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AI Amazing Ai in Shimbashi

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Tkoadventure

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Service and/or Provider's Name:
Ai's Massage

Date of Encounter:
2018/06/08

Contact Method:
Walk In

Appointment Length & Costs:
2 hrs oil lymph massage - ¥15,000

Type/Location:
Shop

Language Notes:
Japanese

Details of the Encounter:
Left my office and caught the JR intending to go out to Hipness, but as the train approached Shimbashi I remembered all the great reviews of Ai and changed my plans. What a great idea that was!

Ai was very friendly and we talked for a bit before she showed me the course menu. Made my selection and after a quick shower, Ai went to work performing her magic. Easily one of the best massages I've ever had. She worked me over from head to toe using her hands, elbows and knees. after about an hour of working out the kinks and relaxing me more than a meditation session she had me flip over and worked my lower extremities. Pushing here and pulling there until I was at full mast. Then she gave me an incredible HJ that left me in convulsive joy! Finished me off with a scalp and foot massage and I left floating on air.

In fact, she did such a great job that I was still feeling the bliss of her touch the entire next day!

Final Thoughts:
Recommended, Will Repeat.

Closing Comments:
Utterly fantastic!!! Thanks TAG members for the previous reviews. Never would have known about Ai without you.
 
I know I am not the only person who reads detailed massage reviews when they have a few trigger points on their back. I want her to deconstruct my trapezeus after reading this.
 
at Ai can we get something more than a handjob?

If by "we" you mean "me and you" then it's a no. But if you mean me or some other of her loyal subjects then the answer is yes.

Once I got coffee and several times I have gotten soft drinks.
 
I know I am not the only person who reads detailed massage reviews when they have a few trigger points on their back. I want her to deconstruct my trapezeus after reading this.

According to several of her fanboys in TAG, of which I proudly confess to be one, she does life changing massages. I am not the only one who visits her at least monthly even when her place is situated very inconveniently for us. Now after around two years worth of visits I am not ashamed to tell she knows my body better than any other man or woman, including me, and goes straight to the problem points.
 
Have you tried cupping?

Do you mean the ancient Chinese thing with needles? Oh sorry, that was opium.

But no, I am bad with both needles and blood so that's not really my thing.
 
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Do you mean the ancient Chinese thing with needles? Oh sorry, that was opium.

But no, I am bad with both needles and blood so that's not really my thing.
Cupping is not with needles and blood, thats acupuncture (the needles, it shouldn’t get very bloody). Cupping is with plasic cups that vacuum your skin.

However, its not proven to really do any good and it leaves very weird marks that stay for a long time (not recommend for escorts).
 
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Cupping is not with needles and blood, thats acupuncture (the needles, it shouldn’t get very bloody).

Seems there are two versions of cupping; dry and wet. I have never heard about the dry, in other words suction only, version. The other version which I have seen they do draw blood and it does get messy.
 
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Cupping is near the top of the list of stupid things that some Chinese people think are healthy. Acupuncture and most herbal medicines are just below it. I mean with this cupping thing, explain how that works. In the West, doctors used to put blood sucking leeches on sick people thinking that the leeches would suck the sickness out. That was discredited about 500 years ago. The Chinese herbal doctors manage to persist in their idiocy.
 
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Western bloodletting was done for completely different purposes as medieval doctors believed it could cure diseases. Some people may believe cupping can do so but I think that’s a high expectation, and a romanticized way of interpreting Chinese practices. I see it as an alternative to deep tissue massage to soothe the soreness. It certainly works for that purpose.
 
It certainly works for that purpose.

The studies that have been done on cupping show that it is indeed effective for short term pain relief. Nothing else, but it does do that one thing well.
 
Western bloodletting was done for completely different purposes as medieval doctors believed it could cure diseases. Some people may believe cupping can do so but I think that’s a high expectation, and a romanticized way of interpreting Chinese practices. I see it as an alternative to deep tissue massage to soothe the soreness. It certainly works for that purpose.
No it does not work for that purpose or any other. It just makes round bruises on your back so you think it is doing something. You are free to disagree with the extensive scientific research that has been done proving it to be nonsense. And enjoy your wheatgrass enema and your reiki power from crystals too. https://sciencebasedmedicine.org/cupping-olympic-pseudoscience/
 
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Haha I don’t do those last two things you have mentioned but thanks for the advice anyway :)
Unwanted advice is my specialty. Deep tissue or any other kind of massage is also mostly BS insofar as therapy goes. You might enjoy it and you might feel good for awhile after, but there is very little evidence to suggest that it has actual therapeutic value. You are much better off doing yoga and other kinds of therapist guided stretching.
 
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The studies that have been done on cupping show that it is indeed effective for short term pain relief. Nothing else, but it does do that one thing well.
Short term pain relief but marks that last weeks, mm.
 
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Leeches are used in Western hospitals all the time today still. They are excellent at localized, painless clotbusting after major surgeries for patients with conditions that prevent the use of blood thinning drugs.
Thanks for this. I learned something. The leeches introduce some kind of an anticoagulant. Very cool.
 
Something that makes you feel good for a while after is therapeutic

A treatment that has no lasting effect would generally not be termed therapeutic. It would be termed palliative. But I get your point. Massage is a kind of therapy. So is beer. And sex.
 
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A treatment that has no lasting effect would generally not be termed therapeutic.
Termed by whom? You? Is that based on your intuition?

'Palliative treatment' is for people with serious illnesses. While I certainly hope to visit Ai before I die, I hope to do so before I hear the bell toll.
 
Termed by whom? You? Is that based on your intuition?

'Palliative treatment' is for people with serious illnesses. While I certainly hope to visit Ai before I die, I hope to do so before I hear the bell toll.


palliative
ˈpalɪətɪv/
adjective
  1. 1.
    (of a medicine or medical care) relieving pain without dealing with the cause of the condition.
    "orthodox medicines tend to be palliative rather than curative"
    synonyms: soothing, alleviating, sedative, calmative, calming; More
I choose my words carefully.
 
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And you cherry pick your definitions.

Why don't you look up the pragmatic meanings of 'therapeutic', and 'palliative treatment'
Why don’t you take a shot at telling us why I would need to use the ‘pragmatic’ definition (whatever you think that might mean) rather than the definition as it appears in most dictionaries? Good luck!
 
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