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Beth Santos

Beth Santos

    Travel

    You Want Me to Do What? 4 Things to Know About Your First Turkish Bath

    by Beth Santos May 1, 2020
    written by Beth Santos

    If you’re anything like me (and I realize I’m in the minority here), the phrase “Turkish bath” evokes less of a sense of warm relaxation than it does a heavy-hanging dread. The age-old tradition has been around in Turkish culture for hundreds of years, and is known internationally for its hot air and cool water application as well as its open (what some of us would describe as partially public) nakedness.

    Yet when I was offered a visit to the Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam as part of our sponsored visit to Turkey on behalf of Turkish Airlines (see disclosure statement here), my nerves were overpowered by my thirst for history and culture. So with an open mind and a traveler’s heart, and I dove in, towel-first.

    If you’re headed to your first Turkish bath, here are four things you’ll like to know beforehand.

    1. Hamams have been a part of Turkish culture for centuries.

    Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam
    Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam

    The Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam is like nothing I’d ever known. Instead of the traditional spa-like atmosphere that I expect in the United States, this felt more like a religious experience. This particular hamam is a nearly 500 year-old Turkish bath located right near the famous Hagia Sophia. It was built in 1556 by request of the wife of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, constructed where the ancient public baths of Zeuxippus (100-200 AD) used to stand, as well as the Temple of Zeus.

    The baths consist of two separate sections – one for men, one for women – with entirely separate entrances. The baths historically were as much a place of cleansing as they were for celebration, often being the site of evening music and socializing.

    2. Yes, you will take all your clothes off. But only if you want to.

    Getting ready for my bath, Turkish style
    Getting ready for my bath, Turkish style

    Traditionally, Turkish baths are best when the patron is entirely naked (except for a tiny paper thong, in our case, which provides a laughable amount of coverage). Not only is it part of the experience, but it also makes the cleansing process more efficient (we all know where soap bubbles can get trapped while wearing a bikini).

    When you first enter the hamam, you’ll remove your shoes and walk into what’s known as the “cold room”. Of course, the room isn’t cold at all — it’s just not hot like the rooms following it. The massive and architecturally gorgeous space is filled with benches with pillows for lounging before the service begins. You will be given a pestamal, or a silk wrap, and a private changing room where you can keep your belongings.

    Changing rooms at the Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam
    Changing rooms at the Ayasofya Hurrem Sultan Hamam

    This is the point where you can decide if you want to wear a swimsuit underneath your pestamal, or your birthday suit. Opt for the latter – trust me, it’s worth the experience.

    3. Get ready for the best bath of your life.

    After returning to the cold room, your attendant will walk you into the hot room, a roughly 110-degree sauna where your skin will soften as it prepares for its scrub. Each guest is walked into the room while holding the hand of her attendant, a historic tradition that gives a nod to the Sultan-like experience. After this, you are seated next to a fountain of warm water. The attendant uses beautiful metal bowls to splash water over you, varying the temperature between warm and cold.

    After the hot room, you are led into a “warm room” where your attendant scrubs your skin. Watch in mild horror as layers of skin slough off your body (even though the feeling itself is actually lovely) and are then washed away by endless bowls of water.

    Once appropriately exfoliated, you are guided back to the hot room where the real bathing begins. You are laid out on a large stone in the center of the room and are washed chin to toes with bubble foam. The attend takes a bucket of soapy water and inserts a massive pillow case-like fabric. She then vigorously waves the fabric back and forth in the air in order to make it extra foamy, then squeezes the bubbles out onto your body in towering piles so that you are nothing but a head with foot-tall piles of bubble foam around you. She then lightly massages your skin, washes the soap off and does it again.

    The feeling is magical.

    25

    Once everything is over, you will be properly rinsed and returned with your towel to the cold room, where you are treated to steaming cups of Turkish tea and as many Turkish delights (delicious confections of starch and sugar) as you can eat.

    4. There’s nothing more powerful than the overwhelming feeling of sisterhood.

    Lillie of AroundtheWorldL.com and TeachingTraveling.com and I prepare for our Turkish bath
    Lillie of AroundtheWorldL.com and TeachingTraveling.com and I prepare for our Turkish bath

    One thing I wasn’t sure about when I visited the hamam was how it would go being naked in front of people that I was only beginning to know in a professional manner. Five other female travel bloggers joined me and I’m sure we were all slightly nervous, regardless of how excited we were for the bath.

    When the time came, I think we realized the same thing – we were all women, and our existence as women connected us together in a deeper way than anything else. At the same time, we became equally vulnerable, and in a way that strengthened us. No longer were we professional bloggers with personas to keep up. Our physical nakedness made us emotionally open, and we connected in a way that I’m sure is precisely why Turkish baths have existed as long as they have.

    If you’re debating trying out a Turkish bath, my advice for you is this: Do it. Do it even if you feel nervous or awkward or afraid. The experience is as cleansing as it is holistic, and I can think of no better way to connect on a new level with the beautiful and historic culture of Turkey.

    May 1, 2020 0 comment
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    2016 Is the Year Wanderful Will Explode. Here’s Why.

    by Beth Santos April 19, 2020
    by Beth Santos April 19, 2020

    When I started Wanderful, I had no plan. All I knew was that there wasn’t enough out there to support women who wanted t

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  • community

    Introducing our International Women’s Day Events Around the World

    by Beth Santos February 5, 2020
    by Beth Santos February 5, 2020

    Our Wanderful chapters around the world are gearing up for an amazing International Womens Day 2019. Join us for an even

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  • Travel

    Patmos: The Greek Islands’ Best-Kept Secret

    by Beth Santos November 17, 2019
    by Beth Santos November 17, 2019

    Dont miss this view! Image courtesy of Beth Santos.
    Everyone knows about the luxurious and idyllic Greek Islands. Honeym

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    Wanderful and Slice: Now homesharing can be safer than ever before

    by Beth Santos August 18, 2019
    by Beth Santos August 18, 2019

    When we launched our homesharing network, we wanted to make sure that every woman traveler had an affordable place to st

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  • community

    The incredible Painted Hills and why no one talks about them

    by Beth Santos July 2, 2019
    by Beth Santos July 2, 2019

    Last week, we hiked through the amazing sights of the Pacific Northwest on an unforgettable trip sponsored by Corning In

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  • Travel

    Smith Rock: The modern day “Land Before Time”

    by Beth Santos May 14, 2019
    by Beth Santos May 14, 2019

    Is Smith Rock the Land Before Time? With towers of ancient basalt, lime green moss and a gently flowing river, you might

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  • Travel

    What we didn’t understand about “tough drops” until now

    by Beth Santos January 29, 2019
    by Beth Santos January 29, 2019

    We’ve spent the past few days chronicling “tough drops” around the Pacific Northwest with our friends, Corning Incorpora

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  • Travel

    Things to Do in Half Moon Bay, California: 5 Adorable Secrets You Never Knew About

    by Beth Santos January 23, 2019
    by Beth Santos January 23, 2019

    If you’re not local to the Bay Area, you may have never known about all the things to do in Half Moon Bay. Yet this litt

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