Pompal 09.
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2011
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When I first started practicing professionally, I was often requested for my somewhat aggressive style of trigger point therapy. I tended to be very direct, and got a lot of requests from people who didn't mind painful work.
After a while, I became interested in finding a gentler approach, as I could tell my direct style wasn't as effective as I wanted to be. Since I was starting to see many people in need of anterior neck work, I switched to a very slow and gentle approach that some of my "direct approach" regulars didn't particularly care for. However, some of them made the transition and stuck with me, and I gained a new group of regulars.
Eventually I realized that the super-gentle method was too time-consuming and limiting, plus I was getting a lot of continuing ed and incorporating many new methods and concepts into my practice. For a while, every massage I did was an experiment as I learned to assess and reassess clients and utilize a broader range of skills to achieve desired results. My regulars largely stayed with me, but my clientele gradually shifted away from basic relaxation and much more towards therapeutic work, especially complex injury cases.
Last year I started learning positional release methods, and it revamped my style again. I also greatly improved my Active Isolated Stretching expertise, and I frequently use both. My old regulars have stayed with me, and my client base is growing more quickly than ever. And while my focus has remained primarily on complex therapeutic work, I have somehow rediscovered the joys of basic Swedish and simple foot Reflexology. The farther afield my studies take me, the more I rely on those old standbys to help me stay grounded and able to flow from one thing to another during a session.
I am excited to see how my practice evolves in the future, and to see the comments/stories shared by others.
After a while, I became interested in finding a gentler approach, as I could tell my direct style wasn't as effective as I wanted to be. Since I was starting to see many people in need of anterior neck work, I switched to a very slow and gentle approach that some of my "direct approach" regulars didn't particularly care for. However, some of them made the transition and stuck with me, and I gained a new group of regulars.
Eventually I realized that the super-gentle method was too time-consuming and limiting, plus I was getting a lot of continuing ed and incorporating many new methods and concepts into my practice. For a while, every massage I did was an experiment as I learned to assess and reassess clients and utilize a broader range of skills to achieve desired results. My regulars largely stayed with me, but my clientele gradually shifted away from basic relaxation and much more towards therapeutic work, especially complex injury cases.
Last year I started learning positional release methods, and it revamped my style again. I also greatly improved my Active Isolated Stretching expertise, and I frequently use both. My old regulars have stayed with me, and my client base is growing more quickly than ever. And while my focus has remained primarily on complex therapeutic work, I have somehow rediscovered the joys of basic Swedish and simple foot Reflexology. The farther afield my studies take me, the more I rely on those old standbys to help me stay grounded and able to flow from one thing to another during a session.
I am excited to see how my practice evolves in the future, and to see the comments/stories shared by others.