Qantas

Pressing the pause button at a renowned health spa

With six nights blocked out in her diary and a lot of unwinding to do, Di Webster heads to one of Asia’s most coveted health spas.

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I WAS sitting at my desk a few years ago when the notoriousl­y driven editor of the magazine I then worked for sashayed through the office in a pastel caftan, her long hair wild and untamed and her face as shiny as a freshly minted coin.

“I’ve been to Kamalaya,” she declared, without explaining if that was a place or a state of mind. A small crowd gathered. “This is the new me,” she continued. “From now on, it’s all about work/life balance.” Someone spluttered. Then, with the air of a Zen master, the world’s most unlikely hippie floated away to her corner office – and betting opened on how long the transforma­tion would last.

Kamalaya, as it turns out, is a wellness retreat on the southern tip of Koh Samui,

in Thailand. I know this because I’m sipping ginger tea in the retreat’s breezy wellness centre, the anchor point of a sprawling collection of treatment rooms where, over the next six days, I will not only meditate but also be massaged, motivated and mentored. Yes, curiosity finally kicked my cynicism to the kerb. After a busy year, I wanted whatever it was that she was having.

To start that process, I’m about to undergo bio-impedance analysis (BIA), which sounds like the work of an evil Bond villain but in fact measures the ratio of your body fat to lean muscle mass and determines the health of your cells, the state of your metabolism and what, if any, toxins are kicking around in your system. As I tick boxes on my medical history, therapists in cheery yellow martial arts-style outfits line a bench at reception, waiting for guests who, if my own experience isn’t unique, are currently in the changing room in a tangle of tablecloth-sized sarongs and disposable knickers.

Later, naturopath Lauren Scinetti draws two basic circles on my BIA report to demonstrat­e cell structure: the first one is plump and smooth; the second, depleted and jagged like a dropped dollop of scrambled eggs. Smooth is good, jagged not so much.

This consultati­on is where your goals for the stay – weight loss, detoxifica­tion – are set and your treatment schedule determined (but there are no firm rules; “Our guests are grown-ups,” says Lauren). My regular diet – Paleo-ish, with French fries and wine – has delivered me some pretty smooth cells, apparently. Though Lauren says I can have what I want from the vast Kamalaya menu – and beer and wine is available – I decide to give alcohol a miss for a week. How hard can that be in the steamy tropics when the sky streaks pink and orange at the end of the day and sun lounges line the pool near my suite? Who’d want a cocktail?

Opened in 2005, Kamalaya is the brainchild of John Stewart, who trained as a yogi in the Himalayas, and his wife, Karina, a doctor of traditiona­l Chinese medicine. The choice of site – a dramatic landscape of tropical jungle and ancient granite boulders – was sealed when John came across a cave where, for centuries, Buddhist monks meditated. But having a vision was one thing; running a 75-suite retreat was another. So in 2003, the couple brought in Swiss hotelier Marc-Antoine Cornaz as a partner. Despite his background, you won’t find a TV in your room, a morning newspaper at the door or alcohol in the minibar. Food, it seems, is just one element of the detoxing process. (Escaping may be another: this is where Fergie retreated to when her invitation to William and Kate’s wedding didn’t turn up.)

Outside the set programs – which cover everything from adrenal burnout to intensive yoga and include sleep enhancemen­t, fitness and support with life changes – there are additional daily activities. In six days I have six massages (two oil, one Thai, one head, one hands and one abdominal), one Reiki treatment, a mentoring session, two visits to the naturopath, one Pilates class, a pranayama (breath control) lesson, one aquarobics workout, one snorkellin­g trip, a cooking class and a mindfulnes­s seminar. I have more places to be than Hillary Clinton. But this is no boot camp.

“There is absolutely no pressure on you to attend anything,” notes Shiree Kay, a real estate agent from Victoria’s Dandenong Ranges who’s on her fourth visit in three years.

Admittedly I’m not on the weight-loss or detox program but when the time comes to leave I’m heavier than when I checked in. With three meals a day included, there’s a tendency to indulge (who knew roast ostrich loin was a thing?). The most popular detox offering? Mung bean risotto. No kidding – it’s delicious. As Shiree observes of the detox menu, “It’s not rabbit food.”

Now, in the interests of self-improvemen­t, I have a confession. At the end of day one, I may have sent an email to a colleague speculatin­g that six nights at Kamalaya was going to be too long; I am, I may have pointed out, a very busy woman.

Then, not long after dawn on the last day, with my forearms resting on the edge of the lap pool and the Gulf of Thailand glistening in the rising sun, I watch transfixed as tiny bees buzz around a bougainvil­lea, darting from one lipstick-pink blossom to another and another and another. There’s nothing on my mind but sheer wonder at the miracle of nature.

When I return to the office, someone says I look well. “Thanks. I’ve been to Kamalaya.”

Kamalaya recently launched group retreats. For details, visit kamalaya.com.

 ??  ?? (Clockwise from left) Kamalaya’s Alchemy Tea Lounge; the Buddhist Monks’ Cave; villas hidden amid the trees, just moments from the beach; salmon steak on the resort’s menu
(Clockwise from left) Kamalaya’s Alchemy Tea Lounge; the Buddhist Monks’ Cave; villas hidden amid the trees, just moments from the beach; salmon steak on the resort’s menu
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 ??  ?? Kamalaya’s lap pool (left); the red rocks of Boynton Canyon loom over Mii Amo, Arizona
Kamalaya’s lap pool (left); the red rocks of Boynton Canyon loom over Mii Amo, Arizona

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