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My advise is to experiment with as many oils as you can and learn about them. try blending carriers and essential oils. the only thing you need in massage is your body and a body to work on. The extras are a comfortable table or massage chair. From there you might add lots of things but your skill and knowledge is the essential element.
What type of massage do you want to do? That is a first step. Then try this at several locations or call them in if you want to do outcall. See what you like.
Women tend to like to be bundled and secure with scents (check on this because I have many female clients that have allergies and don't even want oil), music and consider the eye masks. Men are easy, a towel for draping and a scentless oil and a good deep heat rub like Sombra for the painful muscles.
Work on your ergonomics if you think you need a ThumbSaver. You lose connection with tools. Since it is summer, wait for winter to get a table warmer.
As far as I'm concerned it is all about skill and how you connect with your client. And you will know when they stop going elsewhere for a massage.
Hi Sharon -
The one essential I must have is a great table. It is where I invested the most dollars. Deep padding, table warmer, a comfortable face rest and really nice sheets. A hot towel cabinet is great to have and a variety of bolsters are useful.
Thanks Daniel -- what is your favorite oil carrier ?
Daniel Cohen said:My advise is to experiment with as many oils as you can and learn about them. try blending carriers and essential oils. the only thing you need in massage is your body and a body to work on. The extras are a comfortable table or massage chair. From there you might add lots of things but your skill and knowledge is the essential element.
What type of massage do you want to do? That is a first step. Then try this at several locations or call them in if you want to do outcall. See what you like.
Women tend to like to be bundled and secure with scents (check on this because I have many female clients that have allergies and don't even want oil), music and consider the eye masks. Men are easy, a towel for draping and a scentless oil and a good deep heat rub like Sombra for the painful muscles.
Work on your ergonomics if you think you need a ThumbSaver. You lose connection with tools. Since it is summer, wait for winter to get a table warmer.
As far as I'm concerned it is all about skill and how you connect with your client. And you will know when they stop going elsewhere for a massage.
-Good reference material handy and well organized paper/computer files for client records/accounts/payment handling, including credit card handling (getting that system right when you start off might be trial and error, but once you've all the elements in place it will save you so much hassle)
-Good table (Ty hit it there - a narrow table might be good for you, but it sucks for the larger client)
-Good sheets (it's weird, but don't go for the designer sheets - they don't last. Just go for a good thread count)
-Table warmer
-Soft blankets
-Good sound system and good selection of music (unless you're in a purely medical setting)
-Heater AND fan in room - temperature of room is important
-Towel warmer (even if you don't do spa treatments, using them on feet is a good idea - and sometimes you will have some rather ripe feet)
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