Deb Jones LMT

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05/27/2026

The last several days my low back and left hip/glute pain had really flared up from repetitive work patterns and compensation issues that honestly I didn’t realize had gotten this bad until my body finally started “talking” pretty loudly.

Today I was able to get on Roger’s table for a focused 30-minute session, and the difference afterward was huge. Through targeted therapeutic massage work including muscle energy techniques and trigger point therapy, we were able to reduce a lot of the guarding and chronic tension patterns that had been pulling my hips too far anterior and stressing my sacrum and low back.

As a massage therapist myself, it was a really good reminder that these postural and musculoskeletal imbalances often don’t resolve from one isolated session. There’s real value in scheduling sessions closer together initially to help retrain dysfunctional patterns, reduce compensation, and reinforce better movement before the body falls right back into the same cycle again.

I’ve already booked another session this week and plan to continue with focused work over the next several weeks to really reinforce the changes we started today.

If you’ve been dealing with chronic pain, compensation patterns, or a nagging issue that just never fully resolves, I highly encourage you to reach out to Roger and get on his schedule.

And Roger — thank you for showing up for me today, especially on your birthday 🥳🎂 . The relief I feel tonight means I can continue showing up for my own clients this week, and I’m incredibly grateful for that. 🙏🤲🏼

05/25/2026
https://athletechnews.com/ai-massage-company-aescape-insolvency-proceedings/The recent fall of Aescape really highlights...
05/12/2026

https://athletechnews.com/ai-massage-company-aescape-insolvency-proceedings/

The recent fall of Aescape really highlights something I’ve believed all along: massage therapy cannot be replaced by a machine.
I’m not anti-technology at all. I support many wellness tools like red light therapy, cold therapy, PEMF, and other adjunctive devices. I think they can absolutely have a place in supporting health and recovery.
But massage therapy is different. True hands-on work involves skill, intuition, real-time assessment, adaptability, and human connection. A machine may imitate pressure, but it cannot replace the trained hands and therapeutic presence of an experienced massage therapist.
Nothing beats hands-on care.

US-based robotics wellness company Aescape Inc has entered insolvency proceedings following the sale of substantially all of its assets and escalating financial pressures.

04/30/2026

Fascia is not holding your heartbreak like a photograph. It is holding the shape your body took while your heart was breaking. Not as a memory you can point to, but as a pattern you can feel, and the body remembers. As Eckhart Tolle reflects, no one has ever found a “thought” in the brain during dissection, yet we all live inside them every day. Not everything real is easy to measure, and as our understanding deepens, so does our language for the quiet ways the body holds and heals.

There’s something really special happening right here in our community, and I want to take a moment to recognize it.If y...
04/29/2026

There’s something really special happening right here in our community, and I want to take a moment to recognize it.

If you haven’t yet connected with Roger Hall, I strongly encourage you to. He’s practicing out of the River House at the corner of Kingston & Elm, and word is spreading quickly—for good reason.

Clients are leaving his table feeling cared for, heard, and genuinely better in their bodies. And it shows… his schedule is already beginning to reflect just how much our community needed another skilled set of hands.

Roger brings a background as an athletic trainer, and that depth of knowledge translates beautifully into his work. More importantly, he has that ability we all value so much—he listens. He meets people where they are and creates the kind of space that allows real change to happen.

From one massage therapist to another, I can say this with complete confidence: I would absolutely refer anyone to him.

If you’ve been thinking about booking a session—or if my schedule is full—he is a wonderful option right here in town.

Go check him out, get on his schedule, and support a therapist who is clearly making a difference already. Here is his link:

Roger Hall LMT massage services in Delhi NY. relax and find balance.

Hey where are all my runners 🏃🏻
04/02/2026

Hey where are all my runners 🏃🏻

Please read below for information on all three sessions. This gives you access to all three sessions with a slight discount. April 19, April 26, and May 3rd. You must come to session 1 or 2 to come to session 3.

02/19/2026

This weeks Member Spotlight is on True North Therapy providing individual and couples therapy to adults both online throughout New York and Vermont as well as in-person in Delhi, NY. Currently accepting new clients, click through to find out more about the practitioners and offerings of this dynamic and supportive therapy collective. https://bit.ly/4rt3R9y

02/14/2026

A little love and thought for your body this Valentine’s Day.

In the healing arts, we have a choice in how we approach change, and it is the same choice your therapist makes when they place their hands on you. We can work like we’re holding a hammer and chisel, trying to break tension apart and carve the body into a better shape, or we can work like artists with clay, shaping through warmth, patience, and relationship. One approach assumes resistance and tries to conquer it. The other assumes potential and tries to meet it.

A sculptor working with marble must strike and remove what does not belong, but an artist at the wheel keeps the material alive, adjusting pressure, adding moisture, circling again and again, letting form emerge through steady contact rather than control. Your living body is far closer to clay than it is to stone. It changes with temperature, hydration, rhythm, and trust. Tissue listens. Your fascia adapts. The nervous system leans toward or away from touch the way a plant turns toward light or curls inward from the cold.

If you have ever watched clay take shape, you know it responds best to presence, not force. Too much pressure and the walls collapse. Too little and nothing forms. Skilled hands create just enough guidance and space, returning again and again to glide, pace, and responsiveness. Bodywork follows that same conversation. It is not about overpowering your body, but partnering with it.

Clay is often described as “the only poetry that can be touched,” a visceral bridge between the earth and the human experience, shaped by patient hands and living pressure. And when I think about that, I can’t help but smile a little, because bodyworkers are doing something just as beautiful and artistic. We are not only shaping clay, but tending to bodies made of stardust, water, and memory. Dust Shapers of a different kind, listening for the hidden constellations within the body.

I love this article — it’s such a great reminder that massage therapy is about so much more than easing muscle tension. ...
01/28/2026

I love this article — it’s such a great reminder that massage therapy is about so much more than easing muscle tension. Our work supports how the whole body functions, especially the connection between the nervous and endocrine systems. It’s not pressure from my fingers that makes a knot release — it’s the nervous system finally feeling safe enough to let go. This is truly why I love what I do. 💆‍♀️✨

When I think back to massage school, I can still see myself hunched over textbooks, memorizing muscles, tracing nerve pathways, and learning how to assess pain and dysfunction. We spent hours learning the body's architecture, and somewhere along the way, almost as an afterthought, there was a small section on hormones.

Even then, it struck me as strange because hormones are not a footnote in the body. They are not an accessory system quietly working in the background. They are one of the primary ways the body understands itself and the world around it.

Hormones shape how we experience pain and pleasure, how we recover, how we sleep, how we attach, how we grieve, and how we heal. They influence whether a body feels safe enough to soften or is compelled to brace. They decide whether rest is possible or vigilance must remain. And yet, many of us stepped into practice with only a surface understanding of this vast internal conversation.

What I have come to understand over time, through study and thousands of hours at the table, is that the nervous and endocrine systems are inseparable partners. One senses and the other amplifies. The nervous system is constantly asking, What is happening right now? The endocrine system responds by deciding, How much should this matter, and for how long?

This is where perception becomes chemistry.

So let’s slow this down for a moment and revisit hormones together, not as a checklist, but as a conversation that might offer more profound clarity.

Cortisol is often cast as the villain, but it has never been the enemy. Cortisol is the watchful sentry pacing the walls of the city, scanning the horizon for danger. When a threat appears, it rings the bell, mobilizing energy, sharpening focus, pulling resources where they are needed most. It is brilliant in short bursts. The problem is not cortisol, but a body still listening for danger, never hearing the call that says the watch is over. Cortisol continues to circulate, affecting immunity, digestion, sleep, and pain perception. Bodywork allows the sentry to stand down and rest, signaling the watch is no longer needed.

Adrenaline and noradrenaline are the messengers of urgency. They are the ones who shout, Move now! Act now! Be ready! They tighten muscles, quicken breath, and narrow attention so the body can respond instantly. In bodies shaped by chronic stress or trauma, these messengers remain loud, keeping tissues braced as if impact is always imminent. Slow, grounded, predictable touch speaks a different language to the body. It tells the messengers they can lower their voices. It whispers, You are not being chased and you do not need to be ready for impact.

Oxytocin is the hormone of belonging. It is the warm fire lit in the center of the room when the storm has passed. It softens edges, quiets fear, and reminds the body that connection is safe. Research consistently shows that attuned, consensual touch increases oxytocin, supporting parasympathetic regulation and emotional settling. This is why presence matters in bodywork almost as much as technique. A body responds differently to hands that listen rather than impose. Oxytocin does not force relaxation; it invites it.

Endorphins are the body’s internal balm. They move like a gentle river through pain, easing intensity without erasing awareness. Unlike adrenaline-driven relief, endorphins carry calm with them. They allow pain to soften without demanding vigilance. This is the quiet relief clients describe when they say they feel lighter or more spacious, as though something heavy has been set down rather than pushed away.

Dopamine is often misunderstood as the reward chemical, but at its heart, it is the hormone of anticipation and motivation. It answers the question, Is it worth engaging? Is there something ahead worth moving toward? In bodies shaped by burnout, chronic illness, or long-term stress, dopamine can become dysregulated, leaving motivation flat or restless. Gentle bodywork, rhythmic input, and a sense of completion help dopamine recalibrate, restoring the feeling that effort leads somewhere meaningful.

Serotonin moves like a steady tide. It supports mood, resilience, and emotional stability, helping the body feel anchored rather than reactive. It is influenced not only by thought, but by sensation, rhythm, and environment. Warmth, steady pacing, and consistent touch help serotonin do its quiet work, reinforcing a sense of internal order.

And then there is melatonin, the keeper of night. Melatonin is not just about sleep; it is the hormone of repair, the signal that tells the body it is safe to power down and restore. When stress chemistry stays elevated, melatonin is delayed, fragmented, or silenced altogether. Bodywork that supports parasympathetic tone helps reopen the doorway into rest, allowing melatonin to rise and the body to remember how to heal in the dark.

Together, these hormones are not separate systems pulling in different directions, but an orchestra responding to the conductor of perception. When the nervous system senses threat, the music sharpens and accelerates. When it senses safety, the tempo slows, harmonies return, and repair becomes possible.

This is why touch matters.

Looking back, I wish we had lingered longer here in our education. I wish we had spoken more about chemistry as a conversation rather than a complication. But perhaps this is the nature of bodywork. We keep learning through our hands and continue refining our understanding through presence. And with each layer of awareness, our work becomes less about doing and more about listening.

Address

8 Delview Terrace Ext.
Delhi, NY
13753

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

+16074318488

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