Lomi Lomi Draping and Movements
I took classes in the Auntie Margaret style of Lomi Lomi from Alice Belusko in Ft. Lauderdale. She interned with Aunti for two years. According to her, there are about five styles of Lomi Lomi, although Auntie Margaret was the one that first released it to the general public.
This style uses forearm strokes and a lot of static compressions to really get in and work out muscle problems. I use this when people ask for deep tissue as it is easier on me, and does more for the client.
When in Arizona last year, I found someone that does Temple style of Lomi Lomi. They not only do, they teach at the Arizona School for Integrative Studies. Not ever having seen it, I decided to go have one.
I enjoyed it a lot (although I was a little too focused on stealing moves
). I found it to be a very pleasant style which I would caeforum.xxxorize as a Hawaiian version of Swedish done with the forearms. (The mark of Lomi Lomi is that it uses the forearms instead of the hands.) I got to talk to the therapist (who is also the instructor) at some length and ask questions.
Now, the Auntie Margaret style uses standard draping and does not need to addres the bare glutes. In fact, much of it can be done with the client completely clothed because it is the compressions that do the real work.
The picture shown is an accurate depiction of the Temple Lomi draping. They fold the sheet down from the top, and then in from the sides so that it covers the break between the glutes or the genitals if the client is face up. To properly do Temple Lomi Lomi, the genitals are the only thing covered when the client is face up no matter what sex they are. In my massage, I don't remember any under body work. What was done was rhythmic and flowing, which is what Temp style is supposed to be. It is supposed to let you zone and meditate.
This is something I want to take, not because I intend to do two different Lomi routines, but so I can steal some moves and incorporate them into my routine. At one point, I did get a chance to talk with Tom Cochran who teaches this in various places across the country.
He told me that this style can be done with proper draping, or with the client leaving their underwear on. The time to move the drape does change and interrupt the flow of the massage.
Now let's be real. There are a lot more people in this country that are conservative when it come to nudity than not. For most of them, this method of draping would be very scary. So, as therapists, we work within the client's comfort zone. If we are so strict that we can not make changes in what we do, then we have no business doing this as a profession. So, we modify what we are doing, and change the draping to work with each individual we see (and the key word there is individual). (I talked to a lady that had a Temple session in Hawaii. She was extremely surprised when they undraped her to this level. At the same time, in my first night of massage class, we were shown a video of the 'school massage' as done on the school's owner by her teacher. During the massage, the therapist undraped her to the waist while she was supine, and then did effleurage from neck to navel. And this was Swedish massage. Uhh, no, we did not do this for our massages.) The point is that people have different comfort levels based on area of the country, and we work with them. (We also abide by the laws of the state or region.)
As far as the move being shown, I don't remember this being done to me in my session. Looking at it, and trying it on my partner, it seems very clunky. I would think that the area being massaged could be done differently, and that doesn't mean changing the position of the subject. I know that Temple Lomi puts the subject in a specific position and then does the entire side from that point. I could see getting the inner leg with a forearm, and then the front from the other side.
Again, it is all comfort. Comfort for the client
and the therapist.
But that's only my opinion. I could be wrong.