18. März 2026 · Massage

Relaxation is no luxury: Why regular massage keeps you healthy

Reading time: 6 Min.

Treating yourself to a massage, it sounds like self-reward, wellness, perhaps a bit of luxury. Behind it lies an underestimated truth: regular relaxation massages have measurable effects on physical and mental health. In a time when chronic stress is among the biggest health risks, deliberate relaxation is not self-indulgence but health prevention.

Why chronic stress is a serious problem

When stress becomes permanent, the body reacts with sustained activation of the sympathetic nervous system, the part of the autonomic nervous system that switches to “fight or flight”. Cortisol and adrenaline are continuously released. Over weeks and months, this has consequences:

  • Chronic muscle tension that becomes pain
  • Sleep disorders, reduced deep sleep phases
  • Reduced immune function, more frequent infections, slower recovery
  • Digestive problems
  • High blood pressure, increased risk of cardiovascular disease
  • Increased risk of anxiety and depression

The problem: many people no longer know any state other than “tense”. The body has unlearned how to consciously relax.

What massage triggers in the body

Massage activates the parasympathetic nervous system, the counterpart to the sympathetic. It deliberately switches the body into regeneration mode. This isn’t just subjective feeling but measurable:

Hormonal changes

Studies show that massage lowers cortisol levels and promotes the release of serotonin and dopamine. This is mood-lifting, anxiety-reducing, and supports better sleep.

Anti-inflammatory effect

A controlled study (Crane et al., Science Translational Medicine, 2012) showed that massage after muscle fatigue reduces inflammatory signals in muscles, through cellular mechanisms that go beyond pure relaxation.

Improved heart rate variability (HRV)

Higher HRV, the adaptability of heart rhythm, is a marker of health and stress resistance. Regular relaxation treatments can improve this.

Reduction of muscle tone

The chronically elevated muscle tone, the “baseline tension” of musculature, measurably drops with massage. This reduces pain, improves mobility, relieves joints.

Better sleep quality

Several studies document that regular massage improves sleep quality, especially in people with chronic stress, anxiety disorders, or sleep problems.

Relaxation massage in practice: What happens in the session

A relaxation massage at Anzhelika Wyss lasts 60 or 90 minutes. Treatment starts with a brief history: how are you? Are there tensions, wishes, restrictions? Are there body areas you’d like left out?

The technique itself:

  • Gentle, flowing strokes over back, neck, shoulders, arms, legs
  • Slow pace, the nervous system has time to switch
  • Even pressure, no hard interventions
  • Warm oil, warm table, calm atmosphere
  • Little conversation, conscious letting go is in the foreground
  • At the end: time to feel the effects, not immediate “get up and move on”

Who benefits from regular relaxation massage

### People in stressful jobs Screen-heavy jobs, leadership roles, caring and social professions, shift work, all activities with high stress levels benefit. One session per month as minimum, every 2 weeks with high strain.

### People with sleep disorders When the thought carousel doesn’t stop in the evening, when falling asleep is hard, or sleep is interrupted: regular relaxation treatments are often more effective than sleeping pills.

### People in life transitions Separation, job change, illness in the family, loss of someone close: in emotionally challenging phases, the body needs more regeneration. Massage supports that.

### People with chronic pain Back pain, headaches, fibromyalgia-like complaints, accompanying medical treatment, massage can bring significant relief.

### Athletes After intensive training, massage supports regeneration. Not just deep tissue massage, relaxation massage also has a measurable effect on recovery speed.

### Pregnant women (with adaptations) From the 2nd trimester onwards, particularly recommended. Pregnancy massage integrates relaxation elements specifically for the physical demands of pregnancy.

How often?

As health prevention: once per month With acute stress or high-strain phases: every 2 weeks As intensive recovery (e.g. after burnout): initially weekly, then tapering

Individual massages are pleasant, but health benefits unfold only through regularity. The body “learns” through repeated relaxation experiences to switch into regeneration mode more easily, also in daily life, outside the massage table.

What massage doesn’t replace

Clearly: a massage replaces neither psychotherapy for serious mental distress, nor medications for high blood pressure, nor a balanced lifestyle. It is a building block in the overall strategy for a healthier life.

Those who live constantly at their limit and only occasionally come for a massage are effectively hoping a spoonful of honey will take away the bitter medicine of everyday life. That doesn’t work, massage works best in combination with:

  • Sufficient sleep
  • Regular exercise
  • Healthy nutrition
  • Social connection
  • Breaks in daily life
  • Where needed: professional psychological support

Relaxation as investment, not as reward

The mental shift is important: massage isn’t something you “earn” but something you invest in your health, like exercise, nutrition, or sleep.

People who regularly take time for relaxation are not, by everything we know, lazy or less productive. They are often more resilient, more balanced, and in the long term more productive than those who “push through until the body gives up”.


Pricing

Massage 60 min.: CHF 140 Massage 90 min.: CHF 190

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Also of interest: Acupressure for persistent stress

Sources

  • Crane JD, et al. Massage therapy attenuates inflammatory signaling after exercise-induced muscle damage. Sci Transl Med 2012;4(119):119ra13.
  • Field T. Massage therapy research review. Complement Ther Clin Pract 2016;24:19-31.

Individual results may vary. This content does not replace medical advice.

Frequently asked questions

How often do I need massages for them to have a health effect?

As health prevention: once per month. With acute stress: every 2 weeks. For intensive recovery after burnout or hard phases: initially weekly, then tapering. Regularity is crucial, individual massages are pleasant, but the health benefit only unfolds over time.

Does massage help with sleep disorders?

Yes, several studies show improved sleep quality through regular massage, especially with stress-related sleep problems. Combined with acupressure and good sleep hygiene, the effect is greatest.

Is massage sensible during difficult life phases?

Especially then. Separation, grief, illness in the family, job change, in emotionally challenging phases, the body needs more regeneration. Massage supports that but does not replace professional psychological support for serious mental distress.


### Read more Which massage suits you? → · Back pain from desk work → · Sleep problems and stress → · Deep tissue vs. relaxation massage →

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