“Combining hot steam and wild cypress woods to soothe stiff physical muscles and slow respiratory patterns.”
In Japan, bathing is not a chore of clean hygiene; it is a sacred boundary between day and night. Central to this bath ritual is the use of Hinoki (cypress wood), a conifer native to ancient mountain slopes that contains natural insect repelling and anti-bacterial oils.
When Hinoki cypress wood or its concentrated essential oils contact hot, rising steam, they release a deep, forest-like balsamic scent. The aroma contains high amounts of alpha-pinene and cadinene, chemicals shown to lower heart rates and ease brain waves.
Soaking in a hot, cypress-scented tub is a method of physical decompression. The steam dilates capillaries, while the forest aroma cues the parasympathetic system to shut off the survival alerts of our urban brains. It is like forest-bathing inside your bathroom.
This restorative practice reminds us of the value of daily intervals. We must construct simple thresholds in our schedules where we can wash away the dust of our digital screens and reset our creative perspectives.