Enter Gaia (pronounced guy-uh) in La Jolla and you know
youve found a living workshop for feng shui. Owner Rhana Pytell has created a sensuous
environment profuse with orchids, original artwork and entrancing sounds. In one of the
relaxation rooms, a plate of scrumptious chocolate-chip cookies is offered with the requisite
herbal teas and fruit waters. Surely balance must exist here.
Todays treatment is the banya. Thats Finnish for sauna, but
that doesnt even begin to capture what lies ahead. The technique combines hot and cold,
intense aromatherapy, a series of massages and a eucalyptus tapotementwhere bunches of
the healing trees round leaves are gently thrashed over the body. Theres no pain
here, and honest to goodness, it feels like hundreds of teeny, tiny hands going up and down
the body. Banya is available in San Diego only at Gaia, and on this day it was administered
by Amy, a quietly energetic young woman who should be a national treasure.
The philosophy behind banya is to boost energy and promote health through
applications designed to alternately dilate and flood the bodys circulatory system.
Technical-sounding stuff, that, but look whats involved in this two-hour extravagance:
essential oils of lavender and peppermint, a lemon-lime hydrating solution, melted honey
mango butter, mandarin-jasmine body butter, a cold citrus-sage moisturizer, chilled marble
stones and a lengthy scalp massage using peppermint oil. Between these ministrations of
fragrances are saunas, steam mists and buckets of ice water to pour over ones head. It
is a multisensory journey of glorious proportions.
Your correspondent now manages to stagger into another treatment room to meet Lupe, whose
healing hands are downright inspirational as she indulges her client in a one-hour European
facial. The word bliss only begins to capture the sensation.
Gaia Day Spa, 1299 Prospect Street, La Jolla, 858-456-8797,
www.gaiadayspa.com.