
BCMT Students Provide Massage to Sian Kaan Employees
As the New Year approaches, most of us do some kind of year in review, we think about what we’ve accomplished– and struggled with–in the last 12 months. And then, we make resolutions. We put new hopes, dreams, and plans into place for the new year. It’s been an emotional year, a phenomenal year, a year of huge milestones at BCMT. In March, we took our first group of students on a Study Abroad/community service trip to Tulum, Mexico. Our students soaked up this experience, embracing a new culture, making new friends and making a difference. Each one of them had the opportunity to provide massage for the very first time to the hard-working folks at Sian Kaan Ecological Reserve. They also worked on day laborers – men who do back-breaking work – during a day trip to Ek Balam. The people they worked on had to be encouraged to receive massage. For them, it was a luxury that people like them cannot afford - or something strange that they wanted to stay away from. What they found out what that massage therapy is medicine–it heals–and that they deserve it.
In September, ten faculty, staff and alumni set out to make a difference, this time in Dharamsala, India. The plan was to train 20 or so Tibetan refugees in massage therapy over a six-day period. A BCMT alum, Maria August, inspired us to do this work. She had been working with a local nonprofit, Lha Charitable Trust, and told us that their plan going forward was to incorporate massage therapy into their core training programs. We all knew that the experience would be life-changing, tranformative, amazing. What we didn’t know is that we’d be forever bonded with Tibetan refugees and their plight for freedom, opportunity, and preservation of their culture.

- BCMT Massage Therapy Training, Dharamsala: Graduation
Since leaving Dharamsala, we’ve received emails from students telling us how they’re doing – some have gotten jobs already! They express their gratitude, and their sadness. They hope that we’ll return soon. We tell them that we are also grateful, and miss them every day. We also tell them that we hope to return to Dharamsala in 2010, to train 20 more students.
So what else do we hope for in 2010? More, much more of the same. The BCMT community is envisioning peace and prosperity in 2010 for all beings on the planet. We will continue to serve our local community, and we will continue the work set forth in our vision statement. “We will prepare students to touch lives and become engaged global citizens, and our community will work collaboratively to relieve pain and enhance quality of life for all beings.”–Let There Be Peace on Earth in 2010, Carol Brunelli, Massage for Peace Coordinator