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Healing in nature

Shalini Yeap
Shalini Yeap • 6 min read

Uncovering the benefits of the Japanese forest bathing concept, shinrin-yoku, through an immersive experience at Mulu’s 60 million-year-old primeval rainforest

SINGAPORE (Sept 23): The term shinrin-yoku was coined in 1982 by Tomohide Akiyama, the then director-general of the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Agency, during the height of Japan’s economic boom. This concept of forest bathing — introduced about three decades after the buna massacre, in which a large number of Japanese beech trees were cut down in the name of development — comes from the principle of the healing effects of being in harmony with nature and is part of a forest protection campaign. Its objective is, arguably, two-pronged — if people were encouraged to visit the forest for the betterment of their health, perhaps they would be more likely to care for it.

The shinrin-yoku concept formed the crux of the forest immersion sessions under Mulu Marriott Resort & Spa’s recent Ayus Wellness retreat. The inaugural programme focused on “Clarity & Peace of Mind”, one of the resort’s three signature wellness journeys besides “Anti-Aging & Radiance” and “Energy & Strength”.

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