Skip to main content

The Wonder of Watsu


  Watsu water healing can offer a profoundly therapeutic effect for the body. 
 
Steve Karle performing Watsu
 
Performed in a shallowround pool, heated to 35°Can hour-long Watsu session can be the ultimate relaxant, as the therapist cradles you, taking on all your weight and allowing you to relax into their arms while you simply drift, with little floats around your ankles. A good practitioner enables you to feel safe, nurtured, comfortable and vulnerableall at once.  

The practitioner then tunes into your body and guides youlaunching into stretching, twirling, curling and twisting movements, allowing your body to float freely. Like an aquatic dance, you glide through the water together as the therapist pulls you, and your spine starts to snake and your limbs start to sway naturally.  

Once at ease with the water play, the practitioner applies a clip on your nose and eventually submerges your face. Andfor most people, this holds the biggest transformational charge. Every time your head goes under water, you start to slip more and more into a hypnagogic state. Completely entranced, you will feel as if you’re floating through outer space, breaking through an invisible wall each time your head dips below the surface and you become more self-aware, yet oblivious to the world.  

suitable treatment for people with trust issues, or ones who have experienced trauma in the water, water healing can feel liberating and soothing as you give in to the therapist and learn to trust them completely. So it not only calms the body, but also the mind and spirit. It is even believed to help heal wounds of separation and renew the sense of connection and oneness we share with others.  

“Shock and trauma, whether physical, emotional or psychological, are events that are experienced within our bodies; they are defined by a ‘fight-or-flight’ situation,” says Steve Karle, a Watsu and Craniosacral therapistwho teaches at the British School of Aquatic Bodywork’s Foundationintroduced and developed Watsu for Aman resortsand practises at London’s first Watsu pool at Hotel Café Royal’s Akasha Holistic Wellbeing Centre. “When there is no way to fight or flee, the nervous system freezes as a self-defence mechanism. This response mobilises a great deal of energy in our bodies, and after coming out of the freeze response, it often remains trapped in our system unless we know how to release the charge. By allowing the body to naturally unwind in the freedom of water, such pent-up energy can find its way towards expression and integration. 

The concept of time disappears, and, in its place, you’ll discover a new sense of being that emerges. You succumb to the process, completely surrendering control andby now, the chatter in your mind has long gone, and your worries are literally floating away, providing space for creative thought.  

“The space of the pool begins to feel infinite, like the ocean or the sky,” says Watsu master Michael Hallockwho hosts regular training retreats across the globe and offers Watsu sessions at Fivelements Bali and Hong Kong. “Time becomes relative as your mind recedes into a dream-like state where sensations and images merge. Perhaps you sense yourself as a baby in your mother’s womb. Within this space of deep peace and relaxation, memories and emotions may also surface, and reminders of experiences finally find the receptivity to be met and integrated. The constant struggle with life also slips away, opening into a newfound acceptance of life, of yourself. A deep gratitude arises. Even tears may mingle with the water, and you feel a deep connection to this life.” 

Water healing encompasses the entire family of Aquatic Bodywork therapies that sprung from Watsu, which combines the benefits of Shiatsu massage and the healing powers of water. Developed by Harold Dull in California in 1980, Watsu was mainly about stretching, but therapists and recipients quickly noticed the profound transformational effects it had on people, and it eventually developed into an emotional and energetic treatment. 

Available across the globe at wellness places, including Fivelements in Bali, Chiva-Som in ThailandAmanemu in Japan, Amanzoe in Greece, Rancho La Puerta in the USand Hotel Café Royal’s Akasha Holistic Wellbeing Centre in London to name a few, Watsu has taken the world by storm. 

Vivienne Tang receiving Aquatic Bodywork from Isabella Matrundola 

Water healing has a profound therapeutic effect on the body. The buoyancy of the water allows the spinal column to be moved in a way that isn’t possible on land. Therefore, it can relieve acute pain, enhance lymphatic and blood circulation, activate neuro-pathways for healing, decrease anxiety, decompress the spine and joints, as well as induce relaxation and improve sleep and memory.  So who exactly is it for? 

Anyone who’s willing to experience something new and unique,” says advanced Watsu and water-dance practitioner Isabella Matrundola, who offers sessions at Fivelements in Bali. 

Anyone who wishes to relax; re-centre; let gorelease tension; rest; rechargeexperience a renewed sense of fluidity and heart connection to selfanyone who has experienced a traumatic experience with water; all those who love water or fear it. My unconditional presence and each movement are an unspoken invitation to let go, surrender body weight and mind activity, and drop into a safe and nurturing space of grace. Releasing of deepest-held tensions, freeing the spine, soothing and calming the nervous system are just a few of the numerous physical benefits. What happens on the emotional and mental levels belongs to each individual experience, and again it can be anything from pleasant to deeply transformative, depending on how ready one is to meet the experience fully, by accepting the invitation.” 

Discover more about wellness travel at Destination Deluxe

This article originally appeared in Billionaire's Water Issue, June 2018. To subscribe contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.