Great Graduates from SWIHA, SWINA & SOY

Mary Ritter

Mary Ritter
Mary Ritter is the Chief Executive Director of SWIHA and refers to herself as the “Head Coach.” She has an impressive background as a Strategic Designer who builds organizational cultures through the development of people, processes, and technology. Since joining SWIHA, Mary had become a Yoga Teacher, Reiki Practitioner, Reiki Master Teacher, Transformational Life Coach, and Toe Reader. Mary is now being called to offer Holy Reiki— a Bible-based, Christ-centered, hands-on healing modality. She is committed more than ever to helping people discover their gifts and graces and to fully supporting them as they share their talents with the world in a loving and profitable way.

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Massage Therapist William Mauzerall: Listening With His Hands and His Heart

William Mauzerall’s transformational journey from military service to massage therapist is an inspirational testimony of accepting and leaning into life’s opportunities. William, an honored military veteran, completed three years of services to our country and found himself at a crossroads after completing his military career. Having been fortunate to have the GI Bill assist with funding his educational dreams, William asked for guidance from his brother on the educational direction in which he should travel. William, a strategic thinker with an openness to consider many educational endeavors pursued the Massage Therapy program at SWIHA (Southwest Institute of Healing Art) for a few reasons: He would earn an associate’s degree from an accredited institution, he could enjoy the climate of the Southwest and it was a program that gave him man options to choose from in developing his gifts. William describes a peace and serenity in making his decision to pursue massage therapy through SWIHA -- he knew in his soul it was the right direction for him. In looking back on this decision, William now can see his footsteps to SWIHA transformed his life far deeper than a massage program.

As William began his program, he quickly found the coursework academically challenging. He embraced the notion that if the program did not challenge him, it would not change him. Through coaching and mentoring from his teachers, he learned the key difference between being a good massage therapist and great massage therapist is the ability to view the body as a whole instead of the sum of its parts. Through the life cycle of his program, beginning with the anatomy class, William learned the basics by breaking down the body to its simplest elements: molecules, cells, tissues and systems. As awareness and exploration continued through his coursework, William learned it is impossible to touch a body without understanding the impact on the whole body at every level.

As awareness and exploration continued through his coursework, William learned it is impossible to touch a body without understanding the impact on the whole body at every level.

Topics: Great Graduates, Massage Therapy, massage, Blog

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