Have You Seen The Buckwheat Pillow?
Have you heard about the buckwheat pillow? The
buckwheat pillow is for those of us who love pillows (and
sleeping and beds altogether) like a psycho chocolate triple
cheesecake mousse fudge decadence dessert is for those who love
chocolate. Although I am a great believer in and inhabitant of
beds (thinking I am reincarnated royalty and therefore living
in, entertaining from, and working in my bed, with its 30+
pillows),I had never seen, heard of, or read about the
buckwheat pillow until a few years ago.
Three of us were going on a road trip, having met in a
writing class I was teaching at the community college. As we
loaded the car, we two women proudly admitted the added bulk
was due to our having to bring our own pillows—for the car and
then for the hotels. My new friend, Lyndsey, showed me her
pillow: a buckwheat pillow she said, handing it to me to feel,
listen to, and smell.
The buckwheat pillow is stuffed with a carefully processed
hull mass, the grain (buckwheat, of course) specially harvested
and treated so that it contains no mold or mildew. The
buckwheat pillow is conventionally used by the Japanese people,
who have been assigning healing and preventative
characteristics to this unique sleeper for over 600 years:
they—and my friends and many others—claim that the buckwheat
pillow helps prevent stiff necks, disarms the sleeper’s
allergies, and assuages other possible ailments.
The buckwheat pillow is also unique for the senses and
sensibilities. Because the grain is loosely packed, not
stuffed, into the pillow casing, it keeps the sleeper’s
temperature down…to cool, even. Because it is loosely packed
and because it is composed of individual bead-shaped contents
(like a bean bag chair is), and not stuffed with one solid
material, it conforms to the sleeper’s shape as well as to his
or her sleep movements (which are very typically many movements
a night). And because the buckwheat pillow is lightweight, it
is modular: is great for moving around the house, the car, or
the world, even.
I mentioned the senses. The buckwheat pillow is an
interesting thing, to me, as it sounds like paper bbs when you
squish it or move it. It also feels really unique, almost as if
it were composed of tiny little knowing masseurs who intuit the
exact spots on your head that need soothing or stimulating.
And, as some buckwheat pillows are made with fragrant herbs,
they can smell lovely, as well, with their added lavender
(which is a relaxant) or other soothing, aromatic and/or spicy
smells.
So, whether you're in Michigan or Maine, the buckwheat
pillow may be just what the doctor ordered to keep
comfortable.
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