Beautifiedmami
Member
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2010
- Messages
- 54
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God knows Stacey and I and I are not always on the same page, but I have to agree with every point of that multi-quote post (which I never have the patience to do!). Don't worry Dublin -- it really is possible to care deeply about the well-being of your clients, take excellent care of them, provide care for clients at all income levels, AND enjoy a very prosperous living while giving to the community in many ways, not just with free massages.
Thinking that MTs can be divided into Healers and Billers is a rookie mistake. And I don't mean that condescendingly -- I think most of us who go to the nice touchy-feely schools pick up that idea somewhere along the line. Honestly once you get out into the field you'll realize that there really are almost no *working* MTs who got into the field for the money. The work itself is physically and emotionally demanding, and if you are not committed to helping people, no amount of money will make those demands worthwhile. So the few who do think they'll make a killing without commitment, leave the field very quickly -- usually before they've made a dime, too, because they also tend to think that their businesses will magically grow themselves.
Despite the harshness of your post and the misconceptions you have about your future colleagues, I do hope you stick around the forum at least through graduation. You might not realize it now from the relative comfort of school, but soon enough people will be asking *you* "How can you live with yourself charging so much?", challenging your cancellation policy, trying to convert you to their religion during their appointments, etc -- and this forum, as well as peer supervision, can be invaluable at that time, to help keep your focus on helping people who will accept (and pay for) your help.
Hey you're in my state! Where are you going to school?
P.S. One other note about rates, esp. in WA -- sometimes the advertised rates here have been artificially inflated by the insurance companies. An LMP who bills insurance is paid only a perceneforum.xxxe of their "usual and customary" rate by the ins. co. So in order to collect a reasonable amount of money for insurance-billed services, they have to set the rate relatively high (say, $110/hr may collect only $65). And they can't charge cash clients the $65, because if the ins. co. finds out, the ins. co. will say, "Well, $65 is your usual rate. You must bill us that rate." And then the ins. co. pays -- a perceneforum.xxxe. (Say, $35.) Hope that clarifies why some rates look very high. (Although I support MTs charging as much as they need to.)