After two years of sharing office space my office-mate has given her notice. I have tried finding other responsible therapists to come in to share the rent, but I am wholly unimpressed with the people who have responded to my ads.
Business has been extremely poor since October of last year, and I am considering surrendering the office and creating a space in my home to provide massage. I never wanted to do this=-I have always had a personal bias against it, but finances make it a likely path. At this point, I will have the opportunity to teach full time as soon as January, which would also allow me to get health insurance for myself and my daughter. If this were the case I could see my established clients ( most of whom I would welcome into my home as a guest), but what about developing new clientele?
Things I am concerned about:
*Creeps knowing where I live
*Clients knowing more about me (by virtue of being in my home) than they do now (I tend to be a pretty private person)
*I have two very well-mannered dogs who would be cloistered upstairs in my room while clients were here, and I foster for a rescue organization, so pet allergy sufferers would probably self select out.
I'm not worried about keeping the house clean--I'm not a neat freak, but it generally stays under control.
The unused formal dining room would make a great ground-floor space that I could devote to massage, and it is right next to the downstairs bathroom and kitchen,(convenient for hot towels and a glass of water at the end) and the only thing I would need to do is figure out how to close off an 8 foot opening /doorway and a 4 foot opening/doorway. I'm thinking heavy drapes/curtains.
I would be so grateful if you would share your own experiences, good and bad, having a home office to help me sort this out.
Business has been extremely poor since October of last year, and I am considering surrendering the office and creating a space in my home to provide massage. I never wanted to do this=-I have always had a personal bias against it, but finances make it a likely path. At this point, I will have the opportunity to teach full time as soon as January, which would also allow me to get health insurance for myself and my daughter. If this were the case I could see my established clients ( most of whom I would welcome into my home as a guest), but what about developing new clientele?
Things I am concerned about:
*Creeps knowing where I live
*Clients knowing more about me (by virtue of being in my home) than they do now (I tend to be a pretty private person)
*I have two very well-mannered dogs who would be cloistered upstairs in my room while clients were here, and I foster for a rescue organization, so pet allergy sufferers would probably self select out.
I'm not worried about keeping the house clean--I'm not a neat freak, but it generally stays under control.
The unused formal dining room would make a great ground-floor space that I could devote to massage, and it is right next to the downstairs bathroom and kitchen,(convenient for hot towels and a glass of water at the end) and the only thing I would need to do is figure out how to close off an 8 foot opening /doorway and a 4 foot opening/doorway. I'm thinking heavy drapes/curtains.
I would be so grateful if you would share your own experiences, good and bad, having a home office to help me sort this out.