riches no butler
Member
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2009
- Messages
- 39
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Hi, I'm an American but I just came here to Sydney, Australia for an extended visit. I really like it here, and think the city's beautiful. But I digress...
I've wanted to learn how to give massages for years. I got my first 3 last summer (the first was Thai, the last two were your typical Swedish variety). I loved them. The whole reason I want to learn how to give them is so I can trade with others and save some bucks. I hope even you professionals can sympathize with that. I found a great massage seminar here in Australia that lasts two weeks, and I'd love to get their basic, bare-bones certification.
Here's where the problem comes in. During my first few massages I was occasionally, momentarily and involuntarily aroused. I tried everything I could to fight this. I tried doing several successive math problems in my head as fast as I could, I imagined myself racing a bike downhill, I considered flora and fauna--anything I could to yank my body's response into a different direction. It actually worked a few times...before it came back.
Now I've read enough on these boards to know that this is a somewhat-common problem for men and it's "nothing to be ashamed of if you're not looking for it," but I don't want to respond that way. Period. It would put a huge damper on how the teachers and other massage students considered the legitimacy of my motivation to learn.
So, I've searched this board all over. Searched other massage boards all over. Googled a few different phrases. I want to "adjust" my body's paradigm and I haven't found any good advice on how to do it.
Should I just keep getting massages, hoping that my body will "learn" that it's receiving in a nonsexual context (a plan of desensitization)? I'm afraid that my body would respond the same way (though probably not to the same degree) when giving massages as well. Obviously, this isn't acceptable either.
My desire to learn massage, for all the right reasons, is great. But I don't feel like I can take advaneforum.xxxe of all the hands-on (no pun intended) learning opportunities until I can get control of my body's response. I'd be thrilled with any advice you have for me. I really need to get this issue solved.
I apologize if I've come off sounding like a troll. I just need help. Bad.
I've wanted to learn how to give massages for years. I got my first 3 last summer (the first was Thai, the last two were your typical Swedish variety). I loved them. The whole reason I want to learn how to give them is so I can trade with others and save some bucks. I hope even you professionals can sympathize with that. I found a great massage seminar here in Australia that lasts two weeks, and I'd love to get their basic, bare-bones certification.
Here's where the problem comes in. During my first few massages I was occasionally, momentarily and involuntarily aroused. I tried everything I could to fight this. I tried doing several successive math problems in my head as fast as I could, I imagined myself racing a bike downhill, I considered flora and fauna--anything I could to yank my body's response into a different direction. It actually worked a few times...before it came back.
Now I've read enough on these boards to know that this is a somewhat-common problem for men and it's "nothing to be ashamed of if you're not looking for it," but I don't want to respond that way. Period. It would put a huge damper on how the teachers and other massage students considered the legitimacy of my motivation to learn.
So, I've searched this board all over. Searched other massage boards all over. Googled a few different phrases. I want to "adjust" my body's paradigm and I haven't found any good advice on how to do it.
Should I just keep getting massages, hoping that my body will "learn" that it's receiving in a nonsexual context (a plan of desensitization)? I'm afraid that my body would respond the same way (though probably not to the same degree) when giving massages as well. Obviously, this isn't acceptable either.
My desire to learn massage, for all the right reasons, is great. But I don't feel like I can take advaneforum.xxxe of all the hands-on (no pun intended) learning opportunities until I can get control of my body's response. I'd be thrilled with any advice you have for me. I really need to get this issue solved.
I apologize if I've come off sounding like a troll. I just need help. Bad.