Congratulations Ellie on your graduation, licensure, and establishing of practice!
At one time I was told frequently by classmates that I worked with in school to 'just trust your hands'...
For me it was simple, it just took hours of practice. Each massage I completed I became more confident and more confident. I did take many hours of continuing education, despite the fact that I did attend an extremely well respected school prior to licensure.
It was fine to learn all of the anatomy in school and palpation skills but until I got out there, worked at a spa, saw a lot of clients and felt how everyone's body while basically the same in anatomical terms, are very different in structure energetically, muscularly and in other ways my experience had been limited.
The first six months for me were difficult in the confidence department...and then the veil just started to lift, and then it was like a snowball effect...the more confidence I gained, the better the massage I gave was received, which in turn just helped to support more confidence.
It is experience that will give you that support. It will come, but it may take a little while. It is also a process of amalgamating what you have learned with your own style...and style is once again something that evolves.
Massage therapy, like any other art, is so unique to every practitioner and takes hours of practice. I can tell just by your post that you are innately aware of intention which is the basis for all quality touch.
I think when I started asking the universe before I layed hands on to give me the insight to deliver through my hands what each client needed before my sessions, and asked that my ego be checked at the door, that is when my work became very interesting. When suddenly I was able to start taking the building blocks I had been given in school, and then imprinting my own technique and insight into the sessions, that is when it all became even more interesting and rewarding...and the biggest part of it is that I started trusting in my intuitive capabilities, plugging into that unseen matrix, and just letting it flow...
Keep on believing Ellie, in yourself, the work, even when the days are most challenging and you wonder is my work enough, am I enough...it is and you are! Enjoy this exciting time in the youth of your work...before you know it a couple of years will have gone by and you will have to remind yourself to come to the table with that wide-eyed freshness that just is for you now.
My best to you...