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Just focus on your work.
Everybody has an opinion...
don't let yourself get worked up over something that is not yours to fix.
Hi, Gordon. You know me, for the benefit of others, I am a 2nd year massage student. I've encountered what may be a local oddity, or it may be occurring everywhere. Repeat clients who utilize the day clinic want Swedish--relaxation stuff exclusively. Repeat clients who utilize night clinic like it very deep, very hard--even those who tell the therapist at start of session that, today, they "have no complaints to work, just want to relax."
My analysis of this difference is that day clinic student therapists have just finished Swedish, their first modality. Night class therapists have completed deep tissue and are then studying NMT and MFR--and eager to try out their new skills. The night instructor who I suspect can make a paraplegic walk and the blind see (kidding) insists that his students get very deep; therefore, clients who are regulars to his clinics expect very deep massage--a 7 or so on the 10 scale.
Sorta like this: (hope the photo loads)
So... am I right in assuming that the type of MT preferred is dependent on prior (good or bad) experience?
Hi, Gordon. You know me, for the benefit of others, I am a 2nd year massage student. I've encountered what may be a local oddity, or it may be occurring everywhere. Repeat clients who utilize the day clinic want Swedish--relaxation stuff exclusively. Repeat clients who utilize night clinic like it very deep, very hard--even those who tell the therapist at start of session that, today, they "have no complaints to work, just want to relax."
My analysis of this difference is that day clinic student therapists have just finished Swedish, their first modality. Night class therapists have completed deep tissue and are then studying NMT and MFR--and eager to try out their new skills. The night instructor who I suspect can make a paraplegic walk and the blind see (kidding) insists that his students get very deep; therefore, clients who are regulars to his clinics expect very deep massage--a 7 or so on the 10 scale.
Sorta like this: (hope the photo loads)
So... am I right in assuming that the type of MT preferred is dependent on prior (good or bad) experience?
Hi, Gordon. You know me, for the benefit of others, I am a 2nd year massage student. I've encountered what may be a local oddity, or it may be occurring everywhere. Repeat clients who utilize the day clinic want Swedish--relaxation stuff exclusively. Repeat clients who utilize night clinic like it very deep, very hard--even those who tell the therapist at start of session that, today, they "have no complaints to work, just want to relax."
My analysis of this difference is that day clinic student therapists have just finished Swedish, their first modality. Night class therapists have completed deep tissue and are then studying NMT and MFR--and eager to try out their new skills. The night instructor who I suspect can make a paraplegic walk and the blind see (kidding) insists that his students get very deep; therefore, clients who are regulars to his clinics expect very deep massage--a 7 or so on the 10 scale.
Sorta like this: (hope the photo loads)
So... am I right in assuming that the type of MT preferred is dependent on prior (good or bad) experience?
Obviously. But being critical of them doesn't benefit you or your client.
They have an opinion and philosophy as do you.
You think they are wrong and you are right.
And vice versa.
Just do what you do, don't worry about them and you will keep those clients that they didn't,
Educate your client not by bad-mouthing other therapists, but by SHOWING your clients what you can do for them.
.
Gordon J. Wallis said:
An opinion? So then some therapists actually believe that therapeutic massage has to be very uncomfortable and painful, in order to be successful or effective?
Cindy, I haven't noticed Gordon bad mouthing any other therapist. He made a generalized statement that SOME insensitive therapists hurt their clients and SOME don't use enough pressure.
Undoubtedly true, wouldn't you say?
Cindy Greenwood said:
Obviously. But being critical of them doesn't benefit you or your client.
They have an opinion and philosophy as do you.
You think they are wrong and you are right.And vice versa.
Just do what you do, don't worry about them and you will keep those clients that they didn't,
Educate your client not by bad-mouthing other therapists, but by SHOWING your clients what you can do for them.
.
Gordon J. Wallis said:An opinion? So then some therapists actually believe that therapeutic massage has to be very uncomfortable and painful, in order to be successful or effective?
Hi Gordon
In my practice, each client has their own understanding about massage because of what they heard from people who has not enough knowledge about it. Here in my country you're surprise to hear them say reflex when they meant massage, so yours is normal. Agree at first and try to explain more when you made the connection!
Joyce, deep tissue massage-- NMT, MFR, even vigorous Swedish-- will cause some pain. The "oh that hurts sooo good" kind of pain. But, yes, your instructor is correct that you excite the guarding response if you go faster than the tissue can relax. A single myofascial release sweep of one side of a tight back can consume an entire hour session.
However, no matter how slow you go, active triggers points by definition are tender to the touch...are painful when compressed... should elicit the "oh that hurts so good" moan from the client when compressed. As Gordon remarked (and you confirmed), too much pressure is counter-productive. But too little (as Boris Prilutsky and others reminded me a few months ago) can transmogrify a trigger point into a chronic degeneration of the muscle fiber.
Although most trigger points are dime-sized or smaller, occasionally one will be much bigger; you have to locate the exquisitely tender entrance to those large, painful trigger points, then apply just the right amount of pressure, and sink in a silly centimeter at a time as the layers of tissue melt. But there will be some pain involved. IOW, you can't love a trigger point to death.
Gary, I love it that you used "transmogrify"! I grew up with Calvin and Hobbes and love the reference!!
Gordon, I think you are really onto something here. I think it's not OK for massage therapists to think that any level of pain is necessary. We've had this discussion on other threads, and we know that these people are actually doing damage to their clients. It's possible to go very deep without undue pain or damage, and it's possible to get good releases from light pressure (CranioSacral Therapy, for example). It all comes down to tuning into the client and listening to the tissues. And feedback from the client!
Also for Gordon, as a result of some of your comments on other threads I've given up the "scale of 0-10" thing I used to do all the time and now just simply tell people that they are in control of the pressure and not to put up with anything they don't want to deal with. I tell them that if they have to "breathe through it", it's too much. It's been working much better, with more simple communication and better end results.
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