Monday, 24 July 2017

Beginning Hand & Ear Reflexology Class | Reflexology Workshops

Hand & Ear Reflexology Class Sep 23-24
     
                     9:00 AM – 5:30 PM Both Days
Beginning_Foot_Hand_EarHelp yourself, your family, friends, & clients to be pain free & have far better health. Learn effective Foot, Hand, & Ear Reflexology Routines to use separately or combine with other modalities. Working with all three is far more effective than just Foot Reflexology.Instructor: Stefanie Sabounchian
Continue Your Reflexology Studies

The more serious student can deepen their knowledge, skills,
confidence & results, after the Foot Hand Ear Class, by continuing with:

Beginning Integrated Foot Hand Ear Reflexology
Watch for this advanced class to be offered during 2018 50 CE Hours

Advanced Integrated Foot Hand Ear Reflexology
Watch for this advanced class to be offered during 2018 50 CE Hours
Instructors: Lisa Chan, Bill Flocco, Stefanie Sabounchian



School Campus for Classes: The American Academy of Reflexology conducts it’s classes at
13315 W. Washington Blvd, LA, CA 90066
3nd Floor, Sevenstar Room.
Close to Marina del Rey, Venice Beach, Santa Monica, & 12 minutes from Los Angeles Airport LAX.
Parking: ground floor. Restaurants near by.Motel list available upon request. 

Refund Policy: 100% refund if cancellation received by day prior to the start of class. Thereafter, refund will be made less a $25 fee, Or registration may be applied to future class or transferred to another person by the applicant.

Administrative Address for Correspondence & Phone Calls

American Academy of Reflexology, Bill Flocco, Director, 12719 Sarah Street, Studio City, CA 91604 818 841-7741
AAReflex@aol.com www.AmericanAcademyofReflexology.com
Class size is limited. We look forward to meeting you and sharing this adventure with you.

Monday, 17 July 2017

Hand & Ear Reflexology | Reflexology Foot Massage

Arkansas – Little Rock
For details and to register for this class,
please contact
770 843-2993
KoTan@AcademyofRadiantHealth.com
 
 
About Author:
 
Bill`s introduction to Reflexology might have started as a young boy. His mother went through many surgeries. She used today, Billy, would you rub my feet? Mama Flocci`s feet would feel better, and, the rest of her would feel better as well.

In 1982 Bill coined the word Ear Reflexology began pioneering the integration of Foot Hand Ear Reflexology, in so doing accelerating the popularization not only of Ear Reflexology, but also of Hand Reflexology at conferences and workshops around the world. 

For More Info: Certified Reflexology Training
 
 

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Beginning foot Reflexology Class

Foot Reflexology Class Sep 9-10 Sep 23-24

9:00 AM – 5:30 PM Both Days
 
Help yourself, your family, friends, & clients to be pain free & have far better health. Learn effective Foot, Hand, & Ear Reflexology Routines to use separately or combine with other modalities. Working with all three is far more effective than just Foot Reflexology.
Instructor: Stefanie Sabounchian
 
 
Continue Your Reflexology Studies
 
The more serious student can deepen their knowledge, skills,
confidence & results, after the Foot Hand Ear Class, by continuing with:  
 
Beginning Integrated Foot Hand Ear Reflexology
Watch for this advanced class to be offered during 2018 50 CE Hours
 
Advanced Integrated Foot Hand Ear Reflexology
Watch for this advanced class to be offered during 201850 CE Hours
Instructors: Lisa Chan, Bill Flocco, Stefanie Sabounchian
 
 
School Campus for Classes: The American Academy of Reflexology conducts it’s classes at 
13315 W. Washington Blvd, LA, CA 90066 3nd Floor, Sevenstar Room.  
Close to Marina del Rey, Venice Beach, Santa Monica, & 12 minutes from Los Angeles Airport LAX.
Parking: ground floor. Restaurants near by.Motel list available upon request. 
 
Refund Policy: 100% refund if cancellation received by day prior to the start of class. Thereafter, refund will be made less a $25 fee, Or registration may be applied to future class or transferred to another person by the applicant.
 
                                    Administrative Address for Correspondence & Phone Calls 
 
 
American Academy of Reflexology, Bill Flocco, Director, 12719 Sarah Street, Studio City, CA 91604 818 841-7741

                                    AAReflex@aol.com www.AmericanAcademyofReflexology.com

                Class size is limited. We look forward to meeting you and sharing this adventure with you.
 

Monday, 3 July 2017

Reflexology For Depression/Anxiety, Cerebral Palsy/CP, Arthritis, Fatigue, Multiple Sclerosis/MS

Condition Specific Reflexology II With Foot Hand Ear Reflexology

Depression/Anxiety Cerebral Palsy/CP Arthritis Fatigue Multiple Sclerosis/MS

Think of all the people you have known, do know or will know with Depression, Anxiety, Fatigue, Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis/MS and Cerebral Palsy/CP. During this hands-on Seminar, you will learn where and how to work on Feet, Hands and Ears for relieving stresses related to each of these terrible health challenges.


County, California, a destination for desperately sick people from all over the world. They receive the care of six medical doctors and Foot Hand Ear Reflexology from Paul. He was recently awarded the prestigious “Clinical Reflexology Award” by the Reflexology Association of America (RAA), for his many years of remarkable achievements with Reflexology in a clinical setting. Paul an Academy (AAR) Graduate, is Past Chairperson of the National Health Federation (NHF), and Past Board member of the Reflexology Association of California (RAC),






About Your Instructor: Paul Harvey works at the world famous Whitaker Wellness Institute in Orange


August 26-27, 2017                                Saturday & Sunday             9:30 AM – 5:30 PM


Location: 13315 W. Washington Blvd, LA, CA 90066 3rd Floor, TOT Room, near, Santa Monica, & LAX Parking: Free, ground floor. Student lounge. Restaurants nearby. Hotel list available.

Fee: $275 One month early, $325 thereafter. Refund 100% if cancellation by day prior to class. Thereafter, refund less $25. Or, fee may be applied to future class or transferred to another person. Class size limited.

Prerequisite: Beginning Foot Reflexology or equivalent from a hands-on school

Receive: Document of attendance with class title, hours, school & teachers name, location.

CE Hours: 12 CE Hours for ARCB, ABMP, NCBTMB & Many States

Contact Us:

Los Angeles , 91501
Los Angeles, California, 91501

Phone No :  818 841-7741


For More Info:   Reflexology Training | Courses in Reflexology

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

60 FASCINATING FACTS AND QUOTATIONS ABOUT HANDS

FASCINATING FACTS AND QUOTATIONS ABOUT HANDS

Hands 1st Ten Fascinating Facts About Hands Every Practitioner Should Know

1). A quarter of all the bones in your body are found in your two hands.

2). Your hand is built in 3 sections: fingers are called phalanges, long bones in the middle of your hand are     called  metacarpals, and the wrist bones are called carpals.

3). Your hand contains 27 major and minor bones in each hand.

4).There are 14 phalanges in the thumb and fingers.

5).The thumb has two bones.

7). Each of the other four fingers in each hand has 3 bones (phalanges); The distal phalanges (distal meaning

6). further away from the body); the middle, a.k.a. medial phalanges; and the proximal phalanges (proximal
      meaning closest to the body).

7).  There are 5 long bones, metatarsals, in each hand, that connect the fingers to the wrist.

8). There are 8 wrist bones (carpals).

9). Your hands may also have numerous tiny sesamoid bones—which differ in number from person to person and appear in the hand’s tendons.

10).Each hand contains 29 major joints

Hands 2nd Ten Fascinating Facts About Hands Every Practitioner Should Know

1). Each hand has at least 129 named ligaments.

2). The hand has 34 muscles that move the fingers and thumbs: 17 in the palm of the hand and 18 in the forearm.

3). We work our fingers by remote control…from our brain

4). The fingers are special, because there are no muscles inside the fingers. The muscles which bend the finger joints are located in the palm and up in the mid forearm, and are connected to the finger bones by tendons, which pull on and move the fingers like the strings of a marionette.

5). Each hand has 48 nerves: 3 major nerves, 24 named sensory branches and 21 named muscular branches.

6). Each hand has 30 named arteries and nearly as many smaller named branches.

7). Fingers are never perfectly straight.

8). The finger bones are relatively straight on the backside, but curved on the palm side.

9). The hand has five fingers.

10) Some babies are born with more than 5 fingers on a hand; the condition is called polydactyly or extra digits.There is no real explanation for this condition; however, it seems to be genetics and passed down through the mother’s line.

Hands 3rd Ten Fascinating Facts About Hands Every Practitioner Should Know

1). Black babies are 10 times more likely than White babies to be born polydactyly.

2). Some babies are born with webbed fingers called syndactyly. It is a fairly common congenital defect that runs in families, affecting boy babies more often than girls and affects Caucasians more often than Blacks or Asians.

3). White babies are four times more likely than Black babies to be born syndactyly.

4). The five fingers had unusual names in the past.

5.  The Anglo-Saxons called the first finger scite or shooting finger; in Middle English it was called the toucher.

5).  In Middle English, the middle finger was known as the longman or long finger.

6. The Anglo-Saxons called the little finger, the “ear finger” because it was the one used to pick wax out of one’s ear. In Middle English, it was called the “little man.”

7).  The ring finger was known in Middle English as the lec-man or leech finger. And had medical powers like the leech. It was believed a nerve ran from the ring finger straight to the heart. For the same reason, the Germans called that finger the Artrzfinger or Doctor’s Finger.

8). The Romans also called the ring finger the digitus medicinalis and it has a similar medical name in Greek, Japanese, Korean and Polish.

9). The muscles which power the fingers are strong—strong enough to help rock climbers support their entire weight at times by a few fingertips.

10).Fingernails grow about the same amount as the world’s continents move every year.
 
 For More Info:  Reflexology Training | Reflexology Classes
 

Wednesday, 14 June 2017

First 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet





BONES IN THE FEET
  1. A quarter of all the bones in your body are found in your two feet.
  2. The normal foot has 26 bones providing structural support, 28 bones when you include the 2 large sesamoid bones.
  3. There are extra small bones called sesamoid bones located in the tendons of each foot, near joints.
  4. Two larger sesamoid bones are imbedded in each foot, close to the base of the big toe.
  5. An additional 14 to 26 smaller sesamoid bones can be found in various other parts of each foot.
  6. The foot bones are composed of three sections: the toes, phalanges; the long bones in the middle, called metatarsals; and the third section, known as the ankle bones, are called tarsals.
  7. There are 14 phalanges in the toes.
  8. The big toe is also called the Great Toe and the Hallux
  9. The big toe has two bones.
  10. Each of the other four toes has 3 bones (phalanges); the distal phalanges (distal meaning further away from the body); the middle, a.k.a. medial phalanges; and the proximal phalanges (proximal meaning closest to the body.
Second 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. There are 5 long bones, metatarsals, in each foot
  2. Of the 7 anklebones (tarsals), the talus and the calcaneus form the major part of the heel.
  3. The tibia (the largest bone in the lower leg) sits on the Talus.
  4. The calcaneus bone is what most people call the heel bone
  5. Each foot has 33 joints, 31 tendons, 19 muscles, and 107 ligaments.
  6. What’s the difference between a tendon & a ligament? Both are fibrous tissues. Primarily, tendons attach muscles to bones, and ligaments are the tough tissue that holds bone to bone and stabilizes joints. Both are needed for joint strength & flexibility.
  7. The thickest skin in the human body is located in the feet
  8. Most people have one foot larger than the other; it’s rare for both feet to be exactly the same length.
  9. The bottom of the foot, the part that touches the ground or floor when you walk, is called the Plantar surface
  10. The top of the foot is called the Dorsal Surface
Third 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. The outer edge of the foot is called the Lateral Surface
  2. The inner edge of the foot, is called the Medial Surface
NAILS
  1. Toenails are, structurally, modified hairs made of a tough protective protein.
  2. The rate at which nails grow depends on several factors: like age, sex, diet, and exercise; it is known that fingernails grow faster than toenails.
  3. Toenails grow faster in hot weather,
  4. Toenails also grow more rapidly during pregnancy, and in children before puberty.
  5. To grow an entirely new toenail requires at least five to six months.
SWEAT GLANDS
  1. There are more sweat glands per square inch in the soles of your feet than any other part of your body.
  2. Approximately 250,000 sweat glands in your feet, combined, can release about 8 ounces (one cup) of moisture each day.
  3. Bacteria in the sweat, not the sweat itself, cause most of the smell in smelly feet.
Fourth 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. Alternating the shoes you wear every other day is helpful in reducing the sweaty foot odor.
GROWTH OF THE FEET FROM INFANCY
  1. Some babies are born with webbed toes, considered a genetic defect often inherited.
  2. Normally, the child’s foot grows most rapidly before the teen years.
  3. Children’s feet reach about 90 % of their adult length by 12 years-of-age.
  4. Babies’ feet are flat and chubby because they are born with a pad of fat where an arch would normally be in an adult’s foot.
  5. A child is usually about 2 ½ years old before arches begin to show up.
HEALTH PROBLEMS AFFECTING THE FEET OR TRACED TO THE FEET
  1. A misaligned spine, lower backache, headaches, indigestion, and other health issues can be traced to problems with your feet.
  2. Plantar warts, blisters, athlete’s foot, poor circulation, cold feet, ingrown toenails, and bunions are some of the common foot problems.
  3. Corns & calluses are the most common foot problems.
  4. Having extra toes is technically known as polydactyly, or polydactylism.
Fifth 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. About 1-2 of every 1000 children born are reported to have an extra toe.
  2. Peripheral Vascular Disease of the arteries of the feet and legs can lead to pain on walking, ulceration, infection, and in severe cases—gangrene and possible amputation. Its primary cause is cigarette smoking.
  3. Neuropathy, disease or dysfunction of peripheral nerves in the feet and legs, typically causes numbness or weakness.
  4. Reflexologists, by being on the lookout for any of these symptoms, can help doctors arrive at an early diagnosis and treatment for either of the above conditions.
  5. Going barefoot, especially on wet grass, soil, or sand, known as “earthing,” is excellent for your feet, joints, and other health benefits. Some studies have indicated these health benefits come from our bodies’ drawing electrons from the earth.
IMPORTANCE OF CORRECTLY FITTING SHOES
  1. It’s difficult to concentrate on anything when you’re in pain, but especially when it’s your feet that hurt.
  2. Not wearing the correct shoe size is a common mistake many people make.
  3. Ill-fitting shoes are one of the main causes of foot pain
  4. Many people wear shoes that are one to two sizes too small because they buy the size they wore when they were younger, perhaps unaware that feet change size throughout adulthood.
  5. Haven’t you heard, it is wise to do shoe shopping in the afternoon? The reason for this is that feet have a tendency to swell during the day.
Sixth 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. Every time you purchase shoes, you should have your feet measured . . . while standing.
  2. Why is standing still more tiring than walking? Walking helps circulate the blood. It’s the increased difficulty in circulation when you are standing that causes exhausted feet.
  3. Although it is not “normal” for your feet to hurt – foot muscles tend to become uncomfortable when not enough fresh blood reaches them.
  4. If you wear shoes with 2 ½ inch heels, the pressure on the ball and pad of you feet increases by 75%. Imagine how much greater that pressure is in 3 or 4 inch heels?
  5. Women experience about four times more foot problems than men—most likely attributed to wearing high heeled and pointed toed shoes.
GAITS & WALKING & RUNNING
  1. Gait . . . a person’s manner of walking . . . normally occurs without the whole foot ever flat on the ground.
  2. Gait is usually different for both your left and right feet.
  3. In a healthy gait, the foot’s first point of contact is the heel, then the outside border of the foot (a.k.a. the lateral arch), then the ball of your foot, and finally the big toe.
  4. Irregularities in the gait, can contribute to health problems elsewhere in the body.
  5. Irregularities in the alignment of the toes of the foot can also lead to health problems elsewhere in the body.
Seventh 10 Of 70 Fascinating Facts about Feet
  1. When walking, each time your heel lifts off the ground, your toes are forced to carry about one half of your body weight.
  2. While walking, the pressure on parts of your feet can vary enough to exceed your body weight.
  3. Walking is the best exercise for your feet as well as your general health, as it improves circulation and promotes a state of well-being.
  4. Number of miles women walk per day = 10
  5. Number of miles men walk per day = 7
  6. Thus, women walk 3 miles more than men each day.
  7. By the time the average person is 70-years-old, he/she will have walked the equivalent of three to four times around the earth.
  8. There are schools of thought suggesting that many foot problems and resulting health issues throughout the body, can be corrected or at least dramatically improved by properly and methodically working with the soft tissues of the feet in unique ways.
  9. Entire professions are devoted to feet: Foot Reflexologist, Podiatrist, Podopaediatrics, Foot Hygienist, Podiatric Nurse, Pedorthist, Reflexognosist, Pedicurist, and of those biomechanical specialists who work for companies that make shoes for people with special needs.
  10. The better you take care of your feet, the better health and quality of life you will be able to enjoy throughout your entire lifetime.

Wednesday, 31 May 2017

 


Want to incorporate some basic reflexology techniques into your massage routine? This is my approach, and it doesn't require any special knowledge of meridians, organs, etc. It's just a unique way of working with the foot for extended periods, providing a very different (and wonderful) foot massage experience.

For More Info: Reflexology Foot Massage

Contact Us: 

Los Angeles, California, 91501
Telephone: 818-841-7741