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Esalen for me, with Lomi Lomi close behind!
sad...i have NO idea what that is. :(
Mike Hinkle said:Esalen for me, with Lomi Lomi close behind!
http://www.esalen.org/
Lisa said:sad...i have NO idea what that is. :(
Mike Hinkle said:Esalen for me, with Lomi Lomi close behind!
Hey Mike...
I took a quick look at the link you provided. I'm still a little unclear. i'm gathering there are ocean sounds during the massage to mimic the heartbeat as well as where the method comes from. but is Esalen a modality or a technique? I read this...
The practitioner brings a knowledge of strokes (many have roots in Swedish Massage), of muscles and bones, of movement, of listening to the body as well as the words. Prior to the session, he/she pays attention to his own physical comfort, and quiets down internal chatter to welcome inner guidance, or intuition. As he massages, the practitioner responds to the signs of relaxation: deepened breath, enhanced circulation, a sigh, perhaps flutters of the eyelids. Each session is unique, tailored by personal requests, comfort level, physical tension and release, the felt sense of intuition.
but i'm unclear as to how different that is from what we learn to do in a regular swedish session. this part here...
emphasizes the need for grounding of the practitioner; of nurturing intent; the quality of contact; listening, feeling, and seeing with your hands; and the long, lengthening, integrating strokes with full hand contact which can bring awareness to the body. It explains how the long strokes are also a way to assess the client's body and to learn where to direct attention during the session
sounds like a wonderful effleurage where the MT is present. very similiar to what we were taught through our MT program at CCMT.
am i missing something?
also what is Lomi Lomi?
Mike Hinkle said:http://www.esalen.org/
Lisa said:sad...i have NO idea what that is. :(
Mike Hinkle said:Esalen for me, with Lomi Lomi close behind!
All you knead is love, love, love is all you knead.
Hey Mike...
I took a quick look at the link you provided. I'm still a little unclear. i'm gathering there are ocean sounds during the massage to mimic the heartbeat as well as where the method comes from. but is Esalen a modality or a technique? I read this...
The practitioner brings a knowledge of strokes (many have roots in Swedish Massage), of muscles and bones, of movement, of listening to the body as well as the words. Prior to the session, he/she pays attention to his own physical comfort, and quiets down internal chatter to welcome inner guidance, or intuition. As he massages, the practitioner responds to the signs of relaxation: deepened breath, enhanced circulation, a sigh, perhaps flutters of the eyelids. Each session is unique, tailored by personal requests, comfort level, physical tension and release, the felt sense of intuition.
but i'm unclear as to how different that is from what we learn to do in a regular swedish session. this part here...
emphasizes the need for grounding of the practitioner; of nurturing intent; the quality of contact; listening, feeling, and seeing with your hands; and the long, lengthening, integrating strokes with full hand contact which can bring awareness to the body. It explains how the long strokes are also a way to assess the client's body and to learn where to direct attention during the session
sounds like a wonderful effleurage where the MT is present. very similiar to what we were taught through our MT program at CCMT.
am i missing something?
also what is Lomi Lomi?
Mike Hinkle said:http://www.esalen.org/
Lisa said:sad...i have NO idea what that is. :(
Mike Hinkle said:Esalen for me, with Lomi Lomi close behind!
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