Greetings!
I've been reading along in this excellent forum for months now. I'm very appreciative that many friendly massage therapist's post here to aide those of us whom are new and eager. I was hoping perhaps somebody here may be able to quell my future fears.
My time in school is nearing it's peak and soon I will be cast out into the world of searching for work. However as that grows closer, my concerns become larger and more solemn. Currently I work at a rehab as a Restoration Aide who's job is to make sure the patients that have been rehabilitated retain what they learn. The pay is rather poor ($10.00 an hour), but it's a 9:00 - 5:30 job Monday to Friday, so I have weekends to myself and a steady paycheck. My close friend whom is a physical therapist enjoys showing me his paycheck on payday for the jollies, and the amount of money he makes is borderline two and a half times what I make. A little jealous, I signed up for massage therapy because it's somewhat similar to what I already do and I assumed I'd make quite a bit more money then what I currently get. I'm starting to think that is very much false.
Despite the constant ads and commericals I see everywhere claiming massage brings in a lot of money, I'm getting very skeptical. The teachers in my school have been doing massage for about fifteen years each and both have told me that massage rarely brings in enough money on it's own to live on. You almost always have to supplement in another job to earn a decent pay or risk serious health issues or burnout, or both. t011
Nosing about the internet for MT salaries, I came across this. I'm unable to post the website due to this forum's spam protection, but it's from thebodyworker. This woman claims that an ideal job would be the following:
1. $25.00 per hour as a full employee.
2. $25-$45 per hour if you are a sub-contractor as you have to pay your own taxes.
3. 25 hours maximum of actual hands on massage or less.
4. 15 minute increments between appointments
5. Consistent hours.
6. Consistent days off.
7. light phone duty, filing duty or other minor cleaning duties if no clients.
8. Health insurance completely paid for and option to add family members for a fee.
9. Incentives for booking repeat customers
10. Vacation pay no less than 2 weeks a year preferably 4 weeks per year (1 per quarter) to help avoid burnout and injuries.
11. Retirement funding of some sort.
Anything less then that is being taken cruel advaneforum.xxxe of according to her and you should not agree to it no matter how desperate for work you are. Now that doesn't sound bad at all, in fact it sounds quite good. My question is, do any of you actually have a job that sounds like that? I ask this because I hear and read a lot, and I mean a lot of people say they get pay from spa's that go down as far as $9.00 an hour, plus they get working area's that are similar to a hole in the wall. My teacher took us on a field trip to her med-spa and I couldn't believe how tiny her working room was, it was barely as wide as the table! :x
As you can see, I'm extremely nervous and very disheartened that I just might have wasted my money on this. I love helping people and seeing a happy face when their illness is uplifted, but I also don't want to end up a pauper. I'm twenty-four so if things don't work out, I'm not totally screwed, but it's still an unsettling thought. Thanks very much in advance for your time and concern.
Brandon
I've been reading along in this excellent forum for months now. I'm very appreciative that many friendly massage therapist's post here to aide those of us whom are new and eager. I was hoping perhaps somebody here may be able to quell my future fears.
My time in school is nearing it's peak and soon I will be cast out into the world of searching for work. However as that grows closer, my concerns become larger and more solemn. Currently I work at a rehab as a Restoration Aide who's job is to make sure the patients that have been rehabilitated retain what they learn. The pay is rather poor ($10.00 an hour), but it's a 9:00 - 5:30 job Monday to Friday, so I have weekends to myself and a steady paycheck. My close friend whom is a physical therapist enjoys showing me his paycheck on payday for the jollies, and the amount of money he makes is borderline two and a half times what I make. A little jealous, I signed up for massage therapy because it's somewhat similar to what I already do and I assumed I'd make quite a bit more money then what I currently get. I'm starting to think that is very much false.
Despite the constant ads and commericals I see everywhere claiming massage brings in a lot of money, I'm getting very skeptical. The teachers in my school have been doing massage for about fifteen years each and both have told me that massage rarely brings in enough money on it's own to live on. You almost always have to supplement in another job to earn a decent pay or risk serious health issues or burnout, or both. t011
Nosing about the internet for MT salaries, I came across this. I'm unable to post the website due to this forum's spam protection, but it's from thebodyworker. This woman claims that an ideal job would be the following:
1. $25.00 per hour as a full employee.
2. $25-$45 per hour if you are a sub-contractor as you have to pay your own taxes.
3. 25 hours maximum of actual hands on massage or less.
4. 15 minute increments between appointments
5. Consistent hours.
6. Consistent days off.
7. light phone duty, filing duty or other minor cleaning duties if no clients.
8. Health insurance completely paid for and option to add family members for a fee.
9. Incentives for booking repeat customers
10. Vacation pay no less than 2 weeks a year preferably 4 weeks per year (1 per quarter) to help avoid burnout and injuries.
11. Retirement funding of some sort.
Anything less then that is being taken cruel advaneforum.xxxe of according to her and you should not agree to it no matter how desperate for work you are. Now that doesn't sound bad at all, in fact it sounds quite good. My question is, do any of you actually have a job that sounds like that? I ask this because I hear and read a lot, and I mean a lot of people say they get pay from spa's that go down as far as $9.00 an hour, plus they get working area's that are similar to a hole in the wall. My teacher took us on a field trip to her med-spa and I couldn't believe how tiny her working room was, it was barely as wide as the table! :x
As you can see, I'm extremely nervous and very disheartened that I just might have wasted my money on this. I love helping people and seeing a happy face when their illness is uplifted, but I also don't want to end up a pauper. I'm twenty-four so if things don't work out, I'm not totally screwed, but it's still an unsettling thought. Thanks very much in advance for your time and concern.
Brandon