- Dec 27, 2009
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Hi... I have a question for the massage therapists...
I have had massage routinely for 15 years... Occasionally when there is a good relationship between myself and the therapist I will tend to have sessions twice a month. Given concerns about boundaries and appropriate/inappropriate behavior, I completely understand most massage therapists policy on always draping a client. It makes sense. For me, the massage is about trust. In those cases where I've had a regular massage therapist for a prolonged period of time (at least 1 year), the therapist and I have discussed my personal preference not to be draped. I sincerely feel if I can trust a therapist when I am not draped it reduces my anxiety. If and after we have established a trustful relationship and they have learned that I have no inappropriate intentions or actions, some therapists have been felt comfortable with a no-draping approach and some have not. I have continued with good massage therapists regardless of their comfort with my preference. It is simply a preference not a neccessity. Obviously I understand anyone's concerns. Massage therapy is an intimate important encounter in which both parties must trust each other and feel safe. My question is simply this... In looking for a new therapist, how should I approach them in a way that's honest and respectful, given my prefence?
thanks for your feedback and please take the question for what it is... A honest, thoughtful inquiry....
I have had massage routinely for 15 years... Occasionally when there is a good relationship between myself and the therapist I will tend to have sessions twice a month. Given concerns about boundaries and appropriate/inappropriate behavior, I completely understand most massage therapists policy on always draping a client. It makes sense. For me, the massage is about trust. In those cases where I've had a regular massage therapist for a prolonged period of time (at least 1 year), the therapist and I have discussed my personal preference not to be draped. I sincerely feel if I can trust a therapist when I am not draped it reduces my anxiety. If and after we have established a trustful relationship and they have learned that I have no inappropriate intentions or actions, some therapists have been felt comfortable with a no-draping approach and some have not. I have continued with good massage therapists regardless of their comfort with my preference. It is simply a preference not a neccessity. Obviously I understand anyone's concerns. Massage therapy is an intimate important encounter in which both parties must trust each other and feel safe. My question is simply this... In looking for a new therapist, how should I approach them in a way that's honest and respectful, given my prefence?
thanks for your feedback and please take the question for what it is... A honest, thoughtful inquiry....