Healing Bee Massage Therapy

Healing Bee Massage Therapy Massage benefits both the mind and body, improving a variety of conditions such as: headaches, muscle cramping, chronic back pain, fatigue, and depression

Human beings are designed to respond to touch. Premature babies improve at the brush of their mother’s fingers. Children seek hugs for comfort and reassurance. Couples hold hands both in times of joy and sorrow. Contact is connection with the world. Massage is the art of touch. Healing Bee Massage Therapy was founded on the premise that touch can be helpful, healthy, and healing. It is our mission to bring the therapeutic properties of massage to people of all ages, in all walks of life. Massage benefits both the mind and body, improving a variety of conditions such as: headaches, muscle cramping, chronic back pain, fatigue, and depression. We all deserve a little pampering and revitalization. Renew yourself with a Healing Bee massage today.

02/08/2025
If you can please come donate and support Dylan tomorrow ❤️
03/14/2024

If you can please come donate and support Dylan tomorrow ❤️

Happy Halloween 🎃
10/31/2023

Happy Halloween 🎃

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07/07/2023

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05/26/2023
06/16/2022

UPDATE - This class is SOLD OUT. I have added another one for August. Please visit my website for class dates and information. www.thehospiceheart.net
xo
Gabby

When you are pregnant, you attend birthing classes.
When you are getting married, you might attend pre-marital therapy or visits with a priest.
Where do you go when you have a terminal illness, or you are caring for someone who does?

Please join me for my new class:
What to Expect When You Are Dying.

Saturday, July 9th, 11:00am-1:00pm Pacific Time.
This class will be virtual (Zoom).

This is a two-hour class that will help prepare you, or someone you love, for the dying process.
I will share the symptoms someone might experience, and the tools to help navigate them.
This will also be helpful to anyone who works in the end-of-life field.

Please come to this class with any questions, concerns, or curiosities you might have. I want to answer the difficult questions and help to remove any fear or uncertainty you might have.

I will also talk about:
- Hospice: the team and what is available to you
- Medications that are commonly used
- End-of-life doulas
- Medical Aid in Dying

This first class is $25, or by donation of whatever you can pay. I want to make it available to anyone who wants to be there, and money should not get in the way.

Please email me if you are interested: thehospiceheart@gmail.com

Please note: My intention is to hold this class once a month, adding a different special guest, with different topics, each month.

Guest Speaker for this class will be Lisa Pahl, a hospice social worker and one of the creators of The Death Deck.

I hope to see you there.
Please share this with anyone you think might be interested.

xo
Gabby

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06/08/2022

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I recently spent time with a patient who was planning to take the end-of-life medications, which is approved in California. It is met with a lot of controversy, which I understand, however as a hospice nurse and bearing witness to suffering at the end of life, I support this choice. And I respect those who do not. I am not writing this to change your mind, I am writing this to plea to all of you to find it in your hearts to not allow your differences in choice to keep you from the bedside of someone you love who is dying.

This woman was suffering in many different ways, none of which could be remedied by medication or prayer. She has a strong faith commitment, which is very opposed to the choice she wanted to make. She struggled with that. Her family and close group of friends were also against it and while they were at her bedside daily, they refused to be there when she planned to take the medications. She asked me if I would be there for her, and I said yes.

She also asked me if I thought God would be angry with her, perhaps not accept her, if she chose to do this. I do not practice any particular faith and feel strongly that whomever you pray to does not judge, but I knew I needed to be careful in my response. This is what I told her, “I believe that what God wants from any of us, is to find peace within, and if you make peace with your choices, then your God will be at peace with and for you. And when you die, he will take your hand and welcome you.” I understand that many of you do not support what I said to her, but she was dying, and she was struggling, and she was tormented, and I desperately wanted her to feel some semblance of peace within. She deserved that.

She chose to wait to take the medications, perhaps hoping the people she loved most would let their disapproval go and would choose to be there with and for her. They did not. And she became too weak to be able to take them, removing that choice all together, and leaving her instead to be in a bed, dying alone, and suffering in pain. Thankfully we were able to move her to a hospice facility where the most compassionate team of nurses, home health aides, and volunteers provided gentle and loving care to her until her last breath was taken. I was not there when she took her last breath, but I was there every day until then, and I knew she was in really good hands.

She was not alone, but I question what she took with her…

My purpose in writing this is to ask that we try a little harder to accept people for who they are, not for the choices they make. That we stop being so hurtful with our judgement of someone because they believe differently than us. That we find a way to put aside the things that make us different, bringing what matters most of all to the forefront and allow that to be what binds us, which is love, family, and our friendships.

No one should have to die alone unless that is their choice. Holding the hand of someone who is dying is compassionate and kind… please, let’s be more of that. We do not have to agree, we do not have to kiss, or pray, or vote the same way … we are unique and that is a beautiful thing. But if those choices cause us to be violent, angry, hurtful, or mean that is what tears us a part. Our choices don’t tear us apart, our behavior does and that is something I think we need to change.

Let’s be kinder to one another…please.

xo
Gabby

You can find this and my other blogs on my website:
https://www.thehospiceheart.net/post/our-choices-don-t-tear-us-apart-our-behavior-does

05/13/2022

On my way to see a patient today, I passed the cemetery where my mom is buried. I stopped by to say hello to her. It's been a while since I was there. I remember her choosing the spot because of the oak tree that would one day provide shade over her. She was right, it is huge; it has been thirty-four years, so that gave the tree plenty of time to mature. I was only twenty-three and she was only fifty-one. I am older now than she was when she died.

At the time that she died, I was angry for so many things. Angry that she wasn’t the mom I wished I had. Angry that she died. Angry at the world. I was raising a five-year-old at the time, and I needed guidance and support and she wasn’t there for me. I was selfish… I made it all about me.

I am not the same person I was back then, I no longer hold anger or resentment, and I am very aware of my own behavior, my attitude, and my immaturity. Over the years I have become acutely aware of how fragile life is. I wish so badly I had done and said things differently, but as we all know, you cannot go back in time… but you can move forward, learn from your mistakes and do better… which I believe I have done.

Today when I visited her, it was different, because my brother is now gone too. I imagined my mom, my sister Laura, and Ben hanging out together… and I cried. I wish so badly I didn’t waste the time that I did have with each of them. I try so hard not to have regrets… but I do have them. I wasted time being angry, and even sometimes mean. As I stood there today, all I could think about was what she took with her when she died. I have been so focused on what I was left with, what I didn’t have, and how I wasn’t treated, that it never occurred to me what she left with.

When I share with each of you about saying “the things,” letting go of anger, and filling a box with all the gifts you want your loved ones to take with them when they go… trust me when I tell you now… it will make a difference for you and for them. My hope is that I inspire you to let things go, to not waste time, to fix it if it is not completely broken, and most of all, to make the time you have left with the people you love... BETTER.

On her gravestone, it says "with us always." I don't even remember how that was decided, but I get it now.
They die.
We say goodbye.
We think about them all the time.
We miss them.
We never stop loving them.
In fact, at least for me... I think with time, I love them even more.
They are with us always.

xo
Gabby

04/23/2022

And the very best thing you can do... for the people you love... is to have the conversation now, way before a diagnosis, illness or decline due to age happens.
Know their wishes way ahead of time...

Talk about it NOW.
Death does not happen faster because you talk about it. If you talk about it, if you learn to be more comfortable with the conversation, you will be able to honor the wishes of the people you love.

Let's talk about!
xo
Gabby

Address

325 West Street Suite 102
Canandaigua, NY
14424

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 6pm
Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
Friday 10am - 6pm

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