• LAVA Moderator: Shinji Ikari

Massage Therapy--Valid career choice?

Scunch

Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 28, 2011
Messages
53
I'm seriously considering entering a school for massage therapy. A 20 months basic course will run me around $15,000. I've never been in debt before, and I'm pretty unsure about getting myself into it. But I'm 21 and working 6 hours a week at a package store, I can't seem to find any local jobs. Massage therapy seems like a good fit for me (I've been complemented on my massage skills before) and I've been to a workshop the school holds once, seemed laid back but serious. On top of that I think it would provide a good challenge to me since I have some degree of social anxiety and I need to find some way to get out of the house and overcome it.

Financially though, I don't know what to do. If I can find a job (job placement rates are supposedly 84%, which seems really good) then I'll probably be making between 12 and 15 dollars an hour for something like $35,000-$50,000 a year, so I could be out of debt in a short time. Much later on I may be able to buy my own massage supplies and work out of home, which would allow me to take the full hourly massage cost for myself and (if I'm really lucky) allow me to get up to $75,000 a year. I may be able to get some support from family, though it's hard to say how much they can and would be willing to cover. I'm sure they'd cosign a loan at least. I've been searching all over for scholarships but they seem limited to high school seniors and those with good GPAs, and I'm neither. I might be able to qualify for a disability scholarship or 2 since I have adult ADHD, but that won't cover much.

So I'm kind of stumped. Does it sound like a financially sound idea? To those adults who decided to get education later on, how did you pay for college? Anybody ever take a massage course, and if so was it worthwhile? I'm just looking down the barrel of a big decision here and though I know I need to make a change in my life I'm not sure I'm ready for the crushing responsibility of debt.
 
I'd say you can do this without a degree.

Study up, give freebies to start off word of mouth, and most of all, look for shorter courses or apprenticeships you can do here and there - £15,000 for basic course? Screw that - sounds like a scam...for a bit of paper and a bit of training...I'm sure if you travelled somewhere abroad you could find the same thing for like $1/2G EASY.
 
^ what's your experience of this industry that leads you to post this response? are you a massage therapist?

note he said $15k not £15k - that's a difference of about $8k. also, i doubt he's talking about a degree - more likely just a course to become a licensed therapist.

op, while i agree that $15k seems a little on the high end, if this is something you're passionate about, something you'd like to learn to do properly, something you're committed to becoming good at - in short, something you'd like to make a career of, it's an investment you should be able to pay off a loan like that within 2-4 years. consider that the alternative - a bachelor's degree - might put you in the hole somewhere north of $50k (not least because you'll be done more than 2 years ahead of that).

good luck.

alasdair
 
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