Your Inner Journey – Our First Sense to Develop

THE 'TEXDOS' 

 

  My job requires me to travel a lot and the reality these days is that most people are bound or even somehow dependent on their mobile phone. One- or two-finger texting is a common currency where people exchange information from the trivialities to important appointments. I remember that when we were younger we had fun writing words to each other with our finger on the back of one or a friend. The other had to guess the word from our feeling of the passage of a tactile trace. You could say it was the Morse code of today's texting. But it had the advantage of allowing brief communication and a bit of fun, but also allowing touch on another person. We could thus call it a 'Texdos' since we wrote a text on the back of another person alternately. Emoticons could be read directly on the faces of people who were having fun touching each other from the very first of our senses to have developed in the embryo that is touch.

  Usually the horizon our mink is looking at is about 50% of what can be seen, because most people don't look at the sky much. Our field of vision somehow only sees half of the capacity of our field of vision. Unfortunately it is reduced to much less when our concentration is limited to observing our phone at about 10% to follow our text messages in bursts. We thus cut ourselves off not only from touch but just as much from our vision and from the human contacts that make people feel alive in their environment.

  Sometimes we have the right to be retro and relive the contact of another person, I think that's a bit what makes people want to receive a massage, this in addition to back pain due to stress , overwork, work or sports to keep in shape. I invite people to come and receive a 'Texdos' where touch is in the spotlight and in the evening after this moment of relaxation in massage therapy, to open their horizons by looking at the shapes of the clouds of the day or the stars at night. from the sky.

 

By Sylvain Perron, Massage Therapist