Here's a new find: Click on the link...
http://search.lycos.co.uk/searchFra...t=web&matchmode=and&lang=any&idx=all&x=29&y=8
If it doesn't work here is the part of a thread from a reflexology discussion:
I went for my first Reflexology treatment recently. The girl sat at my bare feet and started lightly tickling my soles. I had thought that ticklish people did not have to worry about getting tickled during Reflexology, yet she seemed to be tickling me on purpose, dancing her fingernails (in a typing motion) along the bottoms of my feet and dragging her index fingers on my toes.
Now, I am extremely :} ticklish on my feet. Fortunately, her tickling was so light it was bearable, though had she not stopped when she did I probably would starting going berserk. Tickling weakens me in the way Kryptonite affects Superman!
So I can't fight off the tickler or even pull away.
After maybe the first 10 seconds I asked her, "Do you know you're tickling me?" She said, "Yes. It's a technique to increase sensitivity so you will be more receptive to the actual reflexology treatment." She tickled me for maybe a minute or so, but when you're getting tickled, that seems like an hour! I was struggling not to giggle too loud but I felt myself turning beat red.
I must say, once she stopped tickling me the Reflexology was WONDERFUL. But since I have heard ticklish people like should not have to worry about getting tickled during Reflexology, I am confused. Is tickling the feet an acceptable part of Reflexology or was this reflexologist testing an unproved theory on me? (Had it been a man, I would have left!)
http://search.lycos.co.uk/searchFra...t=web&matchmode=and&lang=any&idx=all&x=29&y=8
If it doesn't work here is the part of a thread from a reflexology discussion:
I went for my first Reflexology treatment recently. The girl sat at my bare feet and started lightly tickling my soles. I had thought that ticklish people did not have to worry about getting tickled during Reflexology, yet she seemed to be tickling me on purpose, dancing her fingernails (in a typing motion) along the bottoms of my feet and dragging her index fingers on my toes.
Now, I am extremely :} ticklish on my feet. Fortunately, her tickling was so light it was bearable, though had she not stopped when she did I probably would starting going berserk. Tickling weakens me in the way Kryptonite affects Superman!
So I can't fight off the tickler or even pull away.
After maybe the first 10 seconds I asked her, "Do you know you're tickling me?" She said, "Yes. It's a technique to increase sensitivity so you will be more receptive to the actual reflexology treatment." She tickled me for maybe a minute or so, but when you're getting tickled, that seems like an hour! I was struggling not to giggle too loud but I felt myself turning beat red.
I must say, once she stopped tickling me the Reflexology was WONDERFUL. But since I have heard ticklish people like should not have to worry about getting tickled during Reflexology, I am confused. Is tickling the feet an acceptable part of Reflexology or was this reflexologist testing an unproved theory on me? (Had it been a man, I would have left!)