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Returning For More Massage School

By: temp

It is very common, both in the North Carolina massage school scene and elsewhere, for massage therapists to return to school to take massage continuing education courses. Massage school is a place where many people experience healing in a whole new way, in part because of the difference in the way that bodywork treats healing as opposed to the western medicine that so many of us have grown up with. The simple difference in taking a muscle relaxant and actually working the knots out of the muscles may seem small, but in the long run, have two very different results. Taking the muscle relaxant is effective, until it wears off. When the muscles relax on their own (or through the assistance of bodywork's therapeutic convincing) however, that has a much more lasting effect.

The types of courses that a bodyworker might return to school for might take the form of theory and philosophy, or they may be technique-based. When we are talking theory or philosophy, this often enters into the realm of ethics. Bodyworkers provide a therapeutic service for people, through touch. In much of today's society, touch is something that is reserved for those we are intimate with, beyond the handshakes and back-patting sort of fleeting touches that we allow with the rest of the world. A client may encounter some confusion about being touched in such a way that is, for them, in the "intimate" realm while in fact the bodyworker is working within the professional realm only. For this reason, learning how to set up boundaries between yourself and your clients is something that most massage therapists will benefit from. Learning how people react to and process touch is part of this process, as it learning how to protect and ground yourself.

There are a variety of techniques that people seek out to add on to their massage practices. These add-ons can take a session into a realm of greater healing or greater relaxation, and many of them work to enhance the benefits of massage therapy. Some of the more popular add-on modalities studied at one North Carolina massage school are reflexology, cranial sacral, Asian massage (mostly Chinese massage and shiatsu), and massage cupping.

If you are a bodyworker who is looking to expand your practice, attract new clients, and learn new skills, attending massage continuing education courses is a great way to do that. Most programs of this nature interfere very little with your practice, meaning you won't have to take time off of work to learn new skills.

Written by Mel Bryson. Attend massage school at this North Carolina massage school. Learn holistic healing modalities at massage continuing education. Find out more at www.ashevillemassageschool.org

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