Some stuff written here makes me wonder if MT's responsible are almost "Touch illiterate"..
Things I consider real blunders:
* Taking phone calls during massage.
* Letting someone wait on the bench. (maybe some monster will enter?
)
* Dropping touch contact.
* Doing your thing without listening and change course of action depending on that. The massage is FOR the client.
* Don't rush things. (Stress relief anyone?)
* In session sales pitches. (gosh..)
* Incomplete strokes.
I think massage should be a flow without interruptions. If client is forced by circumstances to focus mind then that's a failure.
I conclude the thread like this:
Private and descrete entry to treatment room.
Be upfront weather you massage abs, quads, hamstrings, glutes, adductors, and feets.
Keep touch contact. Don't break it or put it on hold.
Listen for requests on methodology, problem areas, pressure.
Take it slow, too little time -> Do fewer repitions.
Be tolerant of things that might slip the clients mouth. They are not totally in selfcontrol atm.
Respect modesty. Wheather people outside profession regard naked encounter desirable or not.
Be on time.
Dimm lights.
Use proper amount of oil, easier to add than remove. And avoid face/hair etc..
Don't push rebooks. Especially in session..
Give time to recover to reality.
Nice looking and clean smelling textiles.
Ask about essential oils before using them.
Play some real music, not obscure stuff that makes people cringe.
Pay attention to where your body parts will contact the client.
Go on the depth when appropriate, it's most likely not a tactile massage.
Provide a glass of water after. Makes recovery faster.
Have eyecontact.
Warm and quiet space.
Plan your time.
Do what you say, and if time doesn't allow then do fewer repitions on part. Rather than skipping or rushing.
Avoid politics, religion, economics or other potential social minefields.
Design you music setup to work without your interaction. There are computers these days..!
As soon as the client can be expected to be on the bench. Start the massage. Even tell some seconds before touching to allow anticipation.
Use complete strokes.
Avoid scented candles.
Try to a have an predictable flow on which order you massage various parts.
Think of client vs touching other things. It doesn't necessarly mix. Same goes for feets and other parts.
Footmassage does wonders so if feets smell, solve it, with "peppermint,spearmint or lavender EO mixed with a bit of grapeseed oil"
Missed anything ..?
Comments?