Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Couples who massage experience improvements in well-being and relationship satisfaction

Couples wanting to improve their relationship should give each other a massage, a psychological study suggests.

While most of us enjoy the feeling of a partner kneading our tired muscles, the researchers found it was almost as good for the one doing the kneading.

Researchers found that couples who spent just 15 minutes giving a partner a massage two or three times a week experienced significant improvements in well-being, stress and relationship satisfaction.

Those who give a massage felt 9 per cent better overall, compared to 12 per cent for those who received the massage.

Couples wanting to improve their relationship should give each other a massage, a psychological study suggestsSayuri Naruse, a visiting researcher at the University of Northumbria and Dr Mark Moss, a psychology professor, conducted the study on 38 couples.

They self-assessed factors such as their mental clarity, mood, pain, emotional stress, physical uptightness and irritability.

In research to be presented today at the British Psychological Society’s Annual Conference in Brighton, Miss Naruse, a qualified masseuse, said she instructed the couples in massage.

Each partner gave the other a 15-minute treatment and was asked to continue at home at least twice a week.

Ms Naruse said: ‘Many people have found that receiving massage is beneficial, but we found that giving had a similar effect.’

‘These findings show that massage can be a simple and effective way for couples to improve their physical and mental well-being while showing affection.’

MORE: Massage… as good to give as it is to receiv | Daily Mail Online


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