Massage for Aging Clients
Caring for elderly clients requires the massage therapist to have a keen awareness, not only of the characteristics unique to the client but also of the various members of the client’s care team.
Being off-balance is often a good thing. The thrill of playing with our relationship to gravity is at the heart of a long list of activities we do for enjoyment: skating, skiing, surfing, hiking, dancing, tai chi, pickleball. In all of these, we intentionally shift our relationship to the center of the earth—a controlled fall, a flirtation with the edge of balance—and the result can be an ecstatic, expansive state.

But being unsteady when we don’t want to be? That’s a different story. Our fight-or-flight mechanisms are designed to commandeer our awareness, mood, and physiology when there’s a danger of falling. For aging populations especially, balance challenges are a big deal: Fear of falling can lead to reduced activity, social isolation, muscle loss, depression, and—ironically—increased fall risk, creating a vicious cycle with serious consequences.
When clients describe “balance problems,” they may be experiencing quite different things. Those variations could be:
Dizziness or lightheadedness might stem from cardiovascular or autonomic causes, such as blood pressure changes.
Fear of falling, or an overabundance of caution, is itself a potent factor that changes how people move, adapt, and
hold themselves.
Unsteadiness on one’s feet can reflect proprioceptive deficits, muscle weakness, or joint stiffness.
Vertigo—the sensation that the room is spinning—often has vestibular origins, typically involving the inner ear.
To understand how we can help, we need to know how balance works. Our sense of balance emerges from the brain’s integration of three main sensory systems: vestibular input from the inner ear, visual information from the eyes, and somatosensory or proprioceptive feedback from throughout the body—especially the feet, ankles, and spine. When any of these systems is compromised, or when the brain struggles to integrate their sometimes conflicting signals, balance suffers.
Common balance-related conditions can include: benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), where tiny crystals in the inner ear become dislodged; orthostatic hypotension, a drop in blood pressure upon standing; medication effects—many common drugs, including those for blood pressure, erectile dysfunction, sleep, anxiety, and pain, can affect balance.
Age-related changes in proprioception, tissue responsiveness, vision, and vestibular function compound the picture.
Understanding these mechanisms helps us work with our clients more sensitively and safely. We can inadvertently trigger dizziness or unsteadiness without realizing it—through head position changes in susceptible clients or simply by having someone sit up too quickly at the end of a session. The pacing we use, the positions we choose, and our awareness of a client’s state all become part of how we support their sense of stability rather than threaten it.
For hands-on work with balance challenges, I find it helpful to think of our goals in three overlapping layers: (1) helping clients settle, (2) helping clients adapt, (3) helping clients refine.
Settling is a function of the autonomic nervous system. Massage and bodywork is particularly good at helping an agitated client find new levels of rest and calmness. When the nervous system perceives threat—and the prospect of falling certainly qualifies—it shifts into a protective, vigilant state. Hands-on work with someone dealing with vertigo or balance fears is an opportunity to help them downregulate, to rest into the experience of being safely supported.
Adapting means helping the body become more responsive and mobile rather than braced and rigid. When the world seems to be tipping, the natural response is to stiffen—to grip with the feet, brace through the knees and hips, hold the breath, and clamp down through the neck. This protective bracing, especially after a fall or a scare, can become its own problem: Reduced adaptability leads to a more fragile sense of balance, which leads to more bracing. Helping restore mobility throughout the client’s body—feet, ankles, knees, hips, spine, rib cage, neck—can help break this cycle.
Refining means enhancing proprioception, the body’s sense of its own position and movement. Proprioception is the foundation of coordination and motor control, and it responds beautifully to skilled touch. By bringing attention to specific body regions and their movement possibilities, we help the brain’s sensory and motor maps become more detailed and accurate.
The good news is that a single well-crafted technique can accomplish all three goals at once.
The following regions of the body are significant when it comes to balance:
The feet are the literal foundation of standing balance. Reducing unnecessary tone, differentiating the myofascial structures, and awakening the proprioceptors of the plantar surface all allow for more refined postural adjustments. Helping clients sense and use their medial and lateral arches, restore dorsiflexion, and enhance plantar surface awareness can make a tangible difference in how steady clients feel (see “Arches: Wringing Technique”).
Knees and hips that can soften rather than brace provide the shock absorption and responsiveness that balance requires. Encouraging mobility here supports the whole system’s adaptability.
Breathing is the foundation of both responsiveness and support and key to autonomic calming. Clients who are bracing against instability often hold their breath or breathe shallowly. Helping restore full, relaxed breathing supports settling, and the rhythmic motion of respiration itself contributes to postural adaptability.
The neck and head deserve special attention, because two of our three main balance inputs—the vestibular organs of the inner ear and the eyes—are located in the head. The neck, which must remain mobile enough to orient the head freely while stable enough to support it, often bears the brunt of protective bracing. Restoring adaptability here can be a particularly powerful way to help someone dealing with balance challenges (see “Vestibular-Orienting Technique”).
Though uncommon, it’s good to be aware of situations that may warrant referral or postponement of hands-on work. Conditions like the following require medical evaluation:
Chest pain, shortness of breath, or palpitations
Fainting or presyncope
Fever with stiff neck
New double vision or vision loss
New hearing loss or severe ear symptoms
New weakness, numbness, facial droop, slurred speech, severe headache, or confusion
Recent head injury
Repeated unexplained falls
Sudden new dizziness or severe imbalance
Symptoms that are rapidly worsening
Here are a few ways we can support clients with known balance challenges:
Avoid sustained end-range neck rotation or extension in those with cervical sensitivity or protectiveness
Consider the effects of medications or alcohol
Keep lighting stable
Monitor for orthostatic symptoms when the client sits up
Provide support during sit-to-stand transitions
Stop or ease off if nausea or vertigo is triggered
Use slow position changes
Document your observations and encourage medical follow-up for persistent symptoms.
How we work with balance issues is often more important than where. If autonomic activation is the issue, we can slow down and prioritize settling. If stiffness is the issue, we gently encourage mobility. And keeping proprioceptive refinement as one of our main goals leverages the unique power of our work to help people shift their protective reactions. Throughout, we balance playfulness with reassurance—calming presence alongside curiosity and a willingness to explore.
Balance, after all, is not a static achievement but an ongoing process of adaptation. Our work can help clients not only feel steadier but also develop a more confident, curious, and resilient relationship with that ever-shifting edge between exhilaration and alarm.
Caring for elderly clients requires the massage therapist to have a keen awareness, not only of the characteristics unique to the client but also of the various members of the client’s care team.
This variation of your massage stance can reduce discomfort, help conserve strength, and use your movement and body weight most efficiently during a session.
When focusing on stretching a target muscle, sometimes other muscles in the group need to be considered for the session to be effective.
While tension-reducing techniques can help when issues arise from forward-head posture, addressing joint restrictions through manual therapy can prove more significant.