The New Zealand Herald

Ayurvedic Healing

Annemarie Quill retreats to Escape Haven in Bali for a week of Ayurvedic healing

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THE PROMISE:

Massage oils and teas to suit your personalit­y, turmeric muffins, and that strange U-shaped copper pipe you noticed on your flatmate’s bathroom shelf (it’s a tongue cleaner by the way) — all are signs of a resurgence in Ayurvedic healing.

Ayurvedic retreats are a relative newcomer to the well-cation scene. Escape Haven’s Ayurvedic healing retreat for women is set in an opulent Balinese villa in hip Canggu.

Designed to nurture body, mind and soul, it offers a week of Ayurvedic-based yoga, workshops, spa, healing treatments, and delicious organic food.

It includes an Ayurvedic consultati­on with retreat leader Marieke Kouwenhove­n, who prescribes a programme of practical tools and techniques to incorporat­e into your lifestyle.

The retreat’s owner, 44-year-old New Zealander Janine Hall, has been seeing an Ayurvedic doctor since she suffered burnout 12 years ago. Since then, she believes Ayurvedic cleanses helped her fall pregnant naturally twice when Western fertility doctors said the odds were as low as 1 per cent.

Hall says she has witnessed Ayurveda help people with issues ranging from depression, anxiety and stress, to obesity, chronic pain and more.

THE HISTORY:

Dubbed the “sister science of yoga”, Ayurveda is a system of preventive health care developed in India more than 5000 years ago and still used today.

Its holistic approach is based on the belief that health problems happen when mind, body and spirit are out of balance.

Ayurvedic practition­ers use tailored healing tools to help people find balance. These include lifestyle changes, nutrition, specific yoga practices, herbs, teas, cleansing routines, and massages.

THE SCIENCE:

In New Zealand, Ayurveda is considered alternativ­e medicine.

Retreat owner Hall believes there’s an undeniable connection between mind and body in health that mainstream medicine is only just waking up to.

“I love how Ayurveda is so ancient, yet so ahead of Western medicine in this respect. The Ayurvedic way is to approach things holistical­ly and not in isolation in a bid to restore balance.

“It treats the causes of disease and suffering and not just the symptoms. It takes into account how the mind drives the physiology of the body and in turn can lead to disease.”

THE REALITY:

Kouwenhove­n checks my pulse and tongue. To identify my dosha she observes my physical make up, and questions me about temperamen­t and behaviours.

Some questions are curious: Do I have a penetratin­g gaze?

Am I indecisive? Not sure.

My doshas are determined as pitta for the body, and vata for the mind.

Kouwenhove­n takes me through various ways to balance my doshas, starting with diet.

A Pitta fire type like me is drawn to hot, stimulatin­g things.

Yes, I love chillies. But if I have three coffees for breakfast, do hot yoga, a Thai curry for lunch, sunbathe, I might find myself the next day in a bad mood or with headaches. I can counter it with a cool swim in the ocean.

I like that it is not a dogma, you don’t have to avoid things, but simply recognise their impact.

She designs a morning routine for me: tongue cleaning to flush out ama (toxic “goo” thought to be the root of many health issues), followed by lemon water, meditation, yoga, and a warm breakfast, which I must eat mindfully.

Will the kids ever get to school?

A lifestyle change is a commitment says Kouwenhove­n. We repeat unhealthy patterns easily — rushing, drinking our three coffees. So it is possible to substitute healthier habits.

Like moon bathing. The moon, like the sun has restorativ­e energies that benefit our body and mind, and a cooling moon will help balance my fire dosha, she says.

I resolve to give it a go, wondering how it will go down in Mt Maunganui. Will I wear moon screen? Moon glasses?

Regular oil massages are also recommende­d. The retreat’s Balinese Ayurvedic healer, Anatari, offers an eclectic menu of healing treatments.

I try Abhyangam massage, a full body massage with healing oils. Another day she uses heated bamboo to stimulate circulatio­n, mood and remove toxins.

In Kativasti, she builds a reservoir of dough on the lower back into which she pours warm oil.

The Elakizhi massage uses boluses made of chopped leaves tied in linen cloth which are then heated over oil.

Some believe regular Elakizhi reduces not only pain and anxiety but can help with weight loss. A massage to make me skinny? To hell with science, Ayurveda, I believe in you.

THE VERDICT:

The retreat offers a fascinatin­g introducti­on to Ayurveda, with rejuvenati­ng massage and spa treatments, calming yoga, access to healers and the expert retreat team who enable personal growth and insight.

It has put me back on track to living a happier, healthier, more balanced and conscious life. Friends comment I am glowing like new.

Plus, you are in magical Bali, in the tropical jungle in a luxury villa with pool and butler, wonderful food and outstandin­g service in one of the world’s best wellness retreats.

Back home, my new copper tongue cleaner is in my make-up bag. My midnight moon bathing session is pencilled in on my birthday. I might throw an Ayurvedic moon party. Spicy chillies optional.

Six-night, seven-day Ayurvedic retreats at Escape Haven Canggu start from US$2195pp including luxury villa accommodat­ion, food, daily yoga and meditation classes, spa treatments, airport transfers. Flights are additional.

Ayurvedic healing treatments are also offered at Escape Haven’s new “little sister” brand Palm Tree House at a lower price point with fewer inclusions. See www.escapehave­n.com and thepalmtre­ehouse.com

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