massage and bodywork professionals
a community of practitioners
~
Oh, the flap on The View. I’m sure this will carry on for days and weeks.
Here's a YouTube link: The View - Al Gore's massage and other poorly chosen comments
Yea, our profession was ‘wronged.’
Here’s my advice: Use it.
I’m sure no one here as ever called a doctor a quack, or an attorney/lawyer an ambulance chaser, or a computer expert a nerd.
Sure, most of us are not on national TV, but I've seen a ton of 'foot in mouth disease' from all kinds of industries.
Please note that I’m not defending anything that was said.
Here’s my point:
What are each and every one of us going to do (other than complain) to improve our own massage business/practice? Can you take what was said and use it to stoke that internal fire? Go and find a mirror and take a long hard look at yourself. Talk to yourself (or others) and figure out how to use this to improve your own business. Do you have a burning desire to be respected as a professional massage therapist or bodyworker? Then put this to use!
Is it just me, or can anyone else see an opportunity here? To break away from the pack? Leave the weak behind and step up to the plate!
What can you use from that TV show to really turn internally and improve upon? Are we always as professional as we can be with our clients? How about customer service? What about all that time and energy wasted in internal dialogue complaining about how we were ‘dissed’ and put it to good use in creating a new massage marketing campaign?
Action speaks louder than words. Lead by example.
Who/what can we change? Ourselves.
What is demanding an apology from The View going to do? The damage has already been done.
Are we, each and every one of us, doing all that we can? Being the best that we can be?
I know that's what I'm focusing on.
Kris
Tags:
Views: 1069
~
Seems you hit the nail on the head with this one Steve:
"Quite telling EACH OTHER that you are professionals and turn that megaphone towards the general public."
As well as the gist of my original post: Is anyone using this to improve their own practice?
Kris
Relax & Rejuvenate wrote:
hotels looking to formalize their in-room spa offering and ensuring their guests safety and legal protection for themselves by contracting an established vendor with significant safeguards in place and appropriate liability insurance, instead of leaving in-room massage up to the concierge and their rolodex of highest-paying, independent contractors, licensed or not.
Marriott has since banned in-room massage, which created a whole new market for us in creating licensed massage facilities in hotels that previously did not have them.
that sounds promising. does Mariott offer out-room massages late at night provided by LMTs?
Hagerty gave 2 different massages back to back. 1st: 90 minutes, 2nd: 75 minutes.
she was ordered at 10:30 pm and had to wait until 11 pm until "Mr. Stone" was ready. the Portland Lucia had back biting concierges. some girls acted like groupies. (listen to her audio statement.)
Hagerty had worked hard on gain a reputation in highclass hotels in Portland. she superseded the younger massage therapists by far in credentials. in one occasion she worked as a double with another massage therapist who was dressed improperly sexy.
she was not willing to confide with the front desk what had happened to her with client Gore.
she reports one or two other occasions where she had to deal with clients in hotels who expected sexual favors.
a super-rich client mentioned "sex" 17 times during the session. he gave up when she declared to him, "I am a good girl."
Gore didn't take her repeated NOs for a NO. he took resistance as an invitation.
I can't speak for all Marriotts, but we take our last appt at 9PM at any hotels. Anything after that is on a volunteer basis only, subject to an additional fee.
After I do not want to minimize this situation, but let's get real here. This wasn't her first visit to a hotel, she isn't 10 years old and naive. I would be verrry surprised if this was the first time she had had to deal with this situation. Maybe someday the oldest profession will finally be separated from the oldest therapy in the public's mind. In the mean time, If you act like you own the world, the world will believe you own it. Act professional, BE professional. Don't take any crap and handle all situations in a professional manner.
You were, Steve. R&R confirms so as well.I may have been too harsh with the therapist in this situation. Even as a male therapist, I have been in this situation and it is not comfortable to deal with.
© 2024 Created by ABMP. Powered by