Sorebackone Posted March 3 Posted March 3 Heading to Paris in late March and inexperienced. Is it safer to use your hotel or the providers studio? My hotel la a small one on St Germain. Is there any issue with a provider showing up? Do they meet you in the lobby or in your room? I know I sound like an idiot but I don’t want an exciting adventure ruined by not knowing how things are done.
polysome Posted March 4 Posted March 4 21 hours ago, Sorebackone said: Heading to Paris in late March and inexperienced. Is it safer to use your hotel or the providers studio? My hotel la a small one on St Germain. Is there any issue with a provider showing up? Do they meet you in the lobby or in your room? I know I sound like an idiot but I don’t want an exciting adventure ruined by not knowing how things are done. 1. How small is your room? 2. How small is the hotel? I feel like smaller hotels might flag it when you're bringing a guest in but in principle, it should be ok (?) More concerned that the room or the bed is too small that it might be too uncomfortable for a "massage+" type of situation liubit 1
Sorebackone Posted March 4 Author Posted March 4 1 hour ago, polysome said: 1. How small is your room? 2. How small is the hotel? I feel like smaller hotels might flag it when you're bringing a guest in but in principle, it should be ok (?) More concerned that the room or the bed is too small that it might be too uncomfortable for a "massage+" type of situation Small hotel, small lobby. From what I remember when I stayed here once before it was a full size bed.
+ Jamie21 Posted March 4 Posted March 4 I do massage on the bed (especially if the clients room is too small to fit my table). Even a single bed is ok. Personally I prefer to give massage on a table because the bed is too soft and not ideal for a good massage but needs must. As for hotels…they don’t care. I’ve seen clients in some of the top London hotels, both with and without my table. Often the client meets me in the lobby because sometimes you need a key to use the lifts. Otherwise they just give me their room number and I meet them in the room. It’s all agreed beforehand. Sorebackone and liubit 2
Sorebackone Posted March 5 Author Posted March 5 I’ve never tried bed but I assume the table is better. I guess it depends on the activity? I just want an erotic/therapeutic massage.
LD19847 Posted March 5 Posted March 5 If it's a massage, then unless your provider is bringing a table with them, then the provider's studio would probably be better. An established massage provider should have a decent set up and an established routine to welcome clients. A massage on a hotel bed just isn't the same as on a table. For other activities, your hotel room is generally a better option. You're in an environment that you know is clean & comfortable with fewer chances of surprises and I think somewhere "neutral" works for both sides. Sorebackone 1
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