Ugh. I just hate that this has happened to you, especially if you have relied on this kind of advertising to give you good results in the past. Coupla ideas though, since the situation is what it is.When asked about 'relaxation massage', you could say that you would be happy to change or lighten the pressure of your massage somewhat, but your area of expertise is truly "corrective therapy", customized to the idividual's circumstances, be it accident/injury recovery or pain relief from various causitive (sp?) situations. If you don't get the right vibe, you could say that you don't think that you are the right massage therapist for them... that they might try another company.If you don't know what they're after, you could say that you like to break the ice by telling new clients that call a bit about your educational background in corrective, therapeutic massage, and the type of therapeutic bodywork your clients rely on you to provide. That way you don't have to "fish" for who's legit, who's playing a game.I had a fella call a couple of months ago, insisting that he preferred a feather touch, a truly luxurious massage experience. My skin started crawling a bit & I said, "You know, I thank you for calling, but I don't think I'm the right massage therapist for what you describe. I have a pretty heavy hand & my business is built on the type of therapeutic massage I excel in: deep tissue sculpting & myotherapy." He just hung up on me. I was glad!Take care & best, best wishes for this to be turned into a situation of learning how to be comfortable with giving your words a power to 'mold' the business you envision. (Why couldn't they have just gotten it right?!)Jill/SagetherapistDang. I hope you are busy & the wonderful momentum you have set doesn't get shaken by this.