Jordan Sun
Co-Founder of Glimmer
1:1 Thai Massage
Group Belly Dance + Yoga Classes
Jordan Sun is a dancer and multi-passionate healing artist with a deep devotion to helping others feel better, move better, and live with greater joy. Her journey into holistic wellness began at age 14, when she first discovered the transformative power of meditation and yoga. In 2010, she became a Licensed Massage Therapist, and her path soon expanded to include Fusion Bellydance, movement medicine and somatic healing.
Certified as a 200 hr Yoga Teacher in 2014 and as a Traditional Thai Medicine Specialist with the Naga Center in 2020, Jordan combines bodywork, intuitive movement, and ancient healing practices to support clients through all stages of life. She is the founder of Infinitely Love Healing Arts (est. 2022), dedicated to integrated care and embodied healing. In 2025, she is proud to partner with Firebird Healing Arts Alliance as the co-founder of Glimmer Wellness Center.
Jordan currently offers holistic Thai Massage & Traditional Thai Medicine, postpartum care as a Doula, private and group instruction in Fusion Bellydance, Yoga, Functional Fitness and Meditation. Jordan is a student of Expressive Arts Therapy at Lesley University. A self-taught watercolor artist and performance artist, she brings creative energy, grounded presence, and deep compassion to every session.
What is Thai Massage?
Thai Massage is a holistic modality of traditional medicine and consists of many techniques including the use of herbal balms, liniments and hot compresses, cupping, and scraping (gua-sha). It also includes a wide range of bodywork techniques such as myofascial release, pressure ranging from light to deep tissue, passive stretching, and work that focuses on freeing pathways of movement in the body such as tendons, muscles, ligaments and nerves. Many people know Thai massage as “assisted yoga” (although yoga originates from India, not Thailand; Thai massage has been fused with yoga in some bodywork styles), but big passive stretches are just one slice of the pie of what is possible in a session depending on what a client’s individual needs are. Thai massage can also include the use of oils and long strokes like those applied in Swedish massage. It is a very personalized healing modality, “based on Buddhism as medicine, and the idea that the mental, energetic, emotional and physical bodies are not separate.” (I give thanks to my teacher, Naj Jacobsen, from whom this description is adapted.)