Bodymechanics School of Massage - Santa Fe

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Bodymechanics School of Massage - Santa Fe Permanently closed We are excited to bring our 788-hour massage program to Santa Fe, offering both day and evening classes.

Our program in based on our Four Pillars of Success:
• Outstanding massage techniques
• Stellar marketing and business approaches
• Exceptional communication skills
• Development of critical thinking skills

Bodymechanics School is a small, proprietary massage school owned by Shari Aldrich, LMT with help and support from her daughters, Hayley Aldrich, LMT (Regional Manager) and Ashleigh Aldrich, LMT, CPT/CES (Campus Coordinator, Bookkeeper and Kinesiology Instructor). The Bodymechanics Team includes:
• Renee’ Mora, LMT (Enrollment Coordinator)

Our goal: big time results with a small-town feel. Download our brochure here -- https://bit.ly/BrochureSantaFe

We are so excited to announce that our first graduate has taken and passed the MBLEx!We are so proud of Maria for her wo...
27/06/2022

We are so excited to announce that our first graduate has taken and passed the MBLEx!

We are so proud of Maria for her work.
The opportunities in front of her are endless.
Turns out that our clinical program is perfect for her career goals 🙌🙏

Interested in being our next success story?
Check us out at www.Bodymechanics-school.com.

Do you know we offer career planning and career mentorship?
23/06/2022

Do you know we offer career planning and career mentorship?

During our Zoom career planning sessions, we are often asked about the job market our graduates can expect after graduation. Common questions we are asked include: what is the job ... Read more

8/8/22Part-time massage school from 9 am - 1 pm. We are ready to inspire you and help you reach your goals ❤️
04/06/2022

8/8/22
Part-time massage school from 9 am - 1 pm.
We are ready to inspire you and help you reach your goals ❤️

Yesterday was so special!We graduated our FIRST class in Santa Fe. I am so grateful for the staff and students who took ...
03/06/2022

Yesterday was so special!
We graduated our FIRST class in Santa Fe.
I am so grateful for the staff and students who took a chance and believed in me and my program. They are all amazing.

I was so emotional today. The past 10 months have been a roller coaster ride - full of peaks and valleys. I’ll carry the lessons I learned here for the rest of my days.

The lineage of over 40 years of massage in Santa Fe wove together beautifully with our staff who represented generations of massage. Words cannot adequately express my gratitude for Farice, Alex, TC, Robyn, Silvia and other teachers along their journey who touched student hearts and shared their gifts.

To Hope, Maria, and Nick - I am proud of each of you. To know that you will help people for years to come fills my cup and brings me joy.

LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT MANAGER HIRED=======Bodymechanics School of  Massage, with campuses in Tumwater and Vancouver W...
17/03/2022

LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT MANAGER HIRED
=======

Bodymechanics School of Massage, with campuses in Tumwater and Vancouver Washington and Santa Fe New Mexico is proud to announce we’ve hired Brandon Casbeer, LMT to serve as our new Learning and Development Manager.

Brandon began a successful and exciting career in massage therapy after completing 900 hours of training at the National Holistic Institute in early 2018. Since graduating, he has worked in high-end spas as well as healing centers and is the proud owner of Mountain House Wellness, his private practice.

Brandon began employment as a teacher and Training Manager for instructors at the institute in mid 2019. Brandon is thrilled to join the Bodymechanics School of Massage as Learning and Development Manager.

Brandon’s goal is to provide professional development and training for Staff and Students, and to support the Bodymechanics school’s vision to inspire the exceptional within.

Bodymechanics School has long desired to create a robust system to develop students professionally. Brandon’s background brings a unique skillset that will facilitate growth for staff and students.

Brandon can be reached by email: brandon (at) bodymechanics-school.com

16/03/2022

As the current President of the Alliance for Massage Therapy Education (AFMTE), I was proud to take part in The Coalition of National Massage Therapy Organizations (Coalition) work to provide national guidance on legitimate massage schools.

Nationally, an emergence of "bad actors" are emerging that take advantage of students desire to find legitimate schools - leaving them without the ability to get licensed while charging a lot of money.

This is a long read - but if you are concerned about quality massage education which is designed to protect the public, please read.

Shari Aldrich, LMT
President - Bodymechanics School
President - AFMTE

=================

The Alliance for Massage Therapy Education (AFMTE) was pleased to participate in a series of meetings with national massage organizations to address the issue of human trafficking, the impact on its victims, and the implications for massage education.

As the organization that serves as an independent voice, advocate and resource for the massage therapy and bodywork education community, it is important to us to share this document with you. As stakeholders in quality education, it is imperative to address the ongoing problem of massage therapy education being coopted by perpetrators of human trafficking.

The apparent recent shift into infiltrating massage training indicates an ongoing need for continued dialogue and education of massage schools, educators, students, potential students, and the public. We acknowledge that the biggest concern here is the harm to victims of human trafficking. It is the responsibility of the massage profession to close the loopholes that make it easier for our profession to be a conduit for human trafficking.

In our view, addressing the issue of “diploma mills” (illicit massage schools) is important. Placing a certified educator in every classroom or course may be part of the solution to the problem. We value education standards relating to ethical therapeutic relationships between teacher and student and ultimately between graduates and their clientele. This is reinforced through our Certified Massage and Bodywork Educator (CMBE) program. The therapeutic relationship is missing in both an illicit massage school and in illicit massage businesses. These illicit activities have little to do with massage.

Through training of educators, consistency in the message separating professional ethical massage educators and schools from those who participate directly or indirectly in human trafficking will become more evident to the consumer.

AFMTE is getting involved because of the historic lack of focus on strong local and national infrastructure. This has created loopholes in education and regulation that are allowing people to be harmed. Misogyny, racism, nationalism and our cultural discomfort with s*x have led us to draw straight lines where they don’t exist. We welcome the opportunity to talk with others in our profession about how to shape our discourse so we can uncouple any discomfort with s*x, lack of understanding of s*x work as a profession, and the underlying assumptions about how, why, and where human trafficking happens. This will support educators in clarifying the classroom topics of this nature for themselves and their students.

Human trafficking is a serious issue and, for the safety and health of our communities and all humans, it is important that we do what we can to end its existence and to close the loopholes that allow perpetrators to use massage therapy as an avenue of exploitation. This is a living conversation that will change over time and in which AFMTE vows committed and ongoing engagement.

- COALITION STATEMENT -

Joint Statement from
- Alliance for Massage Therapy Education (AFMTE)
- Associated Bodywork & Massage Professionals (ABMP)
- Commission on Massage Therapy Accreditation (COMTA)
- Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards (FSMTB)

Massage therapy is an allied health and wellness profession; massage therapists are found in hospitals, long-term care facilities, medical clinics, integrative health centers, hospice care, spas, and wellness centers, as well as in their own independent practice settings. As such, massage therapy education includes anatomy and physiology, ethics, manual soft tissue techniques, business and professionalism, sanitation, and basic research literacy. Annual continuing education and current competency generally are required in order to maintain licensure to practice, and professional society membership.

The profession has long struggled with attempted infiltration by actors trying to hijack the term and settings of massage therapy for illicit activities such as human trafficking and prostitution. For the general public, the focal point is often stories about prostitution taking place within massage “parlors” directed by organized crime.

The avenues for infiltration include establishing illegitimate schools, taking steps to enable non-professionals to cheat on profession entry exams, and presenting individuals as massage therapists who lack proper training and ethics.

While the vast majority of the 900+ massage schools are lawful institutions of postsecondary learning, a number of massage schools have recently been identified as “diploma mills,” purporting to teach massage therapy but simply providing certificates for a fee to facilitate fraud and illicit passage into the profession. These so-called “schools” are eroding public trust in the profession, creating confusion for students who want a legitimate education, and generally perpetuating the conflation of the s*x trade with massage therapy.

Illicit massage businesses pose a risk to the public and the massage profession—practitioners, students, instructors, and schools. Illicit activity does not come from the massage profession; it comes from organized crime. To make it increasingly difficult for these businesses to pose under the guise of massage therapy, enacting the measures below would serve to protect the integrity of the massage profession and its stakeholders. In combating these issues, the massage profession itself must take an active role in the fight. A multi-pronged approach would be most effective, including the following elements:

EDUCATION
* Rapidly accelerating the adoption of massage-specific programmatic accreditation by massage schools nationwide; state boards of education and massage therapy alone are not adequate and not sufficiently funded to police fraudulent schools
* Enabling pathways toward more robust teacher qualification and training/certification for every teacher in massage training
* Requiring continuing education on human trafficking and ethics, to empower professionals to better support and protect their chosen field

REGULATION / LAW ENFORCEMENT
* Establishing an education campaign to aid/instruct law enforcement and state authorizers on what constitutes legitimate massage therapy, and what does not
* Educating regulators and law enforcement on the purpose/role the Massage & Bodywork Licensing Examination (MBLEx) plays in licensure
* Encouraging states’ participation in the Massage Therapy Licensing Database (MTLD)
* Exploring the merits of regulatory oversight of massage establishments
* Helping schools, students, and therapists recognize and report illicit activity in their communities

LEGISLATION
* Establishing language that helps authorities easily identify those with appropriate education and practice standards
* Identifying and eliminating loopholes that allow “schools” to sidestep licensure rules
* Enforcing laws for practicing massage therapy without a license
* Eliminating laws currently on the books that treat massage therapists as presumed s*x workers (adult entertainment)
* Requiring schools to keep accurate and complete student records on all students
* Requiring state disclosure of approved schools and current status

These aims are by no means all-encompassing, and each of the participating organizations will have their own priorities and beliefs. However, collectively we feel strongly that the massage profession has been unfairly maligned for too long, and what we do as a profession can make a difference. We endeavor to collaborate to achieve these aims to ensure a more vibrant, healthy, safe massage profession for the public and for the individuals who have chosen this noble career choice.

Bodymechanics School staff with massage icon, Dr. Ben Benjamin. We enjoyed Ben’s workshop at our Tumwater, WA campus  th...
07/03/2022

Bodymechanics School staff with massage icon, Dr. Ben Benjamin.

We enjoyed Ben’s workshop at our Tumwater, WA campus this weekend:
- Integrating Orthopedic Massage
- Active Assisted Stretching

Both days were exceptional!
To have quality, in person workshops again feels so good. We are so grateful for Ben coming to Washington.

And - he’s coming to Santa Fe in August!
Stay tuned for details.

Check out his work here —> Www.Benbenjamin.com

**MASK MANDATE UPDATE**We continue to require masks at Bodymechanics School at this time. We need time to review policie...
18/02/2022

**MASK MANDATE UPDATE**

We continue to require masks at Bodymechanics School at this time. We need time to review policies and make changes as necessary to our program.

We thank you in advance for understanding and wearing your mask inside Bodymechanics School as we navigate these rapid changes.

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