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I'm thinking about a career as a LMT. Each school seem to be very different. the core work is all the same-anatomy, ethics, massage law... But the types of massage courses differ. Sports, hot stone, chair, DTM, barefoot massage...and the list goes on. one school even offers "free" tuition in return for an additional 400 hrs of clinical time. which would make me eligible to sit for the NCBTMB certification.
What do I need to get started? More importantly, what is an employer looking for?
thanks you the help
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Catherine, NCBTMB now requires 750 hours of education in an approved school. I'd be leery of any school that offers "free tuition" but with strings attached. That 400 hours of clinic work after graduation I'm assuming the school will be charging the people you treat for. Let's see, 400 hours of massage after licensing in which you could be earning from $45 working for someone else, or up to $70 or so working as a sole practitioner.
Employers are looking for, first of all, proof that you are licensed to provide professional massage in that state Second requirement, you'll have to provide your own liability insurance, which will cost you from $100 up to $250 per year. Third, you'll be asked to provide at least one demo massage to prove you have the palpatory skills they seek.
A recent change: NCBTMB exam is no longer available for new graduates; you'll have to take and pass FSMTB's ( Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards) MBLEX (Massage and Bodywork Licensing Examination). Note that any reputable school will also tech classes in Eastern energetic modalities such as Shiatsu. Without that grounding, you will not pass any licensing exam.
Just so you know, school salesmen usually exaggerate the amount of money you will earn as a licensed massage therapist. The average LMT earns under $20,000 per year-- you are not paid for a 40-hour week, you are paid per massage given.
What the hell do they mean, "barefoot massage"? Swedish Massage is the base from which all other massage modalities spring from.
Massage is not an easy way to earn a living: like Gordon said, providing pain relief and relaxation for others is very hard on your own body. If you do enroll in a school, pay attention to the class on "body mechanics". The burnout rate for new LMTs is about seven years.
Now that I've discouraged the hell out of you.... giving massages is not a road to riches. But there's no better feeling in the world than when a client gives you a spontaneous hug of thanks for taking away their pains.
So, in conclusion, don't enter this profession thinking you'll get rich quick (or slowly, for that matter). Do it only if you have a burning desire to help people.
if you've had PT schooling, you may have transferable credits. the FSMTB test is the MBLEX, a 125 question test.
Actually the may b e using that term to keep out of hot water for teaching what is essentially Ashiatsu Massage (barefoot on massage table, while the LMT supports most of their weight with railings overhead. Lots of copycat classes out there, but the original is usually superior.
the best advice I can provide is to select a school that matches what you are looking for. if you know what you want to specialize in, pick a school that focuses most on this modality. that said, other things are also important like overall approach, philosophy, instructor quality, etc.
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