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Jaw tightness is common—especially if you clench, grind, or sit forward at a screen. This short routine relaxes the main jaw muscles (masseter and temporalis) and can ease everyday tension.

Before you start

Step-by-step jaw massage (4–8 minutes total)

1) Masseter (cheek area)

  1. Gently clench to feel the bulge between cheekbone and jaw—then relax.
  2. With 2–3 fingertips, make slow circles over that muscle for 30–60 seconds per side.
  3. Glide your fingers from the corner of your mouth toward your ear 3–4 times.
  4. If you find a tender spot, hold gentle pressure for 10–20 seconds while breathing slowly.

2) TMJ hinge (in front of the ear)

3) Temporalis (side of head)

4) Jawline sweep (for comfort & drainage)

5) Gentle mobility

How often?

What it should feel like

Extra help (if tension runs into neck & shoulders)

If your jaw tightness comes with stubborn neck/shoulder knots, a focused Deep Tissue Massage in Tysons Corner can release trigger points that keep pulling on the jaw. For flexibility and stretch-based relief, many guests prefer Thai Massage to open up the chest, neck, and hips—often easing clenching habits indirectly. You can also compare options on our Services page.

Quick do’s & don’ts

Do: breathe slowly, sit tall, go slowly, treat both sides.
Don’t: press so hard you bruise, rush through tender spots, or work directly into painful joint clicks.

When to get help

See a dentist, physical therapist, or TMJ-trained massage therapist if you have jaw locking/catching, severe or persistent pain, very limited opening, or symptoms that don’t improve after a couple of weeks.

General self-care guidance only; not a medical diagnosis. If you’re unsure, consult a professional.

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