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Reflexology and massage therapy, specialising in pregnancy, and NEW baby massage classes


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"Reflexology is second to none for pregnancy care" Suzanne Enzer, midwife and reflexologist


I am a fully qualified clinical reflexologist and massage therapist with post-graduate training in maternity reflexology and pregnancy massage offering treatments from my warm and tranquil clinic in Dulwich, as well as from Neal's Yard Therapy Rooms in Covent Garden.


Enjoy the benefits of balancing, energising, stress-relieving reflexology and massage to promote a more relaxed pregnancy, easier labour and faster post-natal recovery. Reflexology is not only well established for encouraging fertility but also for gaining symptomatic relief from a range of chronic and acute health concerns including stress, headaches, insomnia, musculoskeletal pain and niggling pregnancy aches and pains.


Options for pain relief are limited during pregnancy and side-lying massage can bring an escape from stretched and strained tendons and ligaments - as well as being a precious little bit of me-time in the later stages before the baby arrives! Please look at my website for much more information about the treatments I offer or to email me with any questions. I really look forward to meeting you and treating you. www.touchtherapy.co


NEW TO TOUCH THERAPY!

Infant massage classes from newborn to pre-crawling - groups of up to 8 babies at my Dulwich practice on Tuesday mornings and afternoons. Following the International Association of Infant Massage curriculum this course teaches a wonderful massage routine for you to practise on your baby as well as the theory of bonding and attachment, behavioural states, engagement cues, 'listening' to your baby, adaptations for your growing child etc. Come and meet other new parents or round up some local friends and come as a group - bring your baby and a sense of humour! Call or email me on [email protected] for availability.

Charlotte

www.touchtherapy.co

  • 1 month later...
  • 4 weeks later...
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I was given this treatment as a Christmas Gift, and it was one of my best ever presents. The treatment itself was so relaxing and de-stressing, and the added benefit has been a real improvement in my sleep patterns. The environment is delightful and really adds to the whole experience, with the added and unexpected benefit of being able to buy my favourite candles at the end! Top treatment, top gift!
  • 4 weeks later...
I've just finished a course of reflexology which I started when I was pregnant and carried the 6 sessions through until now (my baby is 4 months old now). Charlotte did an amazing job to relieve all manner of antenatal and postnatal issues, including carpal tunnel syndrome, back pain and fatigue. I'm sure the session before my baby's birth helped move things along too! Charlotte has a wonderful way of making you feel extremely relaxed during and after the sessions - I would strongly recommend booking a session or 5 (you get the 6th free!)
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 4 months later...

I having regular reflexology sessions with Charlotte for the last 6 months- both during and post pregnancy. The sessions have become a little bit of 'me time' (although I do take my baby daughter along sometimes) which I really look forward to- I feel so much better afterwards. Charlotte is fab, has a really lovely treatment room and makes you feel really relaxed. I would definitely recommend.


Claire

  • 4 weeks later...
Also now available in Touch Therapy's lovely Dulwich clinic the full range of Neals Yard Remedy Organics products - order Christmas presents for friends, family (or yourself!) and I will have them in my treatment room within a few days or before your next appointment.
Hello - a one-hour reflexology treatment is ?45 (allow up to one hour and 15 minutes for the first appointment for a brief medical consultation). Courses are also available of five treatments with the sixth free which brings the price down to ?37 per treatment. More information on my website www.touchtherapy.co. Email me at [email protected] or call me on 07932 698 864 to book a treatment or if you have any other questions - it would be lovely to meet you! I look forward to hearing from you - Charlotte
  • 2 months later...
Another wholehearted recommendation for Charlotte. This was my second pregnancy and, with a toddler in tow, found it hard to find the time to relax and enjoy this pregnancy in the same way as my first. I found recommendations for Charlotte on the EDF and she became my hour of weekly sanity and grown up conversation! I also pre-paid for the blocks of five sessions and combined reflexology treatments with blissful pregnancy massages. I always walked out of her beautiful treatment room feeling rejuvenated. I am a believer in reflexology for general well being but am also lucky enough to have had two relatively easy and fast labours. It's hard to pinpoint the reasons for this but reflexology puts an expectant mother in a positive and relaxed state of mind, which has got to be a good thing! I can't recommend Charlotte highly enough: she's wonderful!
  • 1 month later...
Gift vouchers available - for Valentine's and beyond! - for reflexology, pregnancy massage and Indian head massage to ease you through your pregnancy aches and pains and help prepare for birth. Be lovely to hear from you...

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    • Denmark Hill to Clapham Junction then pick up the 345 from Falcon Road ( exit Clapham Junction Station from the back entrance) The overground will terminate on platform one anyway so you're already on that side of the station. The 345 bit should take you approximately 30 minutes and the overground from Denmark Hill to CJ approximately 15 minutes. All the best!!
    • I would go to Victoria (185 bus or Southern Rail) then get either a bus from there to Chelsea Town hall (I think it may be the C1 but I'm not sure..I moved from that area over 25 years ago) and the Royal Marsden is a short walk from there. OR get a Underground from Victoria to Sloane square and a Taxi from there to Royal Marsden..It would'nt cost much because its a few mins away..or a bus from Sloane Square to Chelsea Town Hall or Fulham Rd/Sydney St 
    • I don't know how the law works, nor what rules cover what doctors can and can't say in their professional and private (?personal?) capacities,  but on the face of it I agree that some of the comments quoted are unacceptable, to say the least. However, in the context of the subject of this thread,  I think it is important to differentiate between antisemitism ("hostility to or prejudice against Jewish people") and hostility to  the Israeli government's apparent attempted genocide of Palestinian civilians in retribution for the appalling attack on Israeli civilians by Hamas. I might be completely wrong here, and naive, and I am sure someone will correct me if I am, but it seems to me to be as if the English government had started trying to annihilate the whole of the  Irish population because of the IRA bombings in the nineties. I also realise that there is a whole historic background to the Palestine/Israel thing, but I am not familiar with it. Anyway, I and everyone I know who has taken part in any of the recent marches has done so to try to get our government to stop supporting genocide, not because they are antisemitic. And yes there are other awful things going on in the world, and always have been. I can't fight all of them. One of my brothers has taken in three generations of  a Ukrainian family. ETA: Do you really think it is OK to refer to people as "blacks"? Or am I wrong about that as well, and there is some reason why it is acceptable?
    • An abridged version of the article I posted:    The health secretary is preparing to overhaul medical regulators — the General Medical Council (GMC) and Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) — after being appalled by a series of cases in which doctors have escaped disciplinary action. Streeting told The Times: “It is clear that the current medical regulatory system is completely failing to protect Jewish patients and NHS staff.”   Doctors have been let off after spreading antisemitic tropes including claiming that Britain is “controlled by Jewish supremacy”, and claiming the architect of the attack was a “legend”. Some medics have ramped up their activity in the days after the Manchester synagogue attack.   A spokesman for the Campaign Against Antisemitism said: “Time and again, doctors who spew antisemitic bile online and in the streets are being allowed to continue practising medicine, as though calls for hatred and violence are compatible with the duty to care for others.”   Doctor who called Jews ‘worse than Nazis’ cleared Dr Rahmeh Aladwan was investigated over her social media posts, including one that stated that Israelis were “worse” than the Nazis and a claim that the “Royal Free Hospital in London is a Jewish supremacy cesspit”. Since escaping suspension by the MPTS, Aladwan has posted incessantly about Jews and Israel.   She suggested the media’s focus on the Manchester synagogue attack was an example of “Jewish supremacism”. The day after the attack Aladwan shared an image of Britain’s chief rabbi, Ephraim Mirvis, with the words “rabbi genocide” emblazoned on his forehead. On Saturday, she tweeted: “Glory to the Palestinian armed resistance. Death to ‘Israel’.” Aladwan has been a member of the proscribed group Palestine Action, and has shared claims that Streeting is a “Zionist ghoul” funded by “the genocidal ‘Israel’ lobby”. At a rally earlier this year, she said that “Palestinian people who are fighting for liberation, including armed struggle” are “heroes, every single one of them”. “We are proud of our armed resistance and in Islam we call that jihad. That’s an honour. That’s how you defend your people,” she added.   The MPTS ruled that no suspension was necessary, arguing her comments would not “alarm or concern” members of the public.    On Monday night, the CAA announced that it had notified the GMC of its intent to challenge the decision not to impose the condition on Aladwan while she is under investigation. It said that her case was “one of the most egregious examples we have encountered of a regulator failing in its duty to protect the public”.   One of Aladwan’s key supporters is Dr Rehiana Ali, a consultant neurologist who was reinstated by a medical tribunal this year after describing the architect of the October 7 attacks as a “legend”, calling for Israel to be “dismantled”, and claiming that 9/11 was conducted by Mossad.   Ali has made several controversial comments in the wake of the Manchester synagogue terrorist attack, and has claimed that Streeting was an “Israeli puppet”. On October 4, she quoted a post calling for Israel to be abolished and claiming that Hamas had “done nothing to apologise for”, adding: “Agree 100%.” On October 2, about eight hours before the attack, she quoted the same post and said: “Armed resistance is the only solution.”   Ali defended her comments and told The Times that she did not believe in Israel’s right to exist. She said: “It is outrageous that the CAA weaponises an unfortunate incident to continue its defamatory attacks on doctors with a moral conscience for political ends.” Hundreds of complaints over antisemitic doctors Nearly 500 complaints of antisemitism relating to 123 doctors have been submitted to the GMC since the Hamas attacks on October 7, 2023. Of these, 84 per cent were closed at the triage stage, according to figures obtained by Jewish News in July. The rare cases where complaints have led to disciplinary action include that of Dr Manoj Sen, an NHS surgeon. Last month he was struck off for making a string of antisemitic social media comments, including referring to a Jewish man as “circumcised vermin”.   The doctor, who was working as a surgeon at Northwick Park Hospital in London, commented on a Facebook post shortly after the October 7 attacks, using the word “untermenschen” — German for subhuman — as well as the phrases “Jewish c***” and “Jew boy”. Sen also referred to the Auschwitz concentration camp along with the German phrase “Die Juden sind unsere Ungluck”, meaning “the Jews are our misfortune”.   Others have escaped serious sanctions after being reported for antisemitism. In February, Dr Kamran Ahmed, a Wolverhampton-based GP, was not struck off but given a formal warning after posting material described by the GMC as “objectively antisemitic and seriously offensive”. This included sharing a post which said: “The Israeli flag is modern-day swastika”. Dr Ellen Kriesels, a consultant paediatrician at Whittington Hospital, remains on the GMC register despite spending months making openly making racist claims. On her X account, Kriesels has claimed that “virtually every Jew has some feelings of supremacy”. The Whittington Health Trust has previously said that it was investigating and that Kriesels was not working.     Jewish doctors ‘are afraid at work’ Jewish doctors have warned that the institutional failures to tackle antisemitism extend to the British Medical Association (BMA). Those attending the BMA’s annual conference in June warned that they “feared for their safety”.    There have been widespread reports of antisemitic incidents in hospitals. In August, the University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust issued an apology over posters claiming “Zionism is Poison”. A Jewish patient who was undergoing major tests at the hospital and felt “angry, distressed and upset” after seeing some of the posters, adding: “I shouldn’t have to remove my Star of David necklace to go to a hospital visit.” Concerns have been raised at at least two NHS trusts about staff wearing pro-Palestine symbols, such as lanyards in the design of a keffiyeh and badges that say “Free Palestine”. I don't have any skin in the game with what's happening in the Middle East (most likely like many on this forum) and I stand by my clearly stated opinion on other threads that neither Hamas, nor Israel, has clean hands.  What I do care about is what happens on British soil and the idea of any ethnic group in this country - with its supposed history of tolerance and inclusion - being afraid for their lives.  There can be little doubt that the rhetoric of many on these marches fuels the killing that we saw last week.  Don't share a platform with anti Semites.  If you care so much about a community being starved, abused, bombed and oppressed, why not march for Ukraine (where we do have skin in the game), or the 150,000 blacks murdered in Sudan as well? It makes no sense to me.     
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