississauga We have two girls working today. Water and Mia. Water is young, beautiful, sexy and fluent in English. She also knows how to give massages. Mia is tall, plump, especially sexy, and has excellent massage skills. She works hard and has many repeat customers. If you are stressed out at work and exhausted, you might as well make an appointment with them!
  30. EMSpa_schedule:
    Tomorrow's sneak peek: On Saturday May 17, 2025, our attendants will be Vicky 🤩, Lucy 💖, Ivy 😍, Opal 🥰 and Sophie ️. Call us at ☎️(905) 479-6668☎️ to book!
  31. wilson holistic centre:
    💕💕Beautiful Korean girl Anna working at 382 Wilson Ave 💕💕☎️☎️416-840-0071❤️❤️
  32. Lilyspa1:
    Lily Spa : 💰💰100 hh all in💰💰 ❤️❤️ SuSu ( Asian )Slim , 😍😍Porn Service 🩷🩷Elena 22, Latino French, 36 DDD and 🍑🍑ASS, 💋💋Mimi 24, Asian mixed White , very open-Minded , 😈bbbj , DFk 🔥Duo 🔥,☎️ 6475318288
  33. SugarLoveSpa:
    hi today have ella bobo kelly tifany come baby to enjoy with all service available ... Sugar Love spa☎️☎️ (437) 365-2688📲☎️
  34. Lulu1980:
    Phoenix Blossom Spa 🌹🌹🌹 Three girls every day 🔥🔥🔥 5124 Dundas West Street, Etobicoke ☎️ 416-817-3366 👍 New❗️New girl Angela ,so young Petite and pretty😋 open service 😜😜 Sweet girl Luna deep massage 😘😘😘😘 Hot and sexy body very provocative service 😍😍😍😍❤️ You are welcome to make an appointment at any time or walk in directly through the back door. We have ample parking spaces available
  35. Nu spring spa888:
    ❤️❤️❤️sexy hot Filipino 🌸Korean 🌸 Singapore girl working at💓💓 Nu spring spa ☎️416-669-8508❤️❤️❤️
  36. SL East Spa:
    💆‍♀💖HAPPY Friday!!!💖 Ultimate destination for Asian massages🎉 Two fab spots: SL Richmond Hill & SL West Oakville ✨ Your passport to paradise with 10 enchanting girls fr China, HK, Japan & Korea — 🆕36D Flora, Cindy, Cici, Eva, Coco, JPN Yui, Happy, Cindy, Jasmine & Aaliyah — pamper yourself🎁🍁 Ring us 📞647-695-6354 or text us 📱647-578-8169✨ 160 East Beaver Cr., Unit 12, RichmondHill 💰Where Eastern charm meets Western comfort - your bliss
  37. wilson holistic centre:
    💕💕Beautiful Korean girl working at 382 Wilson Ave 💕💕☎️☎️416-840-0071❤️❤️
  38. Lilyspa1:
    Lily Spa : 💰💰100 hh all in💰💰 ❤️❤️ SuSu ( Asian )Slim , 😍😍Porn Service 🩷🩷Elena 22, Latino French, 36 DDD and 🍑🍑ASS, 💋💋Mimi 24, Asian mixed White , very open-Minded , 😈bbbj , DFk 🔥Duo 🔥,☎️ 6475318288
  39. wonderspa:
    🌺welcome to wonder spa☎️416-5000-800,L6a4H8,open10 to10(open holiday),Ensuit shower available 🍅beautiful young Jessica deep tissue to relax massage back walk,hot stone🍅long hair vietname Amy is very good looking,slim body ,open maid, everything she can provide 🌹beautiful sexy face ,big boob Joey ,amazing touch,,really popular girl ,you can get very comfortable warm time🔥🔥
  40. Bencook:
    We have 6 beautiful girl youngest Students Hellen sky jojo mia Angela yumi please call 647 718 6182
  41. AliceSpa:
    FRIDAY at 𝗔𝗟𝗜𝗖𝗘 𝗦𝗣𝗔, 4915 Steeles Ave. E, Scarborough 𝟰𝟭𝟲-𝟮𝟵𝟴-𝟬𝟴𝟵𝟴. 3 ladies waiting for you. Two Very Hot ladies (Qiqi & Summer) have returned to Alice spa today. Open 10am to 9pm: CLOUDIA (10am-9pm): is Vietnamese, young, petite 5'2" & 96 Lbs, B Cup, best rim deep bbbj cim. $40 Room Fee + $80 (incl bbbj & fs). +$20 for rim/cim. Excellent open minded services. SUGAR (1pm-9pm):
  42. Soul Relax Spa:
    ✨ Looking for a relaxing escape? ✅ Click Here Meet🌸Kim🌸Tina🌸SamiCall us today for the best treatment and service experience. Click on our Username and FOLLOW US for updates ! Call now ☎ 289 - 298 - 5662☎️ Your ultimate relaxation awaits! ✨
  43. SpringGreen.:
    Today we have 5 girls :💋💋 New girl Hitti very young💋💋Lisa- Tanned Spanish beauty with large melons and a fun booty too minica- exotic goddess with a gymnasts body and corresponding flexibility Jennifer- Exotic beauty with... Call and text 647 891 0699 ask questions Thanks💋💋
  44. Spa in Markham:
  45. BlueXado Therapy & Spa:
  46. Pink Flower Spa:
  47. Jenny’s Spa:
    🎉🍒JENNY’S SPA🎉🍒 ✅5170 DUNDAS STREET WEST✅ 👌ETOBICOKE ONTARIO M9A 1C4👌 ☎️( 647-893-5196)☎️Call or Text ☎️( 437-888-3759)☎️Call Only (ETOBICOKE) OPEN 10am to 9pm MONDAY to SUNDAY 🔥✅GRAND OPENING💯NEW GIRLS EVERYDAY🔥EXCELLENT MASSAGE + SERVICE QUEENS NOW AVAILABLE AT JENNY’S SPA FOR ALL YOUR MASSAGE AND SPECIAL EXTRA NEEDS🔥💯😘🔥❤️👌 🔥TWO BEAUTIFUL NEW YOUNG ASIAN GIRLS EVERYDAY🔥 💯REAL PICTURES OF ATTENDANTS💯 🔥💋Limited Time Special Promotion🔥💋 ✅💦30 Minutes Nude Mass
  48. Lulu1980:
    Phoenix Blossom Spa 🌹🌹🌹 Three girls every day 🔥🔥🔥 5124 Dundas West Street, Etobicoke ☎️ 416-817-3366 👍 New❗️New girl Angela ,so young Petite and pretty😋 open service 😜😜 Sweet girl Luna deep massage 😘😘😘😘 Hot and sexy body very provocative service 😍😍😍😍❤️ You are welcome to make an appointment at any time or walk in directly through the back door. We have ample parking spaces available
  49. wilson holistic centre:
    💕💕Beautiful Korean girl Anna. working at 382 Wilson Ave 💕💕☎️☎️416-840-0071❤️❤️
  50. Annie Spa:
    🎉🍒ANNIE SPA🎉🍒 ✅7-1001 SANDHURST CIRCLE✅ 👌SCARBOROUGH ON M1V 1Z6👌 ☎️ (647) 891-9688☎️ ☎️ (416) 291-8879☎️ (FINCH & MCCOWAN) OPEN 9:30am to 9pm MONDAY to SUNDAY 🔥✅NEW MANAGEMENT💯NEW GIRLS🔥🔥 🔥GORGEOUS NEW YOUNG ASIAN GIRLS - TODAY’s ROSTER INCLUDES: 🔥 Yumi😘💋A striking new tall gorgeous Korean model with long, flowing reddish-brown hair cascading down her back and a slender, elegant figure that exudes grace and poise. Yumi’s natural confidence and allure, make her approach
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