Cultures Colliding: Health & Wellness Cultures Merging in Thailand

in Cross Culture2 years ago (edited)

Thai people are just so incredibly proud of the dominant healing and wellness culture here in Thailand; it surrounds you wherever you go. One of the oldest of the temples in central Bangkok, Wat Po, is dedicated to traditional Thai medicine and is inscribed with ancient medical drawings originally used for teaching.

ThaiHealingCulture1.jpg
Image Source

Wat Pho was a centre for medicine in Bangkok before it was established as a temple in the 7th century and given the name Wat Phodoram. It remained Wat Phodoram until 1801 when King Rama I restored, enlarged, and renamed the temple Wat Chetuphon; informally, it was referred to as Wat Pho.
Under King Rama III, the art of Thai massage was dying out. The king wanted to prevent this from happening, so he established a school, which is now considered to be Thailand’s first university. This school was to teach students the art of Thai massage and traditional medicine. Wat Pho has continued to be the headquarters for this kind of education since then. Source

How ingrained is it today? We have a special government department for alternative medicine, and you can even get a special medical visa which includes alternative traditional medicine treatments.

Minister of Public Health Dr. Piyasakol Sakolsathayadhorn has visited the Department of Developmental Medicine and Alternative Medicine and handed out guidelines for systematically developing Thai herbal medicine, calling on the office to work with the Ministries of Industry and Science to push forward remedies and the use of herbal medicine in the place of pharmaceuticals.Source

ThaiHealingCulture3.jpg
Image Source

It is only when you start scraping beneath the surface of these ancient traditions, that you come to appreciate that Thai traditional medicine is, in fact, a melding of many cultures. Thai massage itself is believed to have been brought from India, more than 2500 years ago, by Jivaka Kumar Bhaccha (Shivago Kompara) a friend to the Buddha who had tremendous knowledge of medicine. I see this massive statue honoring the traditional medicine lineage every time I head own the highway in the neighbouring province of Lamphun, heading towards Bangkok. It stands on the hilltop and surveys the valley below...

ThaiHealingCulture2.jpg
Image Source

The very same herbs used in Thai herbal massage and brought to Thailand by Shivago were used by the ancient Ayurvedic medicine doctors who attended Siddhartha Gautamo, who evolved to become what we now call The Buddha - the enlightened one. My spa client, Cheeva Spa here in Chiang Mai? They use the same herbal mix today.

Cheeva-Spa-Massage Ball.jpg
Image Source

But it's not just in the Thai massage culture that we see the original Ayurvedic origins, but also in the local traditional healing foods.

Whether we're talking Pandan leaves, ginger, coriander, krachai... the list of common healing foods is endless and common to not only Ayurveda and Thai healing-wellness, but also to Traditional Chinese Medicine. Every Thai hospital serves a healing & gentle Chinese style rice "medicine soup" - a rich bone broth rice soup topped with fresh ginger, garlic, green onions and sometimes fresh coriander and a cracked raw egg.

ThaiHealingCulture4.jpg
Image Source

Thai local festival or market? You see Ya Dong everywhere - a Traditional Chinese Medicine inspired herbal tonic. Occasionally, as well as herbs like ginseng, it may (in the more Chinese way) contain various animal bits like snakes, scorpions, tiger penises etc. Urgh. But you get the picture. Often consumed by men to maintain and promote sexual vigor.

ThaiHealingCulture5.jpg
Image Source

But my favorite traditional health and wellness cultural attraction, that you can find in every back alley, marketplace, temple fair or tourist center? Thai foot massage. Which is not actually Thai at all, but a modification of traditional Chinese reflexology.

ThaiHealingCulture6.jpg
Image Source

It's traditionally performed with a hard, wooden stick to dig and prod the reflexology points in the feet. It can border somewhere between pleasure and pain and is incredibly effective when practiced by a well-trained therapist. In the wrong hands? In my first year in Thailand I had an over-zealous foot masseuse break no less than 4 little bones in one foot. Ouch!

What I love about Thailand is that it is constantly evolving. Right at this moment, in the recovering-from-covid economic crisis, the Thai government has decided to dig even deeper into its traditional healing and wellness culture, and to become a global cannabis center. Every Thai public hospital already has a government sponsored Ganja Clinic, cheap and easily accessible by Thai people and tourists alike.

ThaiHealingCulture7.png
Image Source

In 2019, 39.9 million tourists visited Thailand. It’s estimated that 27.7 million will visit purely for the purpose of health and wellness in 2022, putting expenditure on health and wellness tourism at $2.5bn. The country’s recreational cannabis market has the potential to be worth $424m by 2024, according to cannabis research firm Prohibition Partners.
‘It could provide a spark’
Linn is optimistic that the bill will help Thailand rebuild its economy post-Covid. “Nothing as small as marijuana use can save [an economy], but I think it could provide a spark,” he said. Source

The other new and emerging wellness and health trend in Thailand is the Japanese Onsen. Starting to be very popular for higher end Asian tourists and thriving in the Thai culture. This one, Moncham Onsen, is not far from my home in Chiang Mai and definitely on my GOALS list (and birthday treat list).

ThaiHealingCulture8.jpg
Source

Historically, health and wellness culture evolved and grew as the disciples of the Buddha came from India with their Ayurvedic and Brahmin health training. Over centuries and, indeed, millennia, the Chinese culture to the North has slowly seeped down and enriched the Thai people.

It in a HUGE part of every Thai tourist experience, from that first visit to Wat Po in Bangkok, to the Thai Massage training, the spa culture, the Thai cooking classes teaching the preparation of traditional herbal and healing foods... to the newer experiences of Onsen and (legal!) Ganja culture.

For me, in my day to day in Northern Thailand, health & wellness is an integral part of my life.

Grateful to you @nainaztengra for the tag in your post! I'm inviting @owasco, @mamrita and @anggreklestari to join us in this fabulous challenge - but better get on it fast! 😆 @riverflows - would be so cool to see something about indigenous Australian medicine. And @trucklife-family - hit us with the Celtic traditions please!! Here is the original challenge post: https://peakd.com/hive-181017/@crossculture/health-and-wellness-culture-in-your-country-2000-hp-and-60-hbi-prize-pool 🌿

JuneGarden11.jpg
Powerful antioxidant and healing herb, Dok Anchan (Thai Blue Butterfly Pea) in my Thai garden




HiveOnBoard1.gif

Get Your FREE Hive Account



Fair Trade, Sustainable, Cruelty Free. Shipping Worldwide..png

Come check out my Pure Thai Naturals online store

TwitterTiny100x100.png
Find me on Twitter: Pure Thai Naturals @BreugelMarike & @HiveLift

Sort:  

So glad to see your entry in this. Thai alternative modes are healing are world famous, specially the massage therapies. I do it regularly and find it so soothing for the body and mind. Your article gives a good insight on the healing and wellness culture in the Country, whether it is about food or lifestyle, everything is taken care of.

Really appreciated your heads up about the challenge - I had somehow missed it. Thai culture is SO MUCH about health & wellness and that's one of the reasons I chose this as a country to live and work in. 😊

Wow, really interesting! Thanks for sharing about Thai health and wellness culture! !1UP

Thank you so much @falcout - appreciated you stopping by!! 😊

This is so very different from the US! You've sure made me want to visit. Especially for that healing soup. Is it called Congee? I recently encountered that as a remedy for extreme sickness, and find it very interesting. It sounds delicious. In US hospitals the most delicious thing is artificially flavored jello.

The chinese version of it is called congee, yes. But Thai find it a bit too boring so they add fresh ginger, a raw egg, some fried garlic etc... 😁 and yes, served in EVERY hospital!! It's remarkably gentle on the stomach, has all the feels of bone broth plus slow cooked carbs, and is a total go-to in the morning for many people. Most markets have a stall making and serving it - and they cook it ALL NIGHT to get that real richness in the broth.

Jello? Ironically probably started out as the same idea of bone broth-collagen. and yes, funny how we craved it as children when we were sick, right?

It has been extremely interesting to learn a little more about your culture, you are very fortunate to live in a culture that exalts wellness and health, I would love to read the responses of your guests: @owasco, @mamrita, @anggreklestari, @riverflows and @trucklife-family, I think it will be an enriching learning experience.

Excellent post!

Thanks for all the details

@tipu curate 2

Thank you @miriannalis - I think of Thailand as a place I have lived and worked for 20 years, but not "my" culture, per se. I don't think of ANY culture of country as "mine", actually.

But yes, it is SO SPECIAL to live n a culture that holds health and wellness as part of its value system - and like I said, it's part of the reason I chose to live here. 😊

Wonderful! Your energy and Thailand's are compatible with those health and wellness values 😊

I take the opportunity to invite you to the Holos initiative, more oriented to that personal culture. Here is the link:

https://peakd.com/hive-131951/@holos-lotus/mes-de-la-salud-el-bienestar-y-la-concienciacion-sobre-una-vida-saludable-esp-eng

OK - off to check that out!!! 😍


The rewards earned on this comment will go directly to the person sharing the post on Twitter as long as they are registered with @poshtoken. Sign up at https://hiveposh.com.

This post has been manually curated by @steemflow from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.

Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators.

Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.

Read our latest announcement post to get more information.

image.png

Please contribute to the community by upvoting this comment and posts made by @indiaunited.

Don-1UP-Cheers-Cartel-250px.png

You have received a 1UP from @falcout!

The following @oneup-cartel family members will soon upvote your post:
@weed-curator
And they will bring !PIZZA 🍕

Learn more about our delegation service to earn daily rewards. Join the family on Discord.