Escape_Reality
Member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2009
- Messages
- 48
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I am a massage therapist and have been working for a year now doing about 15 massages a week. I am enjoying it and am very grateful for the opportunity to do something I am passionate about and enjoy, as well as make enough money (for being single and 23) without long hours. I work at a Massage Envy and am treated well and enjoy my job. I would say I make 30-40 dollars per massage (hr).
As much as a enjoy it, there are a few considerations that have arisen:
1. I make enough for my minimalist lifestyle...but not nearly as much as I would want to make when I am ready to move forward with travel, a family...who knows what else.
2. I can see the potential for eventual burnout...moreso physically.
3. Unexpectedly, I developed a strong passion for "clinical" work and love the problem-solving. With massage at this point I feel somewhat limited in my methods - and perhaps moreso in the functional influence in my client's lives outside of the hour.
I know that a possiblity is to simply gain more CEU's in different modalities, and also to branch out from ME's "adequate" pay and work somewhere else. The problem is that I do not feel a strong confidence in being an IC and really am not driven to do so. I like the idea of being an employee, or at least part of a team. Seeking gigher pay as an employee MT is a possiblity...I used to have fantasies of working at some sort of a "holistic clinic"...and they certainly exist in Baltimore. The problem is that I don't feel I can comptete in the "CEU heirarchy". I'm sorry, but in some ways I feel CEUs and Certs are a racket. It is so astronimically expensive to obtain a "Certification" in something. Even though I may do just as great Trigger Point work (as rudimentary to massage as that is) I cannot compete with someone who is "[Insert some Mt celebrity] method certified". You could say the same of the traditional college system...but that's a hard battle to win.
The idea of physical therapy appeals to me, but I also don't know much about it. I can read information on the Internet...but I am lacking a feel for what it is like to be a real PTA. HOw much "artistic freedom" are you allowed? More often than not my client's don't have anything good to say about their PT treatments...I gather that they did not feel that they were effective, and oftentimes that the PT or PTA didnt seem to engage them in tehiro own issues or educate them, or come off as cold and clinical. I have a fantasy of being the "warm PTA" who brings new ideas to the table and engages and encourages clients to be active and interested in their conditions, and BLENDS the best of the techology and structure of PT with the intuition and holistics of massage (and I am not assuming that I can do massage with PT clients). How possible is this? I am a big skeptic of the medical system and do not want to be in a cookie cutter, solidified and stubborn system that treats patients like they are passing through a system.
Anyway, does any of this jive with being a PTA? Any suggestions for other routes to take? ANY info or advice would be SO APPRECIATED!!!!
As much as a enjoy it, there are a few considerations that have arisen:
1. I make enough for my minimalist lifestyle...but not nearly as much as I would want to make when I am ready to move forward with travel, a family...who knows what else.
2. I can see the potential for eventual burnout...moreso physically.
3. Unexpectedly, I developed a strong passion for "clinical" work and love the problem-solving. With massage at this point I feel somewhat limited in my methods - and perhaps moreso in the functional influence in my client's lives outside of the hour.
I know that a possiblity is to simply gain more CEU's in different modalities, and also to branch out from ME's "adequate" pay and work somewhere else. The problem is that I do not feel a strong confidence in being an IC and really am not driven to do so. I like the idea of being an employee, or at least part of a team. Seeking gigher pay as an employee MT is a possiblity...I used to have fantasies of working at some sort of a "holistic clinic"...and they certainly exist in Baltimore. The problem is that I don't feel I can comptete in the "CEU heirarchy". I'm sorry, but in some ways I feel CEUs and Certs are a racket. It is so astronimically expensive to obtain a "Certification" in something. Even though I may do just as great Trigger Point work (as rudimentary to massage as that is) I cannot compete with someone who is "[Insert some Mt celebrity] method certified". You could say the same of the traditional college system...but that's a hard battle to win.
The idea of physical therapy appeals to me, but I also don't know much about it. I can read information on the Internet...but I am lacking a feel for what it is like to be a real PTA. HOw much "artistic freedom" are you allowed? More often than not my client's don't have anything good to say about their PT treatments...I gather that they did not feel that they were effective, and oftentimes that the PT or PTA didnt seem to engage them in tehiro own issues or educate them, or come off as cold and clinical. I have a fantasy of being the "warm PTA" who brings new ideas to the table and engages and encourages clients to be active and interested in their conditions, and BLENDS the best of the techology and structure of PT with the intuition and holistics of massage (and I am not assuming that I can do massage with PT clients). How possible is this? I am a big skeptic of the medical system and do not want to be in a cookie cutter, solidified and stubborn system that treats patients like they are passing through a system.
Anyway, does any of this jive with being a PTA? Any suggestions for other routes to take? ANY info or advice would be SO APPRECIATED!!!!