Friday, November 14, 2014

Ayurvedic Medicine - Rasayana Day Spa


              After two weeks of dieting and taking Ayurvedic herbs, I am ready for some hands on therapy.  I arrange a Rasayana day spa appointment.  Getting the appointment is the hardest part. Apparently, Ayurvedic medicine, like other forms of alternative medicine, is quite popular in Asheville.  The first appointment I can arrange is two weeks away.  Finally, the day arrives.  Much to my delight, the Ayurvedic center is now located in North Asheville. As I pull up in my car, I appreciatively note the center is in a turn of the century home in an eclectic area of town.  I like it when my preconceived notions are realized.  This is much better than the yuppie section of town where it previously sat.  I arrive at 12:30 p.m. on the dot.  Despite my goal of relaxation, I hope I am not forced to wait - I am playing hooky from work, and I don’t want to be gone too long.  I toss my pager in the front console of my car and beseech it to remain silent for the next two hours.  I also turn off my phone.  Receiving pages and calls from the hospital will not help me relax.

            I sink into a comfortable couch in the front room.  The smell of incense wafts through the building.  A sign alerts me that a session is in progress.  After only a few minutes, the Ayurvedic doctor beckons me to follow him upstairs.  The Ayurvedic office is located in the front room of the house on the second floor.  There is a massage table in the center of the room and Indian art on the walls.  I also see the shelves of crushed herbs made the trip, as well as the three foot high elephant Buddha.  He asks how I feel and if I have been following the dietary prescription he suggested.  I say that I have.  I mention that the herbs are not so tasty.  He says their smell and texture are part of the therapy.  He is not opposed to my adding lemon juice to the mixture of hot water and herbs, as I have been doing, but says I should also experience the herbs on their own (no way in hell, I think to myself).  He then introduces me to his female assistant, and we get down to business.  They step out of the room while I fully undress and cover myself with a warm cover while lying on the massage table.

            Upon their return, gentle music is turned on - piano playing, followed by various reed instruments - quite soothing.  Over the next hour, I experience the Abhyanga (warm herbal oil massage).  The two practitioners work in unison - one starting on my head and face and the other on my feet.  I am very squeamish about anyone touching the bottoms of my feet.  Usually, the experience is anything but relaxing.  Amazingly, I tolerate it and even like it.  Perhaps having one person kneading my scalp while the soles of my feet are massaged provides the necessary tactile distraction.  He even massages my ears.  He places mint drops (or something similar) in my nose to open my sinuses.  The next hour is decadent:  two sets of hands rubbing me from stem to stern, front and back with warm herbal oil.  I have never received such attention.  I later read the oil is a liquid form of fat that is well absorbed through the skin.  Purportedly, it enters my circulation and binds to toxins which are eliminated through normal processes.  This form of detoxification sure beats the heck out of the UltraSimple Diet I did last month.  The hour rapidly passes.  When it is over, I reluctantly move on to the next stage of my day spa package, the Basha Swedana, or herbal steam bath.

            The doctor leads me, still fully disrobed except for a small hand towel, to a single person sauna in the corner of the room.  The front of the steam bath swings open to reveal a small bench.  The door is closed, and my whole body is enveloped, except for an opening for my head.  Slowly, steam emanates from the floor of the chamber.  It feels nice and warm.  I wish I had one of these at home.  It is a bit strange though:  while my body is bathed in steam, my head is out in the room just hanging out.  It reminds me of the Halloween gag of the talking head poking through a table as if it is the main course for dinner.  Meanwhile, the Ayurvedic doctor and his helper are milling around the room setting up for the next stage of my experience.  It gives me a chance to ask some questions.  I ask “Where do you get the jars of powdered herbs?” and “Have you traveled to India?”  He replies some of the herbs are purchased from U.S. based companies, while he acquires others through his sources in India (my fears are realized . . . Indian herbs . . . toxic metals - I try not to show my concern).  He has spent time in India, and his mentors are native Indians who trained him here in the United States.

I then ask about the other Ayurvedic methods of cleansing I read about - bleeding, emetics, and laxatives.  He says he uses all of these methods, but primarily for special cases.  He explains that in India, leeches are often used, but here in the U.S., he just encourages patients to donate blood and follow this with a diet of cleansing herbs.  He says that dermatologic conditions respond particularly well to bleeding while emetics, or herbs that induce vomiting, are useful for treating conditions such as gastric reflux disease.  He also uses laxatives.  The goal of all of these therapies is to help remove toxins, or alma, from one’s system. He mostly focuses on dietary changes, herbal meds, and day spa treatments, such as I have been receiving.  It appears I have been receiving “Panchakarma – lite.”  This is fine with me, but it is fascinating that the more “alternative” aspects of Ayurvedic medicine are fully embraced locally.  After about twenty minutes in the steam bath, I am ready for my final treatment of the day, a Shirodhara.

            Shirodhara involves slowly pouring liquid over one’s head - shiro (head) and dhara (flow).  I return to the massage table, and the assistant dims the lights and places a small wet towel over my eyes.  The soothing music is resumed, and over the next 30 minutes, warm sesame seed oil is slowly poured over my forehead.  The oil is released from a suspended pot that resembles a honeypot with a nozzle on the bottom.  The oil runs over my forehead and then oozes through my hair and is collected in a basin below my head and recycled.  The doctor says  most people find it very relaxing and are able to enter a meditative state.  He is not kidding.  Here I am, lying naked on a table with only a thin sheet covering me while a stranger pours oil over my head, and I actually fall asleep - unprecedented.  Eventually, the music stops, and I wake up.  I sit up, wrap myself in the sheet, and walk to a shower.  I look in the mirror, and I appear ready to audition for the movie Grease.

            After a quick shower, I pay my bill, a cool $199, but well worth it, and I drive back to work.  Fortunately, the rest of the afternoon is not too taxing.  I don’t think I could have handled it if it had been really busy.  I have completed my Rasayana Day Spa.  This spa treatment combined with one more week of herbs, and my special diet and my self-determined panchakarma will be complete.

 

Next week -  Ayurveda - Is there evidence to back it up?

No comments:

Post a Comment