Corrections or additions?
This article by Jamie Saxon was prepared for the June 29,
2005 issue of U.S. 1 Newspaper. All rights reserved.
No Longer Gym Rats, Real Men Now Exfoliate
I think my nine-year-old son might be metrosexual. And that’s not
necessarily a bad thing. Men who are well-groomed, fit, and healthy
and know that seaweed takes the toxins out of your skin definitely
have a leg up on those poor, misinformed boy-men who think groomed
means wearing a button-down shirt only they forget it’s also supposed
to be clean, pressed — and buttoned. My Little Leaguer can catch a pop
fly and scoop newts and crawfish out of our stream with his bare hands
but he also uses mango body wash and knows that Capris are his mom’s
pant of choice after Memorial Day. I know his future wife will
appreciate these nuances in his personality.
At breakfast the other day he said apropos of nothing at all, “Mom did
you know there’s a new spa called the Male Room?” Really, honey,
what’s that? “It’s a spa just for men. It’s in Flemington.” And how do
you know this, sweetie? “I heard a commercial on WPST.” I then
informed him, remarkable coincidence that it was, that I was writing
an article on men who go to spas. With his usual aplomb, he said,
“Well, there you go.”
Thanks to Mini Me Metrosexual, I later phoned the new spa owner to get
the skinny on what’s up with men and exfoliation. After all, the New
York Times ran a story just last month on men who go to destination
spas for a healthy dose of organic vegetables, Feldenkrais, and loofah
salt scrubs and another on men who are incorporating spa treatments
into business trips. I had to know, could any such men actually live
around here? And if so, what did they do for a living and more
importantly, did they ever have a manicure and could they do the
triangle pose?
We found 11 such men, all over the age of 40, and some well over the
age of 40, who bared all (figuratively), and the findings are
surprising and impressive. There really are still men out there who
care about staying healthy and looking good, at 40, 50, 60, and 70.
Here’s how — and why — they do it.
“It’s all about men,” says Donna Booth, owner of the Male Room, which
opened last month in Flemington. After a 16-year hiatus from
hairdressing to raise four kids, Booth yearned to return to work but
she had no interest in the whims of female clients. “I enjoyed the
guys, talking to them. When I decided to get going again, I saw that
unisex shops were a dime a dozen. I wanted a place that would cater to
guys.”
She used her own money to transform a building at 35 Stangl Road, with
a 35-foot ceiling, into a space that reeks of masculinity. There’s a
custom-built bar with leather and cherry bar stools, where guys can
have peanuts and iced tea and watch ESPN on a 100-inch projection TV
while they wait to get a haircut — or a massage, a back wax (which
lasts about a month and a half), or facials with names like Straight,
the Energy Boost, the Revitalizer Touch of Youth, and Face Rescue
Express. Booth even does a back facial. “I do a hot stone pedicure
that guys love. We call it foot and hand detailing instead of
manicures and pedicures. We have a pedicure chair that’s heated,
reclines, and vibrates. When my husband sits in it, you’d think he was
a woman.”
Booth is smart and knows what men want. “Guys don’t like to be fussed
over too much.” Her clientele cross all professional borders, from
lawyers to construction workers and car salesmen. She plans to install
a pool table and arcade games in the loft. As for the 100-inch
projection TV, it’s normally tuned to ESPN, but, says Booth, “The guys
tease me; if things are slow, Lifetime is on.”
At Gentle Healing Wellness Spa on Cranbury’s South River Road,
therapist Shea (“We don’t use last names, for privacy reasons”) says
that 40 percent of their clientele are men. And privacy is so
important that she wouldn’t approach any of her clients — many of whom
are out in the public eye as professional and collegiate athletes,
Broadway dancers, and high-profile executives in advertising and
pharmaceuticals — to be interviewed for this article.
But she had plenty to say about what draws men to a spa experience.
“Younger men are supporting the trend to create a handsome package,
more of a fashion sense, the MTV thing. More mature men go to a spa to
maintain health and hygiene; they’re really leaning toward old school,
the barber shop, the professional lodge.”
Gentle Healing has recreated that atmosphere thanks to a unique
building in a unique location — a 150-year-old house full of nooks and
crannies, accessed by no fewer than seven major thoroughfares,
including the New Jersey Turnpike, Route 18, and Route 130. “It’s not
in a strip mall; you don’t have to walk through a hair salon to get
here. We’ve created an atmosphere with an old world, comfortable
approach,” says Shea. Owner Donda Sternberg, who herself has a strong
massage background, has established a massage school on the premises,
but plans to break ground on the property soon to build a new massage
school and will transform the school’s present building into a
separate men’s lounge with a hunt club atmosphere.
Shea says Gentle Healing’s old school approach is key. “Everything’s
customized. We focus strongly on massage and body care with classic
products like Caswell-Massey. A client will come in and consult with a
therapist. Then we might make him an aromatherapy steam, a gentleman’s
soak, like the old Jewish bath house, with pine and sage herbs that we
grow in our own garden. This is an old home, so we use the claw foot
tub, and we offer lager and peanuts instead of the traditional
Champagne, chocolate, and strawberries. We energize the water; it’s a
‘presented’ bath, it’s not fluffy.” For the men’s sports manicure and
pedicure, they use antibacterial and antifungal products, nothing
floral or fluffy. The slippers are basic brown.
Male clients can easily feel that they are the only one there. “We
have so many nooks and crannies and old parlors, we jokingly do that
Scooby Doo switch,” Shea says. “We have a dining room with a
fireplace, where we do private parties, a creaky staircase, and steam
‘cubbies.’” Some men get hooked after their wife or girlfriend lure
them in for Gentle Healing’s evening of romance, which features a
steam bath, massage for two, and wine and dinner.
Shea says there is a marked difference between male and female
clients. “Men, once they find a place they’re comfortable in, are much
more committed to get back to that place, where women will try
everywhere. Men are loyal, usually much more grateful, and financially
rewarding. Men like consistency, conversation, and education. You need
to make a man feel comfortable, talk to him about his health, not how
his kids are doing. If I’m doing a massage, I ask the man, are you
comfortable with the way your skin is? Do you swim? Do you work out?
If you work out on benches, there are simple things you can do to keep
your skin healthy, like a salt and mud treatment. Often a simple
massage leads to more treatments, like a scalp massage, dry brushing
the skin, warm oil. Once they get a salt exfoliation, they might try a
customized mud wrap.”
Shea also says attention to little details matters. For example, a man
sitting in a robe getting a pedicure “is in a vulnerable position. We
are conscious of how his robe is draped.”
Surrounded by the warehouses and extended-stay hotels of Exit 8A,
Gentle Healing draws transient truckers, CEOs making day trips from
New York or Philadelphia to visit their warehouses, and executives
from Merck, Shiseido, and Johnson & Johnson, many of whom take
advantage of spa membership, which gives them 10 percent off services
and retail products.
Sternberg is an aggressive marketer, giving presentations on
everything from feng shui to homeopathic care to companies and sports
teams. “We do business meetings with a 30-minute massage,” says Shea.
“Men may not have as many different services as women but they have
more services within a shorter period of time. They tell their
friends, and women don’t. It isn’t about sexuality. It’s about health
and maintenance. The younger generation is about that visual thing, a
look they have to compete with, they’re on the beach trying to portray
an image. But with older men, businessmen, let’s face it, you’re not
going to have someone sign a million-dollar contract with yucky hands.
You’d shine your shoes. Why not take care of your hands?”
Says Shea: “We love men. They can generate a whole family to come,
where a woman usually just takes care of herself. Men will reciprocate
and give gift certificates to friends and family. It’s a stronger
base. In most houses, the man’s income is usually the highest. If you
can get him to understand the benefits of the spa, you’re in.”
A business analyst in the IT division of American Re Corporation on
College Road, Straughn has worked out regularly for the last 10 years,
and belongs to Momentum Fitness and New York Sports Club, where he
concentrates on weights and cardio work such as the bike. A native of
Barbados, where his parents and identical twin still live, Straughn
played soccer and basketball as a child and thanks his parents for
instilling in him the tenets of a healthy lifestyle, including a diet
high in rice, fish, chicken, vegetables, and fruit. “My father is 78
and goes to the beach to swim every day and is very fit. So is my mom
and she’s 79. My grandmother died in her 90s.” He takes a multivitamin
daily, drinks green tea instead of coffee, and eats a low-cholesterol,
high-protein diet that includes brown rice and coldwater fish like
salmon.
But what really drives Straughn’s youthful streak is yoga. He says he
always knew yoga was “a good thing,” but it wasn’t until he struck up
a conversation with a colleague, Julie Parrella, an underwriting
analyst and a yoga instructor at Princeton Center for Yoga and Health
in Skillman, that he felt the urge to try it himself. His first class
was power yoga, a challenging workout that’s often done in a heated
studio. “It made me realize I wasn’t as strong as I thought I was,
that even though I may lift and do other power exercises, there were
muscle groups and areas of my body that were not being touched and
were weak. There was something missing in my overall fitness regimen.”
He now goes to power yoga once a week and is aiming to fit two classes
a week into an already busy schedule that includes coaching kids
basketball, working with the youth group and singing in the choir at
Barnabas Episcopal Church in Monmouth Junction, and volunteering for
homeless shelters.
While yoga gives Straughn a great workout, he says it’s the breath
work that compels him most. “Yoga emphasizes the power and quality of
the breath. I realized it is the most important aspect of life.” He
says he has noticed improved sleep, flexibility, physical and mental
balance, and concentration at work. “Yoga is also a real boost to your
psyche. It also relieves the tightness that lifting does to your
muscles. Good stretching and good flexibility develops from a good
yoga practice.”
Straughn notes the men in his class range in age from 20s to 50s, all
of whom are strong and flexible. He says everyone in the class focuses
on their own individual goals. “And boy do you sweat.”
But yoga also has a mental aspect that is integral to the practice, a
less tangible but deeply rewarding element that every man I
interviewed who practices yoga commented on. “There’s a very high
spirituality; I’m still only a rookie,” says Straughn. “There’s a
purity about the practice that you must embrace. If you think it’s
hoky or kooky, you won’t get it. But yoga has been going on since long
before you were born. You can receive it.”
Miller is CEO of Hollyrock/Miller, the Forrestal Village-based
advertising and PR firm named, you guessed it, after the Flintstones,
who referred to Hollywood as Hollyrock. His 12-person company services
clients in New Jersey and New York, but also as far-flung as Florida,
California, and Italy. Spa Therapia on Route 206 South is a client,
but Miller says he had been going there for spa services long before
they became a client.
“I go there for three reasons. The first is stress management and
pampering, and I’m not embarrassed to say it. I go for massage three
to four times a month; I mix up a hot stone massage with a basic
massage. I play a lot of golf, and massage gives great pain relief for
your back.”
OK, and then there’s the ear thing. “Men in their 40s, well, they can
have hair growing out of their ears, so I get that waxed. My friends
refer to me as a metrosexual. But I just say to them, ‘I don’t cut my
own lawn, either, at home; I pay someone, they do a better job, and I
don’t waste my time.’” He gets a wax every two to three months.
The third reason? “I’ve always had some type of dermatitis on my face.
People just think I’ve been out in the sun.” A therapist at Spa
Therapia suggested a facial. “‘We can take care of that,’ she said. I
figured I’d give it a try. On the one hand it’s very relaxing but it’s
a little awkward with the green gook. But it works. I’ve done it
twice. I think I’m going to try a manicure or a pedicure next.” When
Miller worked for Grey Advertising in New York 10 years ago, he says
he had a manicure occasionally.
“Part of going to the spa is to turn the clock back,” says Miller, who
also plays golf, often with clients, twice a week at Cherry Valley
Country Club in Skillman. “It feels good when people tell you you look
younger.” He also works out three mornings a week at 6 a.m. at
Princeton Fitness and Wellness Center, including once a week with
personal trainer Wynn Headley. When he noticed, after his 40th
birthday, that he had put on a few extra pounds, he switched to eating
five small meals a day and now swears by it. He brings yogurt, fruit,
and carrots to work. “I get cranky if I miss a meal. At a business
lunch I’ll have a salad; for dinner, a small portion of fish.” Whereas
before he says he felt lethargic, “now I’m energized.”
He has no qualms about telling other men about his spa regime, either.
“I always talk up the spa on the golf course. I’m always talking to
men about this stuff.”
Santin, president and co-owner of Ricasoli & Santin Contracting in
Mercerville, has had nothing to drink but water for the last 15 years
and hasn’t had a drink-drink in 28. After developing gout at age 30,
Santin was put on a doctor’s diet. “You could die from this diet,” he
says. He stumbled through the next 20 years, suffering five to six
gout attacks a year, usually brought on by alcohol. When his wife, who
is allergic to preservatives, developed migraines 25 years ago, they
went totally organic and vegetarian.
Since then, says Santin, “She’s never had a migraine, and I’ve never
had a gout attack. I still look at a steak and it lasts a second and
then it goes away. Vegetarian doesn’t have to be tasteless.” They just
started eating fish and “clean meat,” which means organically-raised
chicken , and eggs from the Amish farm market in Flemington. “We’ve
already poisoned the earth; you can’t put poisons into your body.”
You’d never know Santin, the picture of health, was laid up for 13
weeks in his 30s with a virus that caused an enlarged heart or that he
had a cancerous tumor in his liver removed in 1995. Or that in 2000 he
had a brain tumor. “When the doc told me, I said, ‘Let’s get it out, I
don’t want no foreign thing in my body.’ He operated the next day.”
Santin moved to Ringoes 26 years ago where he built a house, with one
room designated as a home gym, right in the middle of 11 acres; two
years ago, he remodeled the whole house himself, putting in time after
work each day.
In addition to his diet, Santin gets a one-hour weekly massage at Full
Circle Family Massage and Healing Center on Princeton- Hightstown
Road. “It gets the lymphatic fluids moving, which is what removes the
toxins from your body, excretes the sweat.” Does anyone tease him
about going for massages? “I ain’t gonna take no crap from nobody,”
says Santin. “I don’t broadcast it to the world.” More importantly,
Santin says he has no stress.
Massage, diet, and exercise — as well as chiropractic — are part of a
whole package, says Santin, who has two grown children in their 40s
and four grandchildren. You can’t do one without the other. Faith is
another element. I asked him if he was mad at God for his tumors,
gout, and heart virus. “People get mad at God when bad things happen
but they don’t get glad with God when good things happen. And good
things happen every day. I do give praise to God. He designed the body
to heal itself. I read a lot of inspirational books. I read the Bible
every morning. I read Psalm 91, ‘What the Lord Promises You.’”
Santin’s also been happily married for 47 years. He looks forward to a
long life. His own father, who rode his bike every day and was a
moderate eater, died at 92. “I believe it gave him quality of life,”
says Santin. “My wife and I took him out to dinner every Friday. One
Friday, he had taken a bike ride that morning. When we went to pick
him up, he was sitting in his chair with his hat and coat on, ready to
go. He died just like that.”
Top Of PageBob Schnitzlein, 47
When I call Schnitzlein for a phone interview on Tuesday, June 21, at
8:30 p.m., he says, “Can you call me back in 10 minutes? The runaway
bride is gonna tell us why she ran away; she’s being interviewed by
Katie Couric!” I ask in as neutral a voice as possible, “Are you
kidding?” He says, “No, I’m not kidding.”
We reconnect at 9 p.m., and Schnitzlein says that everyone will be
talking about the runaway bride the next day so he wanted to know the
scoop. I already like this guy. He’s got his priorities straight.
I talked to plenty of men who have stress in their jobs for this
article, but Schnitzlein, a psychiatrist, has a professional plate
full of responsibilities guaranteed to grey your hair and raise your
blood pressure. In addition to logging in 20 to 35 clinical hours a
week in his solo private practice in Kendall Park, Schnitzlein
consults with approximately 50 to 60 patients at two developmental
disability residences for adults in South Plainfield and Somerville,
and he sees about 160 inmates — including sexual predators, fire
starters and firemen (“They sometimes go hand in hand,” says
Schnitzlein), murderers, and several chronic psychiatric patients who
are now in the state prison system.
What is his antidote for near-total immersion into the mental health
problems of a rather extraordinary cross-section of the population? “I
have to balance it with an active athletic lifestyle,” says
Schnitzlein. “That’s how I relieve my stress. I work hard and I play
hard. I just got back from playing three sets of tennis.” He plays at
least two round robins and participates in at least one team
tournament a week; swears by the 6 a.m. spinning classes at New York
Sports Club in Kendall Park, where he lives; rollerblades and bikes in
good weather; and snowboards in winter at high-end locales including
Innsbruck, Austria, Mount Tremblant in Canada; Heavenly in Nevada, and
Copper and Breckinridge in Colorado.
Schnitzlein says he feels like he is 18 years old. Part of that no
doubt comes from maintaining a healthy physique but he also has a
dirty little secret: he colors his hair. Well, to be accurate, he
blends. Four years ago, Schnitzlein met Tim Bricker, owner of b+b
Color Studio on State Road (Route 206), on the tennis courts at the
Doral Forrestal tennis club, Winning Touch Tennis. “I needed a
haircut,” says Schnitzlein, who has brown wavy hair that he wears a
little bit long. “It was graying at the temples. That’s a good thing,
in one respect, in my line of work; you look like you’re older and
have more wisdom. But when I went to Tim he asked, ‘Do you want to try
some blending?’ I said, ‘Is it gonna make me look good?’ He said,
‘Sure, it’ll make you look fabulous.’” Now Schnitzlein’s hooked,
popping in to b+b every five weeks for a cut and touch-up.
Coming off the heels of a difficult divorce, Schnitzlein says that now
he is “getting a do-over in life.” In addition to staying in good
shape, Schnitzlein is enjoying new adventures (he took a Caribbean
cruise last fall) and a new relationship, practices meditation, and
maintains a positive attitude. “I want to try to live the most I can
every day. I think positively. I believe everybody I meet has
something to teach me. So many things happen for a reason. You just
have to have faith that what’s happening is exactly where you should
be.”
Ganoe is definitely a man who knows the power of seaweed. After
working as a banker for many years in Philadelphia and then for a
large consulting firm outside of Philadelphia, he set up his own
company, Ganoe Associates, 10 years ago, in Research Park. He prepares
sales and information materials for medium and smaller-sized banks, as
well as newsletters for associations.
“Six or eight years ago, I found that in the winter I got itchy skin.
Somebody suggested Eastern European skin treatments.” At the time
Ganoe was doing work for a couple of banks and American Express in New
York, so he sought out spas in the city that specialized in skin care.
Now he goes once a month to Amber Spa in Pennington for a full body
seaweed wrap. “They put a seaweed paste on, then wrap you in a heated
blanket. It opens your pores, penetrates the skin, and removes some of
the toxins. It moisturizes your skin, and it’s long-lasting. Some
people go to spas for beauty treatments; I go for therapeutic
treatments.”
No ordinary septuagenarian, Ganoe, who is married with two grown
children and two grandchildren, has run the New York marathon nine
times and races regularly in Central Park. He has run 14 marathons
since 1990. Though he had to quit running marathons two and a half
years ago, due to the stress on his feet, he still runs 5Ks and runs
during the week at 6:30 a.m. He also takes spinning classes at
Momentum gym, where he gets an occasional massage if he strains a
muscle. “My cardiovascular system is in better shape than my feet,”
Ganoe says, adding that people often comment on how young he looks.
Emmi and his wife, Donna Marie, have their own law practice, Emmi and
Emmi, in Hillsborough, specializing in worker’s compensation defense
for insurance carriers. “There’s a reason why you don’t see movies
about worker’s compensation lawyers. But I used to be a fraud
investigator. That was a little more exciting.”
How do you get a guy who started weight training at age 13 and played
football in high school to take a yoga class? After complaining about
a herniated disc, which had been giving him problems since his
mid-30s, Emmi says his wife, who is also an instructor at Princeton
Center for Yoga and Health, convinced him to try yoga. “In January,
2004, I finally gave in because PCYH was giving a yoga class for
beginners. I thought it was gonna be a bunch of spacey people tying to
float around the room but it was really just stretching. My back felt
a bit better after the first class. Now almost two years later, I’ve
really not had any major problems with my back.”
Emmi works out at Maximum Fitness in Hillsborough two to three nights
a week, and he and his wife go mountain biking. But when it came to
curing the residual pain and discomfort left over from a dislocated
shoulder dating from his boxing days at the University of Delaware,
Emmi says again yoga did the trick. “I couldn’t lift a shovelful of
snow before, had problems with bursitis, and it hurt in cold weather.
Since I’ve done yoga, that shoulder doesn’t bother me.”
Emmi takes a vinyasa, or flow, class twice a week as well as hot yoga,
where they crank up the temperature over 100 degrees. “It really
loosens you up,” Emmi says. “I tend to be type A, sitting on the edge
of my seat, twitchy. The breathing techniques help calm you down. When
I’m in court doing a trial and I have to cross-examine someone, which
is stressful, I just breathe and it gets me back in my head. I find it
clears my thinking process so I can ask the questions I want to ask.”
Another health trick Emmi has discovered is eating a decent-sized
breakfast and lunch and a very small dinner, such as a shake made with
soy milk and a banana, or a small salad. “That’ll hold me until the
next day.” But he’s certainly not a fanatic. “I like wine, red meat,
and I have maybe a cigar a week.”
Top Of PageSunder Narayanan, 45
Narayanan commutes from his home in Lawrenceville as a professor of
marketing at New York University, where he teaches an average of six
to eight courses a year, including the summer. He says it’s a grueling
commute made less grueling by virtue of the fact that he has to go
into the city only on the days he teaches.
In his native India, running and working out with weights made up his
exercise regime until one day, when he was in his mid-20s, he says, “I
just wanted a change. I went to a bookstore and bought a book on yoga
and just taught myself.” When he came to the United States 19 years
ago to pursue studies at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, he began taking yoga classes. He later earned a
doctorate from Columbia.
Narayanan, who is single, now averages three classes a week. “It’s
like working out but mentally I feel great,” he says. “It calms your
mind down, the way I do it; I do a gentle kind of yoga.” He also tries
to walk about 15 miles a week, and has been a vegetarian his whole
life. “All of that makes a difference.”
If his mother is any indication, Narayanan has found the right
combination of diet and exercise to pursue a life filled with energy
and activity. His mother went out and earned a Ph.D. in education in
her 60s and now lives in Princeton and works at Accenture.
Macias rides a serious man-toy — a BMW R1150R motorcycle, a recent
upgrade from a BMW F650CS — to his job as a senior systems engineer
contractor at Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab at the Forrestal campus.
He can also do a headstand.
How does he reconcile the obvious dichotomy of motorcycles and yoga?
There’s no dichotomy, says Macias. “There’s a really strong connection
between the two. If you think about all the good things about yoga —
letting go, being very present — it’s just like being on the bike.
When you’re on the bike, you have to be very present, you can’t be
judgmental. If someone cuts you off you have to let them go. Yoga is
an analogy of life, and motorcycling is an analogy to yoga.” Macias
says he used to be strictly an off-road biker but once he started yoga
and meditation, “the fear started disappearing” and now he has no
qualms about roads like Route 1.
Macias, who is single and lives in Canal Pointe in West Windsor, had
been an avid gymgoer, doing step, spinning, and weights, but fell off
the wagon when he hit a real low three years ago, losing two jobs and
ending a long-term relationship all in the same time period. “I had
kind of lost my way,” he says. When Macias got his current job, which
he loves, things started to turn around but then he developed what is
called an essential tremor. “They don’t know what causes it, it’s mild
but it scared me. It felt like I was really jacked on caffeine.”
Macias takes medication but he says meditation and yoga are what
really kicked off his wellness regime.
He began taking classes at PCYH taught by his best friend, Julie
Parrella. “I wasn’t quite sure what I was looking for. But yoga is
about being present, not harming yourself, being nonjudgmental,
accepting who you are and what you are. That allowed me to accept this
tremor, and I came out of my emotional thing. My yoga became very
important to me not for the physical aspect; I do it for my soul.” He
also became hooked on Pilates and now teaches twice a week at New York
Sports Club Princeton North.
About nine months ago he started getting a one and a half hour massage
once a month with Gina McLaughlin at Kingston Wellness Associates,
when he feels something’s not quite right with his body. He admits a
couple of guys rib him at work about the massages but Macias comes
right back by asking them, “Doesn’t it feel good when someone gives
you a neck rub? It’s a chance to disconnect and relax and it feels
totally good. It’s an hour that you don’t have to do anything.” He
also does acupuncture and chiropractic. “People look at you funny but
you know that it’s actually a really good thing to get mobility to the
spine.”
The contents of Macias’ desk drawer reveals his take on healthy
eating. “I have a drawerful of Shredded Wheat, Kashi Go Lean Crunch,
almonds, an apple, and an assortment of herbal teas. I eat fruit salad
or Japanese from Teriyaki Boy for lunch. I don’t eat red meat.”
And women, listen up. This guy has no problem revealing his softer
side. “I take baths. I take a nice bath three times a week, do a salt
scrub, turn off the lights and have candles and incense.” He swears by
Origins products, including Ginger Body Smoother, Swept Clean smoother
with charcoal, Let’s Circulate Salt Rub Soap, Have a Nice Day
supercharged moisture lotion, and Soothing Bath Salts. Also in his
medicine cabinet are Neutrogena’s facial peel and Dr. Hauschka’s
cleansing cream and normalizing day oil. “I used to use products all
the time but fell out of it for a few years. I am so glad I
rediscovered using them.”
‘I’m 47 but I feel like I’m 27,” says Thomsen, president of 20/20
Multimedia, a video production company he formed 23 years ago, which
is based in Princeton Forrestal Village and specializes in commercial,
music videos, and corporate and industrial videos. He has played golf
since age 11, and now plays four times a week, sometimes taking in 36
holes a day. He also coaches his 13-year-old son’s travel basketball
team in Montgomery and takes several golf trips a year.
Thomsen says he has probably been to five or six different spas and
started getting massages 10 years ago. At one spa he used a gift
certificate someone had given him for a facial and a manicure. That
was two months ago. Was it his first? “No, I had a manicure when I got
married in 1988.”
Thomsen gets deep tissue massages regularly at Spa Therapia. “Besides
releasing muscle tension, the stress relief is just incredible. It’s
all about having the right massage atmosphere. It’s like walking out
of a tunnel into a very relaxing atmosphere. I lose some stress just
walking through the door in anticipation.”
Thomsen says massage is essential to getting through a stressful work
day. “Once I had a client come in for an editing session and things
weren’t running too smoothly. We had to book an extra editing day the
next day. I ended up booking a massage for that night after the extra
day.”
Thanks to playing a lot of golf, drinking more water, eating more
fruit and smaller portions of everything, and cutting back on his
beloved tiramisu, Thomsen has reached his goal of losing 15 pounds in
three months. Oh, yes, and there is one other little lifestyle element
that Thomsen says contributes to his stress management. “I go away
quite often. We have a house in St. Thomas.”
Fennelly, owner of NAI Fennelly, a major player in commercial real
estate, could easily be a poster child for the stressful workaholic.
Instead, he’s an exercise nut, grabbing at every golden ring on the
carousel of life. In a phone interview, he describes his agenda of the
previous day. “5:30 a.m., bike riding for 45 minutes, had a meeting
for a 5K race I’m organizing at 8 a.m. Then lots of meetings, showing
space, meeting with people though the day. Got a call at 4 p.m. to go
to a 20-year anniversary party at 5:30 in East Brunswick, then at 9
p.m. went to visit my mother in the hospital, then from 10:30 p.m. to
12:30 I drove through a tour of properties I was going to show the
next day. Got home about 1:30 a.m. and got up this morning at 6:30.”
Fennelly, who ran track and was on the fencing team at St. Peter’s,
now aims for five or six workouts a week. He bikes, runs, and hits the
pool at Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton Fitness Center and Princeton
Fitness and Wellness for 30 to 40 laps. “When you work out you have
more strength to go through the day. If you think about it, I
sometimes walk five miles a day, showing buildings, going up and down
stairs, in the hot or cold. I’m always on, just like a machine, then
it’s a problem to shut off. You’re always producing, you’re just a
constant movement of forward energy.”
About 20 years ago Fennelly discovered running, and competes in about
40 races a year, mostly 5 and 10Ks. “What happens is when you work a
lot, you’ve got this Eveready battery that keeps going. Racing
actually gets me tired, slows me down a little bit.”
Training constantly at a competitive level can be a strain on your
muscles and Fennelly says he lives in pain every day. For nine years
Darby Line, owner of Full Circle Family Massage and Healing Center,
has been coming to his home once a month to give him a massage. His
wife and two kids also get one. “We’ve been involved in massage
forever. If you’re training, your body needs to have the work done to
take the lactic acid out.”
Fennelly is also a spa fanatic, booking treatments into every
vacation, which he takes twice a year. Two years ago he took a client
and his wife to the ultra-chic Canyon Ranch Spa in Lenox,
Massachusetts. “First of all they don’t let you eat anything that’s
bad. I got a stress test, massage, facial, yoga. I got a pedicure. The
real pain came at the end: the bill was $4,000 for four days.”
But Fennelly is hooked. Two weeks ago, he and his wife were in Boulder
at the brand new St. Julien Hotel, which boasts a 10,000 square foot
spa. When he skis in Utah, he always books two to three massages.
“Sometimes I throw a facial in. You’re trying to rejuvenate.” He likes
the spa at the Hyatt in Beaver Creek, where he often indulges in a
double session with a personal trainer.
Any vices? “I eat too much,” Fennelly admits. “We’d have to live like
rabbits to be healthy. It’s hard to do. When you’re brought up on
pizza it’s hard to convert. Conversion comes with great pain. I had
salmon for lunch today, though.”
What happens when an overweight guy with a high-stress job and medical
issues, who hasn’t worked out in 20 years, takes a yoga class? An
independent computer systems consultant, Fradin services clients
around the country, like a Midwestern agricultural corporation that is
losing hundreds of thousands of dollars a month because its factory
computers aren’t working efficiently. His job has high stress and high
pressure stamped all over it. Traveling about 20 days a month only
adds to the stress.
“Several years ago I developed high blood pressure and arthritis,”
says Fradin, who lives in Plainfield and has two grown children in
their 20s. He went on medication for both and also started getting
debilitating sciatica attacks. “I felt I was on a downward spiral.” He
says a number of people suggested yoga, and he finally succumbed,
taking a hatha yoga class with Leslie Hadley at Princeton Center for
Yoga and Health. “It took me about a week to recover from that class,”
he says. “I had not worked out in more than 20 years.”
He gradually worked up to three classes a week, while cutting way back
on desserts and snacking, losing 15 pounds in the process. His blood
pressure returned to normal, his arthritis improved, he went off of
his medication for both, and the sciatica cleared up completely.
“I feel better than I have in 10 or 15 years,” he says, “so good that
I became certified to teach yoga in 2003.” He says he has attracted
more men into his classes. How? “It’s all about three things with men
— high blood pressure, stress management, and sexuality. It’s all
about blood flow. It’s all about relaxing — better blood flow and
being more relaxed. Think about it. Fifty percent of your sexual
problems will go away.
“Yoga is thousands of years old and yet it lends itself to adapting to
our time so well, it almost seems it was invented for the present.
Work and family stresses — yoga can be so helpful in managing that.
Yet men have traditionally stayed away. Like me they sort of stumble
into it, and if they stay with it, they start noticing real
substantial improvement in their health.”
Here’s the real kicker. “For guys yoga is one of the last great
frontiers for meeting women. Most classes have a 1 to 8 ratio of men
to women. You don’t have to go to a bar and you can get healthy.”
Corrections or additions?
This page is published by PrincetonInfo.com
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