Flopdingme
New Member
One IHM call I went to showed us an old black & white Indian movie ('40s? '50s?), with the champissage man singing his song (Bollywood style before it was called Bollywood?) walking down the streen with his fold up chair, he'd unfold it and work on someone (hardly any oil, he just rubbed a bit in his hand like a barber does in movies ) and fold the chair up and move on. It was in Hindi, but our instructor was giving us a translation. Most of the moves were pretty much as per Nerendra Mehta's routine, there were even upper arm squeezes.
THAT's what IHM means to me.
I've learnt LOTS of different techniques, and I will use whatever works for the client in a treatment, pulling from any of the techniques I know, they'll get Thai, Hawaiian, MLD, Shiatsu, stones, Ayurvedic, whatever in a bit of a soup of a treatment, but that soup treatment, I would no more call a lomi lomi massage than I would call it IHM.
If someone books in for a lomi lomi, that's what they get; if someone books in for IHM, that's what they get; if someone books in for a generic treatment, they get whatever I do in that treatment which draws on a variety of modalities.
Labels ARE important. If I booked in somewhere for IHM and they told me to get undressed and get on the table, it would not be what I was expecting. I would think the person didn't know what they were doing. Maybe I wanted a traditional IHM because I didn't want to get undressed, since I have body issues, cultural standards, or whatever.
Is it if you only know IHM you want to be able to adapt it, to cater for all environments? And if you have a whole lot of modalities to draw from, you know there is no point mislabelling something, it just confuses people? you can adapt without having to call it IHM?
THAT's what IHM means to me.
I've learnt LOTS of different techniques, and I will use whatever works for the client in a treatment, pulling from any of the techniques I know, they'll get Thai, Hawaiian, MLD, Shiatsu, stones, Ayurvedic, whatever in a bit of a soup of a treatment, but that soup treatment, I would no more call a lomi lomi massage than I would call it IHM.
If someone books in for a lomi lomi, that's what they get; if someone books in for IHM, that's what they get; if someone books in for a generic treatment, they get whatever I do in that treatment which draws on a variety of modalities.
Labels ARE important. If I booked in somewhere for IHM and they told me to get undressed and get on the table, it would not be what I was expecting. I would think the person didn't know what they were doing. Maybe I wanted a traditional IHM because I didn't want to get undressed, since I have body issues, cultural standards, or whatever.
Is it if you only know IHM you want to be able to adapt it, to cater for all environments? And if you have a whole lot of modalities to draw from, you know there is no point mislabelling something, it just confuses people? you can adapt without having to call it IHM?