I have something I've been wondering about, the more experience I get and as I graduate. I don't know really how to approach this question so bear with me!
I'm just wondering how others have felt about dealing with the aspects included in massage, beyond the mechanical, particularly how you felt your schooling prepared you for dealing with the mind/body/spirit aspect of our work. Many talk about massage being holistic and involving the mind/body/spirit. "Mind/Body/Spirit" phrase was even mentioned several times during school, but that was about the extent of addressing it. It seems inherent to me that whenever we touch someone there is a lot more there than muscles and bones (and the physical properties of our body.) I realize the more clinical approaches to massage are probably more focused on addressing just the body in the session, but even then there's not really a way to cut off the mind and spirit from the work being done. Is there?
I guess I'm writing the all because I am just learning how emotional issues can manifest in the body. (I always knew/believed but now it is the first times I'm experiencing this with a client-that makes it all different! ) It's real physical, palpable things going on causing the client a lot of pain. The client wants out of the pain and wants a MT (or PT or MD) to do the job and make it better...but "fixing" it is elusive because while it is physical it's also emotional on the clients part. If I didn't have the feedback of more experienced practitioners that I've found on my own, I would have no idea how possible it is for this to occur.
Did you just learn this kind of stuff after school on your own as you practiced? Also, did your school focus on therapists building a foundation of self-care skills...? I know we are responsible for self-care on our own and all of our ideas of self-care can be different, but the extent of it being covered in school was "You need to make sure to do self-care." and a couple wrist stretches.
Ughhhh....I'm graduating and feeling so overwhelmed with what I feel like I need to build to be up to speed. I guess I am now I am especially realizing the training that was lacking in my program and how simple it would be to make it better! (For starters, I'm chomping at the bit to teach at least a 12 or 16 hour self-care class--addressing all aspects Mind/Body/Spirit-covering the care and keeping of a therapist. How else can we stay open to what is oging on with our clients? And how else can we not fall apart or burn out or lose interest in 2 years (or less)?
Maybe I'm really just venting. But I'd really like feedback from others if you have it about how you dealt with some of this. How did you feel upon graduating? Did you feel prepared? What did you like about your school program, and what do you think could have been added that would have been helpful (now that you're working? What's the first thing you did out of school (work wise, self care, anything) and what was the most helpful to you?
Thanks for this space and for everyone here!!!
I'm just wondering how others have felt about dealing with the aspects included in massage, beyond the mechanical, particularly how you felt your schooling prepared you for dealing with the mind/body/spirit aspect of our work. Many talk about massage being holistic and involving the mind/body/spirit. "Mind/Body/Spirit" phrase was even mentioned several times during school, but that was about the extent of addressing it. It seems inherent to me that whenever we touch someone there is a lot more there than muscles and bones (and the physical properties of our body.) I realize the more clinical approaches to massage are probably more focused on addressing just the body in the session, but even then there's not really a way to cut off the mind and spirit from the work being done. Is there?
I guess I'm writing the all because I am just learning how emotional issues can manifest in the body. (I always knew/believed but now it is the first times I'm experiencing this with a client-that makes it all different! ) It's real physical, palpable things going on causing the client a lot of pain. The client wants out of the pain and wants a MT (or PT or MD) to do the job and make it better...but "fixing" it is elusive because while it is physical it's also emotional on the clients part. If I didn't have the feedback of more experienced practitioners that I've found on my own, I would have no idea how possible it is for this to occur.
Did you just learn this kind of stuff after school on your own as you practiced? Also, did your school focus on therapists building a foundation of self-care skills...? I know we are responsible for self-care on our own and all of our ideas of self-care can be different, but the extent of it being covered in school was "You need to make sure to do self-care." and a couple wrist stretches.
Ughhhh....I'm graduating and feeling so overwhelmed with what I feel like I need to build to be up to speed. I guess I am now I am especially realizing the training that was lacking in my program and how simple it would be to make it better! (For starters, I'm chomping at the bit to teach at least a 12 or 16 hour self-care class--addressing all aspects Mind/Body/Spirit-covering the care and keeping of a therapist. How else can we stay open to what is oging on with our clients? And how else can we not fall apart or burn out or lose interest in 2 years (or less)?
Maybe I'm really just venting. But I'd really like feedback from others if you have it about how you dealt with some of this. How did you feel upon graduating? Did you feel prepared? What did you like about your school program, and what do you think could have been added that would have been helpful (now that you're working? What's the first thing you did out of school (work wise, self care, anything) and what was the most helpful to you?
Thanks for this space and for everyone here!!!