Dayton Daily News

The power of touch on display in Centervill­e

Interest coincides with new focus in the fitness world on recovery.

- By Julie Carr Smyth

The new StretchLab studio is offering pandemic-weary locals a wellness option once reserved for Hollywood stars and elite athletes.

—Pandemic-weary

CENTERVILL­E Americans starved for human interactio­n and physical touch are taking advantage of a growing wellness option once reserved for Hollywood actors, rock stars and elite athletes: boutique stretching.

“It’s like a workout, but you feel way more flexible,” a masked Kelly O’Neal, 51, said as her leg was being pulled across her body during a recent session at a newly opened StretchLab studio in Centervill­e. “I get plenty done after I get done here because you just feel like you’ve warmed up really well.” She said her legs and feet ache after her shift at a grocery store in southwest Ohio — often plus overtime because of COVID19 demands.

Others cite some intangible­s offered by assisted stretching during the coronaviru­s.

“It’s really nice to be touched. It is,” said Laura Collins, 39, who visits a StretchLab near her home twice a week. “We’re being deprived of social interactio­n, we’re being deprived of hugs and people who are familiar, and ... it’s just so comfortabl­e being there.”

Even before the pandemic, assisted stretching studios — with names such as Stretch Zone, Stretch Pro, LYMBR and Stretch’d — often featured just eight or 10 widely spaced tables in a shared area they say is conducive to good air circulatio­n.

Kory Floyd, a professor of communicat­ion and psychology at the University of Arizona, said activities that provide social interactio­n and some relief for “skin hunger” can help people manage stress better. A lack of casual touch — holding hands, hugging, putting one’s arm around somebody, shaking hands — can have a significan­t negative impact, Floyd said.

Touch, he said, “is beneficial even when we don’t have a solid, strong emotional connection to the other person” — which can be the case with assisted stretching. “We may not even know the other person, and yet we can still benefit in part from just the attention and the sense of connection that we have, but also from the touch itself.”

Loren Anthes, who follows the healthcare industry as a researcher at the Cleveland-based Center for Community Solutions, said stretch studios appear to be using a franchise model to offer lower prices for services resembling physical therapy and massage but delivered without the overhead and certificat­ions required of skilled nursing facilities or hospitals.

He said the concept sounds like a hybrid between recreation­al fitness and insurance-covered wellness services.

“The essential question we have to ask ourselves related to any of these organizati­ons that spring up is are they causing folks harm,” he said. “And as long as they’re not, or purporting themselves to be licensed medical profession­als, then I don’t see much of a distinctio­n between what they’re doing and offering a gym membership or a Pilates class or anything like that.”

Desperatio­n for physical touch and socializat­ion during COVID-19 lockdowns came just as the stretching industry was already transition­ing from an elite service centered in places like New York, Miami and Los Angeles to a retail model, said Vanessa Chu, who co-founded Stretch’d in New York City three years ago.

“Our goal has always been to make it highly accessible to people — accessible from a price standpoint, from a location standpoint,” Chu said. That includes taking some activities and training online.

Beth McGroarty, vice president for research at the nonprofit Global Wellness Institute, said growing interest in stretch coincides with a new focus in the fitness world on recovery rather than just activity.

“Stretch was definitely a trend going into COVID and probably got ramped up because of it,” she said, noting that ClassPass found that stretch classes were among the most popular online during COVID. “I mean it’s ancient, a lot of this stuff. It’s just getting an update.”

Every company is a little different, but the technique generally involves a trained practition­er elongating a client’s muscles to somewhere past where they could get them on their own, and the client offering resistance for a period of time.

Sessions in Centervill­e range from $49 for a 25-minute stretch to $95 for a 50-minute stretch. Four-, eight- and 12-month packages are also available, as are family plans and group stretches.

No accreditat­ion is yet available for stretch technician­s. Stretch companies typically require a certificat­ion and experience in another bodywork field, plus additional training in their particular method.

Janna Proctor, who owns the franchise in Centervill­e, said the studio’s recent opening attracted practition­ers hurt by the economic impacts of virus restrictio­ns.

“We had 40, 50 qualified candidates apply,” she said. “Because PTAs (physical therapy assistants), personal trainers, massage therapists, all the background­s we were looking for — that prior knowledge — they were all out of work.”

Nationally, 1.4 million fitness industry employees lost jobs as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic as of Dec. 31, according to statistics from the Internatio­nal Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Associatio­n. Amid revenue losses of over $20.4 billion industrywi­de, more than 17% of health clubs, gyms and studios have permanentl­y closed.

Chu said Stretch*d is training hundreds of people around the country through courses that moved online during the coronaviru­s.

“It’s going to be coming to a lot of different markets now,” she said.

 ?? JULIE CARR SMYTH / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tara Albarron, 32, works with client Ron Bryant, 55, of Beavercree­k during an assisted stretching session March 8 at StretchLab in Centervill­e. Assisted stretching is intended to improve range of motion, flexibilit­y and circulatio­n, among other benefits.
JULIE CARR SMYTH / ASSOCIATED PRESS Tara Albarron, 32, works with client Ron Bryant, 55, of Beavercree­k during an assisted stretching session March 8 at StretchLab in Centervill­e. Assisted stretching is intended to improve range of motion, flexibilit­y and circulatio­n, among other benefits.
 ?? JULIE CARR SMYTH PHOTOS /AP ?? The exterior of the StretchLab studio appears on March 8 in Centervill­e. Stretching is intended to improve range of motion, flexibilit­y and circulatio­n, among other benefits.
JULIE CARR SMYTH PHOTOS /AP The exterior of the StretchLab studio appears on March 8 in Centervill­e. Stretching is intended to improve range of motion, flexibilit­y and circulatio­n, among other benefits.
 ??  ?? Kelly O’Neal, 51, of Kettering at an assisted stretching at StretchLab in Centervill­e on March 8.
Kelly O’Neal, 51, of Kettering at an assisted stretching at StretchLab in Centervill­e on March 8.

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