It's Joe here, everyone can relax, I didn't take any of your comments negatively. ย Everyone makes different decisions based on what they think is best. ย I understand that you don't want to sell your practice but I will say, I can't understand why. ย I respect my clients immensely but they are clients all the same. ย I work for a living and happen to have the privilege of loving the work I do. ย I just think that massage therapists in general under-value themselves. ย They feel as though they are betraying "the work" if they want to make good money at it. ย And please, Sadie, this is not directed to you at all, it's a general observation that the post got me thinking about not your reply. ย I look at it this way, if I see 20 clients a week at $50.00 a session (which is too low but works for my example), that's $1,000 a week, aproximately $45,000 a year (I know the math doesn't work but I accounted for some time off). ย Even if half of the clients walk on the new therapist, that's still $22,500. ย Who wouldn't pay 20% of that or 4,500 (and I think that's low), for the benefit of what they are going to immediately make. ย Call me crazy but I think (me included) that we buy into our own images sometimes. ย A little story, I was at a party recently and had a few glasses of wine and decided to have a cigarette (a nasty, horrible habit I know, I know) but a decision that is my choice as an adult. ย Low and behold, I see a client at the party. ย Instantly, I'm 13 years old and my mother just caught me smoking behind the shed! ย "you're a massage therapist, you drink, you smoke, oh my!". ย I was just a guy before I was a massage therapist. ย My point about selling the practice was more about not under-valuing yourself and not about under-valuing your clients as if they were "sell-able". ย Good luck Sadie, did I miss it but I don't know what you're going off to study. ย Is school far away, or do you just want to concentrate on school? ย All my best, Joe