EarthTouch Shiatsu and Massage

EarthTouch Shiatsu and Massage Shiatsu -- it's like massage, but better. http://www.EarthTouchShiatsu.com. Hours by appointment only Hours by appointment.

Offering shiatsu, acupressure, massage therapy, and holistic wellness services to individuals and groups in Catonsville and neighboring areas in Maryland (Ellicott City, Columbia, and the greater Baltimore area). See our website at http://EarthTouchShiatsu.com for more information.

Yes, friends, in a necktie again and back in the halls of power in Annapolis, to testify in favor of HB 1527, The Comple...
03/18/2026

Yes, friends, in a necktie again and back in the halls of power in Annapolis, to testify in favor of HB 1527, The Complementary and Alternative Health Care Practice Act. More information on how to write key legislators to support this bill: https://earthtouchshiatsu.com/protect-cam-HB1527

Protect Complementary and Alternative Health Care in Maryland:  Support HB 1527, The Complementary and Alternative Healt...
03/16/2026

Protect Complementary and Alternative Health Care in Maryland: Support HB 1527, The Complementary and Alternative Health Care Practice Act. This bill would protect the rights of 26 different types of complementary and alternative health care practitioners.

There is a hearing for this bill on Wednesday March 18. Please consider taking action on this bill by submitting written testimony or writing to Delegates on the Health Committee. Link in comments.

The ancient Greek poet Archilochus wrote, “The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.”Kitsune is J...
03/14/2026

The ancient Greek poet Archilochus wrote, “The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.

”Kitsune is Japanese for “fox”, but also connotes a shape-shifting trickster spirit that in some cases is seen as a messenger or servant of the gods, or even an incarnation of the divine — and sometimes is a mere prankster.

Thus, I might describe The Bodywork Kitsune as a blog devoted to the idea that bodywork and massage therapists should take a multifaceted (“fox”) approach to the art; specifically recommending one that incorporates East Asian medical traditions and has a healthy bit of trickster, shape-shifting spirit.

https://bodyworkkitsune.substack.com/p/the-fox-knows-many-things

The Regulation Fe**shMore and more I see massage therapists calling for greater regulation -- and usually this means gre...
03/05/2026

The Regulation Fe**sh

More and more I see massage therapists calling for greater regulation -- and usually this means greater standardization, and a less holistic and less cross-cultural approach -- of the practice of massage. Often this is couched in terms of us earning "more respect".

Friends and colleagues, jumping through (often expensive) hoops to obtain a permission slip from the government is not what gets you respect as a bodyworker.

What gets you respect as a bodyworker is that people enter your treatment room with pain, and leave without it. What gets you respect is the way that you treat clients/patients and colleagues. What gets you respect is knowledge and the ability to apply it. What gets you respect is "having the hands". What gets you respect is showing people self-care things that transform their relationship with their body.

Credentialism is a pathology of the professional class, and it's a dangerous one.

The current attempt by Maryland's acupuncture board to destroy the practice of Asian Bodywork Therapy, acupressure, and Asian modalities of massage therapy, has had me reading up on the "acu-pocalypse" -- the way in which overregulation of acupuncture (stemming in part from professional-class elitism) has led to a situation where it's impossible to afford acupuncture school on an acupuncturist's salary. Acupuncture schools (including Maryland's MUIH, formerly Tai Sophia) are closing and some believe the profession is in danger of extinction.

Let me be clear: this makes me sad. I entered Asian Bodywork Therapy training with the intention of going on to acupuncture school, but I found that ABT is so rich that it's not worth the expense -- acupuncture school would not greatly improve my ability to help people. Still, many of my teachers have been acupuncturists, I've benefited enormously from acupuncture. I consider acupuncture a sister art and would like to see it grow.

But the root of the problem is that rather than setting the training bar for entry near the level of three to six months of post-secondary training that the "barefoot doctors" who revived Chinese Medicine in the Maoist period received, western acupuncturists decided that two years of graduate study -- a master's degree from a private school (I don't think any public universities have an acupuncture program?), likely to run into a six figure cost today -- were required before one could stick needles in people. You had to have a fancy credential, and never mind how much of the work to obtain it was busywork with little impact on the quality of practice.

(The acupuncturist I saw for many years learned as a kid in China. When she moved to the US to pursue a different profession but decided to shift into acupuncture, she had to do the whole program...even though the style of acupuncture the school taught was not what she already knew or what she ever used in her career. She had to get the paper.)

But regulation never ratchets down, only up. Rather than consider that the current level of regulation might have been a mistake, the profession is pushing towards making a doctorate degree the standard. (One can start to see why this segment of acupuncturists aren't happy with low-class bodyworkers, and even completely unlicensed practitioners, giving away the secrets of Chinese medicine!)

This ought to be a warning for massage and bodywork therapy. Beware the fe**sh for more and more regulation in complementary and alternative healthcare. Keep it alternative!

02/17/2026

Save acupressure and shiatsu in Maryland! An open message to Maryland legislators regarding House Bill 374 and Senate Bill 370 in the 2026 session -- a bad bill which would require an acuPUNCTURE license to perform acuPRESSURE or any form of Asian Bodywork Therapy.

Senate Finance Committee members include: Senator Pam Beidle, District 32, Senator Steve Hershey, Senator Dawn Gile, Senator Clarence Lam

House Health Committee members include: Delegate Heather Bagnall

Oppose SB0370/HB374! Protect healthcare access and practitioner livelihood
02/08/2026

Oppose SB0370/HB374! Protect healthcare access and practitioner livelihood

Maryland may ban Asian Bodywork Therapy!This absolutely shocking and ignorant bill in the Marylandlegislature: https://m...
02/05/2026

Maryland may ban Asian Bodywork Therapy!

This absolutely shocking and ignorant bill in the Maryland
legislature:https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2026RS/bills/sb/sb0370F.pdf

crossfiled as https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/Legislation/Details/SB0370?ys=2026RS and
https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/Legislation/Details/HB0374?ys=2026RS

would define the safe and effective therapies of Asian Bodywork
Therapy and acupressure -- what I have taught to massage therapy
students at PMTI and CCBC, hold national certification in, and have been practicing for over 20 years, including at Baltimore's Mercy Hospital for years as a member of the medical staff -- as
acupuncture, destroying the practice of Asian Bodywork Therapy in
Maryland.

I am asking all of my ABT and massage therapy colleagues to
immediate contact the sponsors of this bill:

Delegate Jennifer White Holland jennifer.white@house.maryland.gov

Senator Malcolm Augustine malcolm.augustine@senate.maryland.gov

to register your opposition.

Those in Maryland, please contact your own state representatives as well: https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/members/district

There is a hearing scheduled in the Senate on 2/10
at 1:00 p.m. and in the House on 2/11 at 1:30 p.m. You can register
to testify via Zoom by setting up a "MyMGA" account:

https://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/Account/Register/Tracking

This Friday: "Vital Power Exercise", an eclectic Qi Gong, Shiatsu, and Meditation class on the second and fourth Fridays...
01/08/2026

This Friday: "Vital Power Exercise", an eclectic Qi Gong, Shiatsu, and Meditation class on the second and fourth Fridays of each month, 5:30-6:20pm. Class is held at the Catonsville Dojo, 6159-B Edmondson Avenue (in the Goals complex).

11/13/2025

Under Maryland laws and regulations pertaining to massage therapy, "[a] license holder or registration holder may not...[d]iscriminate against a client...based on race, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, national origin, or disability[.]" The NCBTMB Code of Ethics requires that therapists they certify "[r]efuse to unjustly discriminate against clients and/or health professionals," while the NCCAOM code of ethics requires Diplomates to "[a]ssist those seeking my services in a fair, nondiscriminatory and unbiased manner." (I let my NCBTMB certification lapse long ago, while maintaining my NCCAOM Diplomate in Asian Bodywork Therapy, but I'm citing them both for context.)

A massage or bodywork therapist who discriminates against entire classes of people in this manner is in grave violation of professional ethics, and depending on the state, of regulatory law.

Now, I will absolutely discriminate against individual clients who do not behave properly! And I've encountered that a few times over the years. But I have zero tolerance for unprofessional LMTs who discriminate based on these sort of classes. That includes racist, religiously bigoted, or homophobic therapists, but it also includes LMTs who refuse to treat male clients.

If you encounter such a bodywork therapist, I encourage you to report them to the appropriate regulatory and/or certification authority.

10/21/2025

New client today, 60-something gentleman referred by his wife, walked in with a bad limp, walked out without one saying "I haven't been able to do that in three weeks."

08/08/2025

To the Maryland Department of Health and the Board of Massage Therapy Examiners:

I am extremely concerned to learn that the Department of Health
and the Board of Massage Therapy Examiners are proposing new
burdensome, culturally insensitive regulations regarding a topic they do not understand.

Gua sha is a method of Asian bodywork which has been in use as both a professional treatment by bodywork therapists and acupuncturists, and a folk treatment, for thousands of years. It is sometimes called "coining" or "spooning" from the use of these items as tools for self or family care.

I was trained in gua sha in my studies in the Baltimore School
of Massage's Shiatsu and Asian Bodywork program more than 20 years ago, and have taken several continuing education classes using it since then.

In recent years, some enterprising teachers have repackaged this ancient treatment under names like "Graston technique" or
"instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization", but it is nothing new.

However it seems that some of these entrepreneurs have bamboozeled Maryland regulators into proposing that massage therapists in Maryland who wish to use this ancient technique -- and in some cases have been using it for decades -- must take their specific class and pay additional fees to the board.

Besides being a corrupt, expensive, and burdensome regulation
places on Maryland massage therapists, already dealing with hostile economic conditions, this proposed regulation is rooted in cultural ignorance about the origin of this therapy. In the past gua sha occasionally led to confusion among culturally ignorant teachers who wrongly believed the marks it leaves were evidence of child abuse. I thought that we were past the point were it was viewed as something dangerous, but this proposal to regulate it even more strongly than massage shows that ignorance abides. This is not a new therapy, we have been practicing it for centuries.

Even more stunning is the fact the Board made no mention of
this proposal to therapists! No notification was sent to us. We found
out about it only via social media.

This proposal is one of the worst regulatory ideas I have ever
heard proposed, and I cannot urge you strongly enough to abandon it.

Thank you.

Tom Swiss
Dipl. ABT (NCCAOM), CP (AOBTA), LMT (Maryland)

Address

2119 Arlonne Drive
Catonsville, MD
21228

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