Want to augment practice - what to do?
living_the_dream said:
Hi
I have been praciticing for a few years now and would like to add something to my practice. I honestly cant see myself doing just massage therapy for another 20 or 30 years :shock: and would like to study/learn something which would complement my existing practice...
Any ideas? I was thinking about pilates (VERY expensive to train in my country) or chiro... what are the other options which go well with massage?
thanks!
I've found myself in that conundrum. Hats off to the people who can, but I can't sit in a room silently for long periods of time just doing the same ol' Swedish/Deep Tissue combo. I have a definite nurturing side, but that ain't it
So I had 3 basic options, each with their own pros and cons... (I've done all 3--LOL--and they all worked for me at some point)
1. Take different classes within the massage therapy realm. People above mentioned a lot of great options. My two most useful classes were Neuromuscular Therapy (NMT) (a long program, maybe 6-9 months at 1-2x/week is a good length) and Hot Stone massage, because I ended up incorporating BOTH into every massage, which added both variety to my work AND a way to set myself apart from the rest, as I was incorporating techniques that those around me didn't, and I could solve issues with aches and pains that others around me didn't. I also thought my Pediatric massage therapy class was pretty cool. Pro: relatively inexpensive, and it's still massage therapy, so it's a known quantity. You can learn something completely new and take a whole new direction for the time invested in a single weekend, costing as little as $90. Con: the technique may not turn out to be what you expected or wanted, or it may have limited application in actual practice, so you may end up back at Square One.
2. Branch into a different field - personal training, certified nutritional consultant, yoga, etc - people above mentioned great ideas. If you decide on something like DC (chiro) or ND (naturopathic) in the US, be very sure you want to pursue that avenue with all of your heart. Those educational programs are just as expensive as medical school, and take just as long. They require quite a commitment and you really have to be sure you want to go through them. Also double-check the scope of practice for DC or ND in the area you want to practice in; it can vary. DCs in Oregon and Oklahoma can do minor surgery; Some DCs in New Mexico can dispense certain prescription drugs; DCs in Michigan can't even adjust wrist or ankle joints - spine only. DCs in NJ (I think) can't give nutritional advice. DCs may or may not lose the right to practice in Brazil, where the PT lobby is strong. NDs require licensure in 11 states. NDs in TX aren't licensed but can operate so long as they don't claim to diagnose, treat, adjust joints, or alter a patient's medication. A few years back, NDs in FL were scurrying to go to DC school when the authorities start rounding them up and charging them for practicing medicine without a license.
Other fields to consider that I don't think have been mentioned yet are PT (Physical Therapy) and nursing (either RN or LVN), or midwife (CNM/PRM) or doula. These fields also require long-term training (PT school is 3 tough years and I believe you have to write a thesis) but an LVN can be had in 15 months. Pros of option #2: You can get awesome training, a wide skill set, a whole new title and niche, and usually, a bigger scope of practice. Cons: school can be loooong and pricey, and there are no public DC schools that I know of, although there are for PT and RN/LVN. I'm not sure about ND. These programs take quite a commitment (I'm a DC myself, and our instructors who were MDs were telling US that they felt for us because THEY had it easier in MD school than we did in DC school! My health was essentially wiped out from the stress and I've been told by others--and I believe them--that it's going to take several years to recover. Would I do it again? Absolutely. Would I make a few changes? Ohhhh, yeah.) I don't want to scare you or dissuade you from following a dream; I just want to make sure there are no mistakes about what this really entails.
3. Use your current skill set, but for a different purpose or niche. I discovered this quite by accident. By the time my uncle's cancer had been diagnosed, it had spread too far. It was a very aggressive form of throat cancer and it was completely resistant to both chemo and radiation. He was designated "terminal" and given 1 to 3 months. One day, about 2 months before he died, we (my uncle, my parents, my husband, and myself) were all watching a movie and I had to get up and get some water. On the way back I got this urge to just lay my hands on him and come what may. So I stood behind him and ended up massaging his shoulders, being careful not to disturb the heavy-duty feminine pad taped to his neck to cover what was now a very open wound. It was through this experience that I learned that doing oncology massage would hit a soft spot in my heart because these people so desperately need caring touch. Pros: Free! No time or financial commitment required. You don't have to stop working. It just takes a little creativity, so schedule your own private brainstorming session. Cons: you're still in the massage therapy realm; any change or fulfillment you gain that you didn't have before is up to you (which can be said for any of the options, I reckon
)
Hope that helps? Or did I just add to the mud? LOL
Hugs,
~Jyoti