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Hi all ,
I must admit I feel sorry for you girls going into a session with a guy who's got the wrong idea/totally ignorant or is just on a wind up. There you are trying your damdest to help these guys and they just see it as a game to keep guiding conversation to doubler entondrue country. I am trying to see these situations where you got a large powerfull guy on the couch and I am the slightly built female trying to handle these situations.
Prehaps you can get together and do a dvd especially for female therapists giving lots of examples of this kinda behaviour/inuendo etc and how best to handle it.?
As a six feet two 14 stone male, inappropiate requests by female clients (yes they been watching to much of sex in the city) no longer bother me as I've made the dicision not to end a career that I live and breath in "that way".
Here's a question for you. How do you handle the heavy breathers ? I mean when they start to get loud ? Are they just enjoying the session or what ?
Also remember, Am I dressed "Ugly" or Am I dressed "Cute". This is something that was brought out in an Ethics class.
And how do male therapists respond when approached sexually by another MALE? Female therapists are unconfortable if a guy requests sexual services or shows signs of sexual arousal, but in my experience, male therapists are even more upset.
A young male therapist told me he was treating and husband and wife, plus their teen daughter. One day he had the male partner on the table and noticed that the man had an erection. The man then exposed himself. The therapist ended the massage, then later (when the client was dressed) had a conversation with him and told him this could not happen again. He now treats the man in prone position only.
Stephen Jeffrey said:Hi all ,
I must admit I feel sorry for you girls going into a session with a guy who's got the wrong idea/totally ignorant or is just on a wind up. There you are trying your damdest to help these guys and they just see it as a game to keep guiding conversation to doubler entondrue country. I am trying to see these situations where you got a large powerfull guy on the couch and I am the slightly built female trying to handle these situations.
Prehaps you can get together and do a dvd especially for female therapists giving lots of examples of this kinda behaviour/inuendo etc and how best to handle it.?
As a six feet two 14 stone male, inappropiate requests by female clients (yes they been watching to much of sex in the city) no longer bother me as I've made the dicision not to end a career that I live and breath in "that way".
Here's a question for you. How do you handle the heavy breathers ? I mean when they start to get loud ? Are they just enjoying the session or what ?
Remember that you are the one in power, when it comes down to it. The client's unclothed body is lying on the table while your fully clothed body is standing over them. You can disable someone if you have to, although I don't recommend assaulting anyone except as a last resort. You can certainly leave them there while you make an escape.
....if you dress in a sexy manner, you are asking to be hit on.
Darcy Neibaur said:Also remember, Am I dressed "Ugly" or Am I dressed "Cute". This is something that was brought out in an Ethics class.
Warning: rant to follow
Like it or not, we are in a profession that has been used as a euphemism for prostitution......
If someone has the wrong intent coming in, what you wear isn't going to make a lick of difference--ie, 70-year-old therapists getting hit on. Saying that female therapists are "asking for it" sends a horribly retrogressive message, IMO. No one "asks" to be sexually harassed, which is exactly what this is.
Laura Allen said:....if you dress in a sexy manner, you are asking to be hit on.
Darcy Neibaur said:Also remember, Am I dressed "Ugly" or Am I dressed "Cute". This is something that was brought out in an Ethics class.
Rock on with your bad self! ;)
Erica Olson said:Warning: rant to follow
Like it or not, we are in a profession that has been used as a euphemism for prostitution......
If someone has the wrong intent coming in, what you wear isn't going to make a lick of difference--ie, 70-year-old therapists getting hit on. Saying that female therapists are "asking for it" sends a horribly retrogressive message, IMO. No one "asks" to be sexually harassed, which is exactly what this is.
Laura Allen said:....if you dress in a sexy manner, you are asking to be hit on.
Darcy Neibaur said:Also remember, Am I dressed "Ugly" or Am I dressed "Cute". This is something that was brought out in an Ethics class.
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