Ryken Wellness Chandler

Ryken Wellness Chandler 20+ year established, family owned Wellness Center located on Alma School & Frye Rds., in Chandler, AZ.

Specializing in Chiropractic, Medical Based Massage, Acupuncture & Spinal Decompression Therapy.

05/04/2026
Massage Sale Ends Friday 5/8!!$60 - 1hr Medical Based Massages$85 - 90min Medical Based MassagesBook Online or Call at 4...
05/04/2026

Massage Sale Ends Friday 5/8!!
$60 - 1hr Medical Based Massages
$85 - 90min Medical Based Massages
Book Online or Call at 480-857-1991
HSA/Flex & Insurance Reimbursement Plans Approved
Same Day Appointments Available

https://conta.cc/4unNaNz

Scheduling Link:https://app.acuityscheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=15384419
04/29/2026

Scheduling Link:
https://app.acuityscheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=15384419

We are happy to announce that we have added another massage therapist to our team! James' schedule is NOW AVAILABLE to book online.

James, LMT (Available Mon-Fri )
With more than 15 years of clinical massage experience, James specializes in Therapeutic and Deep Tissue Massage; His approach is centered on helping patients recover from injury, reduce pain, and improve overall function.
Outside of the clinic, James enjoys spending time with his wife, their two children, and their dogs. He also has a passion for woodworking, houseplant care, and being outdoors.

We are happy to announce that we have added another massage therapist to our team! James' schedule is NOW AVAILABLE to b...
04/29/2026

We are happy to announce that we have added another massage therapist to our team! James' schedule is NOW AVAILABLE to book online.

James, LMT (Available Mon-Fri )
With more than 15 years of clinical massage experience, James specializes in Therapeutic and Deep Tissue Massage; His approach is centered on helping patients recover from injury, reduce pain, and improve overall function.
Outside of the clinic, James enjoys spending time with his wife, their two children, and their dogs. He also has a passion for woodworking, houseplant care, and being outdoors.

Welcome Ally to our Team!Ally, LMT (Available Tuesday & Thursday)With more than a decade of clinical massage experience,...
03/16/2026

Welcome Ally to our Team!

Ally, LMT (Available Tuesday & Thursday)
With more than a decade of clinical massage experience, Ally specializes in Therapeutic and Deep Tissue Massage; designed to help patients move, recover, and feel their best. Her work integrates clinical techniques to address pain and improve mobility.

06/23/2023

AFRICAN HISTORY OF HEADRESTS

There is evidence to support the idea of continuity of headrest use in Africa. Earliest known headrests from burial contexts in Ancient Kemet are traditionally dated to Third Dynasty in the Old Kingdom (around 2707-2369 BC) and they continue to be found in burial contexts in Ancient Egypt until the Ptolemaic Period (323-30 BC).

In neighbouring Libya headrests were also found among the Garamantes who ruled the Fezzan between 500 BC and AD 700. In Mali, they were present among the Tellem, from the eleventh to fourteenth centuries AD, and among their followers, the better-known Dogons, until the twentieth century. Nineteenth-century headrests belonging to the Bicharin and the Ababds in Nubia still present forms similar to those of their ancient counterparts, and in this particular region they seem to have survived, in use, into the twentieth century. Furthermore, the use of headrests could have easily spread from one cultural group to another.

The main use of headrests in East Africa was to support, and therefore protect, the characteristically elaborate headdresses and hairstyles. In 1880 the missionary Edward Coode H**e described the hairstyle of the “waGuha” on the Lukuga River in Tanzania: The hair is encouraged to grow long by every possible aid of combing and stretching over rolls and puffs, which are built up into shapes resembling crowns or turbans, and ornamented with iron and copper ornaments, bands of cowries and beads and terminal points and cones, forming a structure requiring great care to preserve from damage. This is achieved by the use of little wooden headrests, or pillows, which are used in sleeping to keep the head from contact with the ground or bed. Elaborate hairstyles are found in numerous other groups – best known is perhaps the mudpack coiffure of the Karamojong of Kenya and Uganda.

Hairstyles are often an indicator of status, especially among pastoralists. In the Pokot society, hierarchies but also hairstyle and feather decorations indicate a young man’s rise in society: the initiation ceremony of the sapana allows him to wear the blue mudpack headdress. In some cultures headrests are linked to dreaming; in Chokwe divination, for example, miniature headrests are called “pillows of dreams”. The incisions on headrests are sometimes linked to bodily scarification, with symbolic overtones. In addition, headrests in Africa were sometimes reserved for leaders and followed their owners into the grave, as in Ancient Kemet. The Karo people and lives in Korcho village, Omo Valley, Ethiopia uses a headrest to protect the clay headdress he wears at the back of his head, and to which he attaches feathers. He also uses the headrest as a seat.

Shona” headrests (mutsago) come from Zimbabwe and a number of neighbouring areas. These (and those from Southern Africa) are different in type from those of East and Central Africa. In hard wood, they have lobed bases and play on a combination of structural and decorative elements.

The carved supports follow various patterns, including large vertical supports and X-shaped structures, often combining a whole range of circular, triangular and rectilinear shapes in a combination of positive and negative spaces. Here too their main function would have been to protect the elaborate hairdresses and the hairstyles of the people who used them. They acquired their dark brown patina through continual handling. As in Kemet, they were often buried with their owners.

In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, headrests were widely collected in a vast area stretching from Nubia in Sudan, to Zaire and to South Africa including Namibia; in West Africa, they are found among the Tellem and the Dogons, the Bobo, Nuna, Dagari, Lobi, but also the Akan and the Baule. They show a great diversity, reflecting the variety of African styles and cultures, but also traditions matched by innovations.

08/17/2021
Reminder: We will be CLOSED Thursday 7/1 - Monday 7/5.  Have a fun and safe holiday!
06/30/2021

Reminder: We will be CLOSED Thursday 7/1 - Monday 7/5. Have a fun and safe holiday!

Address

290 S Alma School Road Ste 5
Chandler, AZ
85224

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 6pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Friday 9am - 6pm

Telephone

+14808571991

Website

https://app.acuityscheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=15384419

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