Contact US / FAQs
Thank you for your interest in Sarga Bodywork.
We look forward to hearing from you!
Our Hours: Monday - Friday, 9am-5pm HST
Call/Text Us: (833) SARGA88
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General FAQ
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Therapists that would be a good match for a Sarga Bodywork practice will answer yes to all the questions below:
• Are you an experienced and skillful bodyworker?
• Do you have excellent balance and movement control?
• Do you have the capacity for exceptional focus, patience and grounded presence?
• Are you sensitive to your clients’ nervous system and contact preferences?
• Do you have a somatic practice such as Yoga, Pilates, dance, Feldenkrais, or martial arts?
• Are you passionate about exercise, movement, and health?
• Are you in excellent physical condition?
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Sarga Bodywork will absolutely get easier with practice, however learning this modality can be quite rigorous at first and excellent physical conditioning (particularly isometric strength), is a must in order to gain the most from a Sarga Bodywork course. Yoga, Pilates, dance, martial arts, or any full-bodied practice that encourages both strength and flexibility will help to condition you for practicing Sarga Bodywork.
Sarga Bodywork does not have specific weight restrictions for students who attend in-person Sarga Bodywork courses. We recognize that a person’s weight is not necessarily indicative of fitness level, however we reserve the right to deny applicants based upon our evaluation and will inquire further with applicants who are more than 175 pounds in weight and/or more than 6 feet in height. Fitness level is especially important for Sarga Bodywork practices on raised massage tables. For more on practitioner weight and safety considerations, please review “Safety Considerations for Sarga Bodywork on Raised Massage Tables" under the “Equipment section” below.
Here are four fitness measurements that can help to gauge your ability to learn and perform Sarga Bodywork with success:
• The ability to balance on one foot for at least 1 minute without holding onto anything for support.
• Excellent cardiovascular conditioning and the ability to perform cardiovascular exercise (jogging, swimming, etc.) for 10-15 minutes without stopping.
• The ability to perform at least 3 sets of 20 squats.
• The ability to isometrically hold a plank for at least 1 minute.
If you do not feel confident that you could meet these four requirements but would still like to attend a Sarga Bodywork course, then our floor-based courses would be the best fit for you! While basic strength and conditioning is still important here, a floor-based practice provides practitioners a much wider and more stable working area, and fitness level is less of a consideration.
If you would like some conditioning guidance to help you learn and perform Sarga Bodywork with confidence, our Sarga Strong online course is an excellent resource designed with the fitness demands of Sarga Bodywork in mind.
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We get this question a lot, and while we recognize that there is no substitute for in-person learning environments, especially for kinesthetic and touch-based trades, there are benefits and drawbacks to both in-person and online learning.
Online courses
Online education is a rapidly evolving interface that has made leaps and bounds in the last several years. Dynamic, intuitive, and user-friendly platforms have made digital learning increasingly seamless and effective. With Sarga Bodywork's online courses, you will gain access to a step-by-step learning experience that includes high-definition video instruction, accompanying written materials, and access to a private Facebook group for ongoing support. Here are a few key benefits of starting your Sarga Bodywork training online:
• Learn from home!
• Move through the course curriculum at your own speed.
• Start with Sarga 101 Online to see if you like the material. If you would like to deepen your practice, apply that tuition to the cost of an in-person course (valid for 2 years after online course purchase date).
• Lifetime access and archivable format gives students the ability to reference the material as needed.
• Online course cost is more affordable than live courses.
• No travel or travel expenses
In-person courses
Sarga Bodywork's in-person courses are physically and mentally demanding, technique-based programs. A lot of material is packed into these courses and proficiency in the techniques is gained with subsequent practice of the material after class. Our curriculum is designed to build on itself, becoming more integrated with each day of class. Be sure to prepare your body and mind for a rigorous learning experience! Here are a few key benefits of starting your Sarga Bodywork training in-person:
• Traditional, time-tested live learning format encompasses visual, verbal and kinesthetic learning styles.
• Group classes help to facilitate accountability, feedback, and camaraderie.
• Ability to receive real-time feedback from a skilled instructor.
• Ability to feel the techniques from other students and an instructor.
• All relevant online curriculum is included with in-person course tuition!
Can't decide which track is best for you? Call/text us at 833-SARGA88 (833-7274288) to schedule a time to chat.
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SARGA, SARGA BODYWORK, SARGARX, and MYO.RUB are trademarked names which are legally associated with the products, services, and methods provided by this business. Practitioners may only use the name Sarga® or Sarga Bodywork™ on marketing media once he/she has been certified as a Certified Sarga Bodywork Practitioner® in the proprietary methodology of Sarga Bodywork. Doing so without Sarga Bodywork certification is a legal infringement. In addition, proprietary Sarga Bodywork equipment is exclusively available to practitioners who have completed our introductory in-person course or who have enrolled in our online courses, which review the proper installation and use of this equipment.
Other businesses and organizations may not use our proprietary equipment, or similar permutations, to teach massage technique. Our files with the US Patent and Trademark office (US10959897, US 11612542 and US11737940) encompass equipment used for foot-based massage methods that is comprised of a piece of fabric or strap attached to a massage table and used by a practitioner both for support, and to deliver therapeutic force to the receiving client.
SARGA TECHNIQUE
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Feet are amazing manual therapy tools, and as bodyworkers, the ability to perform massage with our feet opens up a whole new set of biomechanical options. Barefoot massage is an ancient practice, most notably in parts of Asia and the Pacific, and this practice encompasses manual therapy techniques that are applied to recipients' bodies with the practitioner's bare feet. These techniques often mimic massage techniques applied with therapists' hands, however a notable difference is that barefoot massage techniques are less "pointed" and have the ability to deliver deeper, more consistent pressure due to the broader contact surface area of therapists' feet and the gravitational force that can be accessed for the delivery of the techniques.
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The prefix “myo” refers to muscle tissue. Fascia is the connective tissue that forms a whole-body, continuous, 3-D matrix of structural support and wraps around every single cell, connecting cells to organs, organs to organ systems, and interpenetrates every muscle in the entire body.
We define myofacial technique here as manual therapy characterized by slow, sustained, oblique, and high-tack contact with the aim of stimulating a stretch response in the fascia associated with muscle (myo) tissue (see shear-force).
Myofascial massage can help to treat muscle pain, inflammation and restriction, by relaxing contracted muscles, stimulating length and hydration in the tissue, and improving circulation.
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Our goal with a Sarga Bodywork treatment is to provide a systematic and full-bodied "combing" of recipients’ connective tissue. Using the metaphor of a comb being run through a lock of hair, straightening out twists, kinks, and facilitating more organization, Sarga Bodywork techniques aim to facilitate organization in the fibrous fascial network of the human body.
Sarga Bodywork subscribes to the idea that the therapeutic manipulation of fascia (myofascial technique) can be characterized as having slow, sustained, oblique and high-tack contact, and we experience these techniques as facilitating a lengthening, hydrating, detoxifying and organizing effect on the fascial network of the human body. We find the broad contact surface of the human foot to be an incredibly useful and intelligent tool for this purpose!
But what does that actually mean in practice? Below we detail how our four main myofascial technique concepts translate into practical application.
1. Slow
By “slow” we mean that as we apply a manual therapy technique, we are moving at a speed that allows us to “stay behind the wave” of the recipient’s tissue as much as possible. This requires that the “slack” in the tissue remains ahead of our manual therapy tools, and a gentle, yet assertive stretch is applied to the tissue behind our manual therapy tools. If our manual therapy tools get ahead of this “wave” of tissue, we no longer consider it to be a myofascial application, which Sarga Bodywork emphasizes in practice. “Slowness” will vary from body to body and is more of a felt sense than a quantifiable speed, but is achieved by a combination of adequate pressure, oblique vector direction, and a specific quality/quantity of lubrication.
2. Sustained
By “sustained” we refer to a consistency in the manual elements that underlie the myofascial techniques that Sarga Bodywork practices. Speed, pressure, oblique vector direction, and friction maintain an equanimity and rhythm that are not choppy or imposing to the affected tissues, but rather seamlessly adjust to their qualities from the start to the finish of an applied technique.
3. Oblique
By “oblique” we refer to the angle of application, whereas this angle is neither parallel nor perpendicular to the tissue that is being affected. This oblique application of manual therapy techniques has a “shearing” effect on the underlying layers of connective tissue, thereby facilitating mobility between these layers.
4. Hight-tack contact
By “high-tack contact” we refer to manual therapy applications that are not slick or slippery from massage oils and lotions, but rather maintain a certain “tack” and “drag” on the affected tissues. While this kind of friction might imply discomfort, Sarga Bodywork techniques seek to stay on the soothing, parasympathetic side of manual therapies, and by no means should recipients experience any discomfort during a Sarga Bodywork treatment.
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Referencing Mosby’s Dictionary of Complementary and Alternative Medicine:
Massage is the application of diverse manual techniques of touch and stroking to muscles and soft tissue to achieve relaxation and improve clients' well-being.
Bodywork applies therapeutic touch paradigms with the aim of restoring health and balance to the entire person by working through the body. In other words, the body is viewed as a doorway to access systemic health.
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While Sarga Bodywork is a barefoot massage method that uses the feet as primary tools for manual therapy techniques, and while our instructors have background in the Ashiatsu pioneered by Ruthie Hardee, as well as Thai Massage, barefoot Shiatsu, and Chiavutti Thirumal of South India, Sarga Bodywork as a modality is none of the above.
We draw inspiration from these methodologies and we honor our teachers and the rich lineages that inform and inspire our work. But just as there are many methods that utilize the hands as manual therapy tools, Sarga is a new addition to the growing world of foot-based massage.
What makes Sarga most distinct from the methodologies listed above is: 1) The use of tensional force via our proprietary equipment, 2) Myofascial technique* and the sparing use of lubrication, 3) Directionally oriented myofascial technique*.
*There are many schools of thought around fascia and the manipulation of fascia, however we define myofascial technique here as manual therapy characterized by sustained, oblique, and high-tack contact with the aim of stimulating a stretch response in the fascia associated with muscle (myo) tissue.
*We draw inspiration from a few theories of Structural Integration and the work of Ida Rolf. While Sarga Bodywork is in no way a form of Structural Integration, it employs directionally oriented myofascial technique, or techniques applied in specific directions that aim to help in reversing patterns of structural inefficiency in the body.
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Sarga Bodywork licenses the floor-based concept of its proprietary equipment to Deep Feet Bar Therapy, and while the equipment may be the same, the techniques and curriculum presented by these two schools are completely different. DeepFeet Silks is a course that features the signature barefoot Ashiatsu techniques that Deep Feet Bar Therapy is known for. All Sarga Bodywork courses, including our floor-based courses, feature barefoot techniques that focus on slow, high-tack, myofascial techniques.
Courses & LEARNING
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There are so many different learning styles and skill levels that affect our students' ability to master Sarga Bodywork, but in general here is our suggested learning flow:
1. Enroll in Sarga 101 Online and review everything up to the Technique section before deciding on what kind of Sarga equipment to purchase. For an in-person entry into the world of Sarga Bodywork, check out our 1-day SargaOne course.
2. Purchase equipment, continue with the online coursework, and practice regularly for 1-3 months before enrolling in an in-person course.
3. Use your purchase of Sarga 101 Online as credit towards your registration. Begin practicing the techniques immediately after your class to optimize integration of the techniques.
Note: Enrolling in Sarga 102 In-Person right after Sarga 101 In-Person is an option if:
You are a quick and confident learner.
You have already gained proficiency in Sarga 101 techniques independently with the online coursework.
4. Practice regularly for 1-3 months while completing the 20 practice sessions required for Sarga Bodywork certification.
5. Complete Sarga Bodywork certification.
6. Enroll in Sarga 102 Online and practice the techniques independently before using your purchase as credit for registration for Sarga 102 In-Person.
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Sarga equipment and merchandise is not included with in-person course tuition costs, however all purchases are 10% off for students present at in-person Sarga Bodywork courses.
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Each Sarga Bodywork instructor maintains their own registration terms but in general you may opt to transfer your course registration to another course before 30 days from the start date of the course for which you have submitted payment for. A transfer fee of $75 plus any course fee differences will apply upon transferring to your new course. Course transfers are valid for 12 months from the start date of the course you originally registered. Transfers are not available for registrants less than 30 days prior to the start of your registered course date. Please contact yous instructor for more details and/or to initiate a course transfer. For more details on Sarga Bodywork's course policies, click here.
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In-Person Course Retake Rates:
Sarga 101: minus $200 from your tuition.
Sarga 102: minus $100 from your tuition.
Enrolled Online?
If you purchased Sarga 101: Guided, you may apply $200 of your tuition towards Sarga 101: In-Person within 2 years of purchase date.
If you purchased Sarga 101: Self-Paced, you may apply all of your tuition (not inc. tax) towards an in-person Sarga 101 course within 2 years of purchase date.
If you purchased Sarga 102: Guided, you may apply $100 of your tuition towards Sarga 102: In-Person within 2 years of purchase date.
If you purchased Sarga 102: Self-Paced, you may apply all of your tuition (not inc. tax) towards an in-person Sarga 102 course within 2 years of purchase date.
Contact us for your coupon code to apply at checkout.
Equipment
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Sarga Bodywork has equipment and courses that are designed for either raised massage tables or floor-based mats. While many barefoot bodyworkers prefer to work on portable raised massage tables, others may choose to work on the floor because of the stability that a larger working area provides, or because they can incorporate Sarga Bodywork into their existing floor-based bodywork practices such as Thai massage. Each configuration has its unique benefits and limitations, and students will tend to gravitate toward one or the other.
Note that all of the raised-table techniques taught in our courses can be applied to a floor-based practice, however many techniques taught in our floor-based courses cannot be applied to a raised-table practice.
Benefits of Floor vs. Table:• Larger and more stable working area.
• Floor-based techniques have an easier learning curve.
• If you do not meet our fitness measurements, our floor-based courses can still be accessible.
• If you are over 175 lbs and/or over 6 feet in height, a floor-based practice might suit you better.
• Easily integrated with other floor-based bodywork practices.
Benefits of Table vs. Floor:• All the material our raised-table courses can be applied to a floor-based practice.
• If you already have a raised table practice, your clients do not need to acclimate to a different configuration.
• Easier to incorporate hand-based techniques.
• Elderly clients and clients with impairments have less trouble getting on/off a raised massage table.
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Sarga Bodywork is a rigorous practice that requires excellent physical conditioning. Strength, flexibility and a fine-tuned kinesthetic awareness are a must for practicing Sarga Bodywork safely and without risking injury to both practitioner and recipient.
All Sarga Bodywork techniques are done with just one foot at a time on the recipient’s body, and the therapist’s full body weight is never fully on the recipient, so having a heavier build is not problematic if abiding by the limits of your massage table’s design and weight capacity.
Raised massage tables used for Sarga Bodywork must meet the following requirements:• Must be of excellent quality and condition.
• Must have an adequate “working weight” capacity. There is a working weight limit on every massage table, which usually accounts for the weight of the recipient plus the pressure of the exerted force via the massage therapist. For foot-based massage modalities on a raised table, the massage table’s working weight must be able to support the recipient’s bodyweight, plus the therapist’s bodyweight, plus the moving pressure exerted by the massage therapist. Most massage tables have at least a 500-pound working weight capacity, but massage tables made by reputable massage table manufacturers can usually support much more (for example, Earthlite or Oakworks massage tables are very well made and are designed to easily hold over 2,500 pounds (static weight), with a working weight capacity of 750 pounds or more). Check the label posted beneath your massage table or research your massage table’s make and model to make sure that it meets your working weight requirements.
• Must have a medium/firm foam (massage tables with soft/thick foam cushioning don’t give enough standing stability for therapists.
• The width of your massage table must be no smaller than 30” (tables that are between 32” and 36” wide are ideal).
• For practitioners over 6 feet in height we recommend no less than a 35" wide table, or a 32" table with a low height range capacity.
• Sarga Bodywork methodology works best at a lower-than-average table height range (slightly above therapist's knee level). This lower height facilitates proper body mechanics per our methods and increases working stability for foot-based techniques.
• The rubber bumpers or any other obstructions on either rail of your massage table must be removed as the Sarga Strap can get caught on these.
• Must have non-slip rubber pads on the legs.
• The Sarga Massage Table by Earthlite is a portable massage table that meets all of the requirements listed above.
• Stationary and electric massage tables can also be used for Sarga Bodywork and are good because they are very stable and have higher weight capacities than portable massage tables. However, width and foam density still need to be considered.
• Massage tables that have extra moving parts (such as a for a tilt feature) tend to be problematic over time with the added wear and tear of barefoot massage.
Sarga Bodywork Certification
Learn more about the Sarga Bodywork certification process here.