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Kindness At The Milwaukee School Of Massage

by Mary Vuk, photos by Kurt Johnson
Wanda Beals believes that
massage is a form of
kindness. Beals is the owner
and director of the Milwaukee School of
Massage, located at 830 E. Chambers.
“Kindness is highly underrated. I think
we need to be much more kind with one
another. It’s a challenge in this day and
age.” Surrounded by classroom tables
and chairs, models of skeletons, brains
and skulls, neatly folded pink and
blue towels, blankets, pillows, plants,
candles, vases and flowers, Beals talked
quietly in the gray and pink painted
classroom about her goals and mission
as an educator and businesswoman.
“I think touch is critical to maintenance
of a good healthy life,” Beals said. She
thinks our culture is one of the more
distant ones that does not encourage a
lot of touching. “We’re lucky if we get
a handshake. So
many of us are
not thriving as
well as we could
because we aren’t
getting touched.”
Massage, she
believes, can help people in the
community become more capable of
making wise and loving decisions.
Beals earned an M.A. in social work
from the University of Wisconsin-
Madison. After working for seven
years as a social worker, Beals became
interested in psychotherapy, which
then led her to massage. She worked as
a massage therapist in a beauty salon in
Brookfield for 18 years before founding
the Milwaukee School of Massage in
1996. She chose education because
she wanted to influence the massage
community and thought the best way
to do so was through education and
teaching so that she would be able to
instill certain values she thought were
much needed.
Beals has run the school from the
Riverwest location since 1999 and has
been exceedingly happy with Riverwest.
Kindness At The Milwaukee School Of Massage
With help in the form of low interest
loans from the City of Milwaukee, Beals
was able to buy the property. It took a
bit of work to clean up the yard and
outside of the building, and the first
floor was extensively renovated before
becoming the airy and inviting space
that is now the main classroom.
Beals runs two massage classes
simultaneously – one in the morning
and one in the evening. The cost of
tuition is $6,900, which includes the
cost of a laundry service for the linens,
and the student getting a professional
massage table and books. Beals also
manages a business incubator program
on the second floor of the building.
At the Graduate Massage Clinic, her
graduates are able to get their first
paying jobs and get the experience
they require to one day open their own
business.
Beals sought
to have a
school that
would educate
students
who would
ultimately go to work in the community,
but she also wanted to be able to provide
massages for those people living in
the community who were middle and
lower-middle and working class. Her
location in Riverwest allowed her to
achieve both goals.
The massages at the Graduate Massage
Clinic cost $39.00. Beals believes the
“average citizen ought to be able to
afford to get a massage.”
“The way we are able to keep costs down
is because we are in a neighborhood
where we can afford the taxes, and we
can afford the upkeep. What’s interesting
is that our staff upstairs makes about
the same amount of money they
would working at a high-end spa. The
difference is the overhead,” Beals said.
“In this neighborhood, the taxes have
stayed fairly reasonable. They’ve gone
up, but they’re still reasonable.” Owning
her own property has allowed Beals to
make the Milwaukee School of Massage
a successful business. Riverwest “has
exceeded my expectations.”
Beals recalls a story about when she
first started out. One day realizing
she needed a few new chairs for an
incoming class, she went to a store on
Martin Luther King Drive, which didn’t
have enough of what she liked. As she
walked back to her car on a snowy
winter’s day, she looked down and saw
a penny on the ground. She heard a
little voice inside say “Oh, too big for
pennies. I didn’t realize you were too
big for pennies.” As she stooped down
to pick the penny up, feeling frustrated
because she had a limited budget to
buy the chairs and still hadn’t found
what she needed, she stood up and
saw Fein Bros., the restaurant supply
store. “I went in there, and they had
the chairs.”
Beals believes that if you allow
yourself, you will find what you need,
but sometimes “you’ve just got to bend
over.” Beals bought 30 chairs that day
because they were so reasonably priced.
Now she has more than enough chairs
for special events like graduations.
Since 1996, more than 120 students
have graduated from the Milwaukee
School of Massage. Beals believes
that graduations should be somewhat
ritualized with candles and flowers, and
wassail or punch. “We have water from
the River Jordan that we use to bless
their hands.” The graduates’ families
come and everyone gathers around to
bless hands. Beals wants her graduates
to know that: “We’re here, we’re
supporting you. You’ve completed the
task, you’ve done what’s been asked of
you, and now we’re supporting you, and
you shall go forth and be fruitful. You
just [can’t] say, you’re done, goodbye.
There needs to be a community.”
For further information about the
Milwaukee School of Massage, call 263-
1179 (school) or 263-1180 (clinic).
Riverwest Currents online edition - February, 2006
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