Body Charge was hired this past July for the WPC at the LA Convention Center.
The booth had video screens where attendees could watch a presentation given by the company we were representing. Body Charge staffs trade shows nationally with licensed and insured therapists.
Incorporated in 1997, Body Charge has staffed Oracle, Siggraph, Microsoft, and other trade shows in Las Vegas, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Atlanta and Orlando. 
In order to expand our efforts to bring our clients the best possible massage to the Trade Show venues, Body Charge Inc. has opened their new office in
Las Vegas.
WIth over 14 years of experience in bringing massage to offices and conventions, Body Charge Inc. elected to bring our services to the Trade Show capitol of the world. “With the economy showing some signs of recovery, and attendance at shows increasing, I felt it was the right time to open an office in town, so we could keep a closer watch on the industry,” said Paul Gudits, president at Body Charge.
One of the best ways to draw traffic to your booth at a trade show is to have attractive, healthy, and fit massage therapists doing chair massage and/or reflexology sessions at your exhibit space.
Body Charge Inc.
The Executive Offices of Lindell Professional Plaza
3651 Lindell Road Suite D-282 Las Vegas, NV 89103-1200
702.479.3012 email: info@body-charge.com
Body Charge Inc. takes the quality and consistency anywhere we are asked to be of service. Chicago is no different.
Being a Chicago native, I know for a fact how brutal the weather can get, and how exhausting it can be just to commute from home to your office. That is why we make sure the massage therapists that do our office and corporate chair massage work, are the finest the city has to offer. Personally screened and tested, our therapists are available anytime and anywhere in Loop or in the Chicago area.
Chicago corporate massage, can help recruit, retain and reward your employees, and they’ll love you for it. Chair massage is also great at health fairs, employee appreciation days, and office parties.
Call us toll free for pricing or fill out our request form for more info.
We want to continue to inform our potential clients that we are very active in Chicago as a home for corporate massage therapy. Law firms in the Loop, as well as internet firms on Wacker Drive, use us consistently as employee perks.
Being a Chicago native, I understand how stressful working downtown can be. Many people have to commute by trains into the Loop, and more often than not, in challenging weather conditions.
So consider doing office chair massages for your employees. They’ll love you for it, and maybe even buy you a hot dog, from Hot Dougs….one of the best places in town!
Hi:
As the owner of Body Charge, I have studied many different types of massage, and seen many different types of injuries.
I am currently recovering from neck surgery for a bulging disc between c5 and c6. The procedure was called a ACDF- an anterior cervical discetomy where the surgeon makes an incision in the front of your neck off to the side, to get to the disc. He then replaces the disc with a piece of special plastic that dissolves as the bones start to heal and graft.
During this time I have had to wear a cervical collar, and now it is my 6th week… physical therapy including EMS and ice have helped a lot. Massage for traps, scalene muscles, and occipital muscles have helped relieve the tension caused by having to keep my neck so rigidly straight.
Massage can help the healing process speed along and help your recovery during post-op.
Regards,
Paul-CEO
Relaxed and Refreshed Body Charge has revitalized weary pediatric health care workers for the past 8+ years and consistently receives great feedback. This company provides prompt responses to requests and employs customer service minded staff. They are very easy to work with, and I highly recommend them!
-Beth Maldonado, Employee relations-Childrens Hospital Los Angeles
Satisfied Customer I worked with Body Charge over the summer and was pleased. Paul helped arrange several therapists to work during a thirty day campaign for us. Paul was easy to work with and coordinated therapists to work in rotation on each of the days making for a very smooth operation.
Pete D. Six Flags Magic Mountain
Great Experience! I’ve worked with Body Charge twice in the past year and have had a pleasant experience both times! Paul, my contact, was extremely accommodating and flexible. I hired Body Charge for two University events and the students really enjoyed the massage therapists – they were so personable and engaging. Not only is the service great but their prices can’t be beat. I would recommend Body Charge!
-USC-
Bodycharge ROCKS! I’ve hired the Bodycharge team several times over the past few years. From large corporate events to small office rewards programs, they offer the best in massage therapy. With Bodycharge you get experienced therapists who are friendly, professional, and most importantly they love what they do. This organization is run by passionate individuals who do their best to make sure you are receiving the most customized experience possible. I highly recommend using Bodycharge for all of your massage therapy needs.
Miley Waterman for the Taste of Lexus
Do you feel ‘righteous rage’ on the road?

- A person’s upbringing may reflect how he or she will handle anger in adulthood
- “Righteous rage” is when people feel entitled to something and get angry when they don’t get it
- Anger isn’t just bad for your relationships; it can also affect your health
(CNN) — You’re speeding along on the highway and someone cuts you off out of nowhere. Your heart starts racing, and you pound your wrists on the horn, screaming obscenities only you can hear.
It’s one of those moments when you’re so angry that you act out of character, transforming from mild-mannered to vengeful person. It’s as if something in your brain tells you that you need to fight back.
Instances of frustration are common in daily life, but sometimes it can get out of control.
Four audio recordings capturing a heated argument, allegedly between actor Mel Gibson and his ex-girlfriend, Oksana Grigorieva, have been released since July 9 by RadarOnline. In the most recently revealed recording, a man threatens to burn down the house. CNN has not independently confirmed the authenticity of the recordings.
Grigorieva and Gibson were scheduled to appear in court Tuesday for a status hearing on a restraining order that Grigorieva filed against him, alleging that he struck her in the face, according to her spokesman, Stephen Jaffe.
Gibson isn’t the only one in the news lately who’s allegedly been having anger issues. Carlos Zambrano, pitcher for the Chicago, Illinois, Cubs, has been on the restricted list since June, when he had a shout-out with teammate Derrek Lee. Zambrano has finished anger management therapy and participated Thursday in his first bullpen session since the confrontation, the Chicago Tribune reported.
–Robert Goldman, attorney and psychologist
Anger stems from a survival instinct, experts say. When you feel that someone is threatening your existence, you fight back to save yourself.
A calm, rational person may appear to transform into an angry beast in a traffic jam because of that need to protect oneself, said Dr. Tracy Latz, psychiatrist in Charlotte, North Carolina.
“It gets into this mentality of ‘kill or be killed,’ ” Latz said. “Subsconsciously, there’s a fear that someone else is going to kill or take power over me.”
Combine that with a sense of entitlement and you’ve got what attorney and clinical psychologist Robert Goldman calls “righteous rage.” That’s when people feel so strongly they deserve something that it blinds them to the reality of the situation, and they behave irrationally.
“While we live in a world of abundance in our country, it can also create feelings of anger and rage when we get caught up in it. We’re not able to step back and see how really lucky and blessed we are,” said Goldman, who works for the probation department of Suffolk County, New York.
In making decisions, the frontal lobe of the human brain, which is relatively new in evolutionary history, is instrumental. But the more primitive parts of the brain are involved in anger, Goldman said. Alcohol can inhibit the more thoughtful functioning and allow anger to flood out.
People tend to lash out at family members because they believe those close to them will not abandon them, no matter what, Latz said. A family setting is when people often let their guard down, which can lead to ugly confrontations.
A person’s upbringing may reflect how he or she will handle anger in adulthood, she said. If, growing up, parents expressed their anger in an inappropriate way, or repressed it altogether, the child may follow suit later. This is also how abusive behavior gets passed down from one generation to the next, she said.
“You can actually form a belief that this is how it is — we can unlearn that if we begin to be aware of it,” she said.
It’s important to understand the root of your anger, and use the sense of unfairness to become stronger, Goldman said. Think about how you can deal with the things that make you mad in a more rational fashion.
In the moment, thinking about the consequences of an action driven by anger can help stop you from going too far, he said.
Another approach is to close your eyes and think of something calming — a loved one, a spiritual being, a beautiful sunset or a piece of music that you adore, Lantz said. Meditation also helps.
Seek professional help when your anger is interfering with your ability to function in relationships, Goldman said. It doesn’t take aggression for such feelings to get out of hand; if you’re unable to move forward with your life because you’re still mad at someone for something, there’s a problem.
One client Goldman is counseling is still stuck on the fact that his mother wasn’t invited to a bar mitzvah on the wife’s side of the family. The couple is getting divorced.
“Holding a grudge really impacts your relationship, and it’s empowering another person to control you,” he said.
Anger isn’t just bad for marriage; it can also affect your health. A 2009 study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found that anger triggers electrical changes in the heart, which can predict future arrhythmias in some patients.
Mark Farparan also has health issues from anger — he has a condition of chronic pain and fatigue called fibromyalgia, and these days when he gets too worked up about something, his energy will be drained for hours. The breathing exercises that he and his wife learned in Lamaze class have helped him calm down in moments of frustration.
Farparan, 52, considers himself “Mr. Mellow” now, but that’s not how it always was. When his 12-year-old son was 3, Farapan once got so mad at the child that he punched a door instead of him.
“I started again in a marriage at a late time, and being a father again was kind of rough,” said Farparan, who has a 26-year-old from his first marriage and two children from his second. “I guess I was having sort of like a post-partum.”
Farparan has not done that again. Beyond the breathing, his mellowing over the past several years has to do with age, he said.
“I don’t have much time left on this Earth. I’m not going to waste it being angry,” he said.
Working overtime may harm the heart, study says

- Study: Doctors should see long working hours as a potential risk factor for heart disease
- People who worked overtime were healthier in other ways
- They were also more likely to exhibit “Type A” personality traits
- All of the study participants were white-collar workers in England
(Health.com) — If you’ve been saying for years that long hours at work are killing you, forward this article to your boss–it might literally be true. According to a new study, people who work more than 10 hours a day are about 60 percent more likely to develop heart disease or have a heart attack than people who clock just seven hours a day.
It’s not clear why this is, but the researchers suggest that all that time on the job means less free time to unwind and take care of yourself. Stress may also play a role–but not as much as you might think. Working long hours appears to hurt your heart even if you don’t feel particularly stressed out, the study found.
“Balance between work and leisure time is important,” says the lead author of the study, Dr. Marianna Virtanen, M.D., an epidemiologist at the Finnish Institute of Occupational Health and University College London. “If you work long hours, the fact is that you may be exposed to higher stress levels and you do not have enough time to take care of your health.”
Doctors “should include long working hours on their list of potential risk factors” for heart disease, she adds.
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Dr. Virtanen and her colleagues followed more than 6,000 British civil servants with no history of heart disease for an average of 11 years. The participants were all drawn from a larger, ongoing study known as Whitehall II that began in 1985.
During the study, a total of 369 people had heart attacks (some of them fatal) or were diagnosed with heart disease after seeking medical attention for chest pain.
Compared to people who worked seven hours a day, those who worked 10 to 12 hours a day had a 56 percent increased risk of heart disease, heart attack, or death. Those who worked for 8 to 10 hours a day were not at increased risk.
The findings are “sort of a wakeup call,” says Dr. Gordon McInnes, M.D., a professor of clinical pharmacology at the University of Glasgow, in the U.K., who wrote an editorial accompanying the study. Doctors should be extra vigilant about the heart health of patients who work long hours, he says.
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The study doesn’t say how, exactly, long hours at work might affect heart health. To try to pinpoint the effect of work time, Dr. Virtanen and her colleagues took a range of health factors into account in their analysis, including blood pressure, cholesterol levels, diet and exercise, and whether or not the participants smoked. They also factored in the workers’ rank and salary, since socioeconomic status has been linked to heart health.
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In some ways, the people who worked overtime were healthier than those who worked just seven hours a day. They were less likely to drink heavily and smoke, for instance, and they got more exercise. On the other hand, they tended to sleep less and reported experiencing more stress, having more demanding jobs, and having less control over their work.
They were also more likely to exhibit “Type A” personality traits. Type A behavior includes aggressiveness, irritability, and a “chronic, incessant struggle to achieve more and more in less and less time,” according to the study.
But the workers who burned the candle at both ends were still at greater risk of heart disease even when all of these factors were accounted for, which suggests that something besides stress, personality, and behaviors such as smoking may be responsible.
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Still, workplace stress may have affected the study’s findings in spite of the researchers’ attempts to control for it, says Dr. McInnes. “I personally think stress was involved,” he says. “These people did a lot of extra work, which I would think is stressful. But it’s very difficult to be sure.”
Peter Kaufmann, Ph.D., a researcher at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute in Washington, D.C., says that this type of study (known as an observational study) can’t prove whether long hours directly increase heart risk. For instance, Kauffman says, it’s possible that the workers’ overall lifestyle–including type A behavior–contributed to the long hours and the heart risk observed in the study.
“You would expect people who are more driven and more impatient to work longer hours to get things done,” Kaufmann says. “But they may be equally driven and impatient with the people around them, family and friends. They may have disorganized work habits and lives. Or [the long hours] may reflect failed social relationships or that they use work as a means to escape.”
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The study had other limitations. The researchers only measured blood pressure and hours worked at the start of the study, and were therefore not able to track how these factors may have interacted over time, McInnes says. Blood pressure can be affected by stress and can in turn cause heart problems.
In addition, as the study notes, the researchers did not know whether the workers had been diagnosed with anxiety or depression, both of which have been linked to heart disease.
Lastly, all of the study participants were white-collar workers in England, which means the findings may not apply to all workers everywhere.
Copyright Health Magazine 2010
Job strain ups heart-attack risk in women

- Women with demanding jobs twice as likely to have a heart attack as peers with easier jobs
- Those with a lot of job strain were 43 percent more likely to need heart surgery
- Women who are worried about losing their jobs are more likely to be physically inactive
- Women are more likely than men to experience job strain
(Health.com) — Women with very demanding jobs are nearly twice as likely to have a heart attack as their peers in more easygoing occupations, a new study suggests.
Researchers at Harvard Medical School analyzed 10 years of survey and medical data on more than 17,000 women in the health profession. The women, who were enrolled in a long-running study on heart disease, were all in their 50s or early 60s when the study began.
The women who said their job requires them to work “very hard” or “very fast” but who have little say over their day-to-day tasks — a combination known as “job strain” — were 88 percent more likely than those in less-stressful jobs to have a heart attack.
They were also 43 percent more likely to need heart surgery, according to the study, which was presented Sunday at an annual meeting of the American Heart Association in Chicago.
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In addition, women who were stressed out by work — or worried about losing their jobs — were more likely than those with steady employment to be physically inactive and to have high cholesterol. (Job insecurity by itself did not appear to increase the risk of heart attack, however.)
“This new data is among the most important to emerge in recent years concerning the relationship between job strain and cardiovascular health,” says Peter Kaufmann, Ph.D., a researcher at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute who has studied mental health and heart disease but was not involved in the new research.
Doctors and other experts in the field need to do more to help people manage work-related stress, Kaufmann adds. The findings “emphasize that progress is needed urgently in this arena,” he says.
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The increased risk of heart attack seen in the study can’t be attributed solely to health or socioeconomic factors. To zero in on job strain, the researchers controlled for age, race, education, and income, as well as blood pressure, body weight, and cholesterol.
And even though all of the women in the study were health professionals, it was a “very socioeconomically diverse” group that included doctors, nurses, dietitians, and researchers, says the lead author of the study, Dr. Michelle Albert, M.D., a cardiologist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, in Boston.
Much of the research to date on job stress and heart health has been done in men. But women are more likely than men to experience job strain, not to mention stress related to home and family demands, says Paul Landsbergis, Ph.D., an associate professor of environmental and occupational health sciences at SUNY Downstate Medical Center, in Brooklyn.
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“The results certainly imply that we need to do more to make jobs healthier,” Landsbergis says. One way to accomplish this, he adds, might be to give individual workers more control over their jobs through collective bargaining and other types of organizing.
For her part, Albert recommends some simple steps to help women limit the impact of work-related stress: Exercise regularly, try to leave your work at the workplace, and take 10 to 15 minutes a day to relax and concentrate on your physical, mental, and emotional health. It’s also important to have a network of family and friends to help you cope, she says.
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“We’re never going to be able to get rid of stress — some stress is positive, actually,” Albert says. “The negative aspects of stress we’re going to need to learn how to manage.”
The AHA’s annual Scientific Sessions meeting highlights the latest heart-related research and treatment advances. Unlike studies published in medical journals, the research presented at the meeting has not been vetted by independent experts in the field.
Copyright Health Magazine 2010


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