You are working in a chiropractor's office and I doubt you are getting paid well there.
Not exactly sure what my compensation has to do with anything, relative to what your "natural therapeutic body worker" is theoretically making. For that matter, I happen to feel that I'm very luck as a therapist because I do seem to have a strong intuition that some classmates and colleagues seem to lack. I agree, and already agreed that education is no substitute for a natural ability and drive. However, I also do not believe one's ego in believing in one's own natural ability is a substitute for solid knowledge and experience.
What I believe my 975 hours got me:
1.) A full year working with and around a large variety of talented and knowledgeable professionals, ready and willing to answer questions, share techniques, tell stories about their own experiences, and give advice.
2.) A full year dedicated to understanding the human body better, on a physical, emotional, and energetic level.
3.) A full year to work with other students, to experiment and learn with one another, to make mistakes in a safe and nurturing environment.
4.) A full year being exposed to different modalities and philosophies, without having to pay a $200+ fee for a continuing eduction credit.
5.) A full year of being introduced to and networking with other alternative health care practitioners, such as acupuncturists, chiropractors, and naturopaths.
6.) A full year developing intake questioning skills, SOAP charting, and post-massage interviews, so that I've yet to have a SOAP rejected for any reason, and should my SOAPS be required in a court of law, I have 100% confidence in my documenting ability.
Yes, there are naturals out there, prodigies even, who don't need a single day inside a classroom to know what to do. I don't think this is the majority, or even the norm. I guess it depends on what kind of modalities you intend to do. I would not feel comfortable doing pin & stretch, origin/insertion work, or even deep tissue without the understanding I have of muscular systems and physiological processes.
At the chiropractors, I work on people with whiplash, herniated discs, strains, sprains, scar tissue, and all kinds of other issues. If I work improperly, I can hurt them, I can set their healing process back. Are there gifted, competent, and successful therapists out there with the equivalent of 2.5 weeks under their belt? I'm sure. Would they have learned more about their craft in a longer program? Seems likely. Would it have made them better therapists? Hard to believe it would have hurt.
Especially given the push to have massage covered in more insurance policies, to convince doctor's it's a legitimate health care addition, and to prevent cities from requiring offensive processes like STD testing, MORE educational requirements seem like the direction to go, not less. I can't help but see a correlation between cities/states that have low hourly requirements for licensure, and high number of other seemingly more superfluous requirements, including difficult or embarrassing processes meant to weed out or regulate prostitutes using it as a front for their business. (And to sort of bring it all back to the original poster's issue, it was actually these processes and not the hourly requirement that he found difficult.) My State has one of the higher educational requirements in the country, and once I'd completed the educational program, it was a breeze to get my license, and a business license.
Just my two and a half cents. I've always placed a high value on (quality) education. Maybe that's a hazard of growing up as the daughter of an educator.
Natasha