Japanese Way to Aromatherapy


In modern day Japan, the traditional culture of aromatherapy has been kept intact, yet concurrently there evolved the Modern Japanese Aromatherapy, a form adapted from Western aromatherapy techniques, using primarily essential oils instead of incenses. As always, the modern Japanese Aromatherapy method is infused with the unique Japanese approach to this form of art, and a Japanese way of appreciation evolved into being.

While the delivery format for traditional Japanese aromatherapy is incense, modern Japanese aromatherapy uses essential oils. What then, links the two? What makes them “Japanese”? The short form answer is really in one word – the heart (“心”).

Traditional Japanese Shintoism believes that everything has a soul. This is so ingrained into Japanese culture, that every time they have a meal, they thank the food for contributing to their wellbeing (“itadakimasu, 頂きます”). This simple gesture has two implications in moulding the Japanese culture: firstly, it implies appreciation and respect for other beings. Secondly, it implies that there are spiritual dimensions outside of the material realm. The cultivation of the heart, considered to belong in the spiritual dimension and undetectable, then demands constant attention to details in the physical realm.

Hence, this appreciation of essential oils, a product of nature, and the application of the essential oil knowledge through the use of “heart”, defines the Japanese way to aromatherapy.