Sacred Bali: A Path of Spirit & Serenity
Photo 1 Sacred Bali: A Path of Spirit & Serenity
Photo 2 Sacred Bali: A Path of Spirit & Serenity

Sacred Bali: A Path of Spirit & Serenity in Indonesia, Sacred Balinese Healing

Duration
8 hours
Language
English
Guests
2-20

Discover Bali's sacred energy on a peaceful healing journey through Sangeh Monkey Forest and Taman Beji Gria Temple, where you'll join a traditional water purification ritual and connect deeply with Balinese spirituality, guided by locals in natures calming embrace.

Highlights:

  • Sacred forest walk at Sangeh Monkey Forest
  • Traditional water blessing at Taman Beji Gria Temple
  • Cultural and spiritual guidance from locals
  • A peaceful, healing experience in nature
Highlights:
  • Experience the serenity of nature while reconnecting with Balis sacred spiritual energy
  • Take part in a traditional water purification ritual at Taman Beji Gria Temple led by local priests
  • Cleanse your body and spirit as you release negativity and welcome renewed balance
  • Learn the cultural and spiritual meaning behind Balinese rituals from your knowledgeable local guide
  • Embrace a day of reflection, healing, and inner peace in the heart of Bali
Includes:
  • Sacred Bali tour
  • Driver-guides
  • Hotel pick up and drop off
  • Entrance fees
Not included:
  • Personal expenses
  • Food
  • Drinks

Bali Healer Tour Spiritual: Water Purification at Taman Beji Gria

A bali healer tour spiritual experience that combines the Sangeh Monkey Forest with a traditional water purification ritual at Taman Beji Gria Temple is one of the most personally meaningful things a visitor can do on the island, and it is genuinely different from everything else on Bali's standard tour menu. The balinese spiritual tradition of melukat, the water purification ritual performed at sacred spring temples, has been practiced for centuries as a form of cleansing for both body and spirit, releasing negativity and restoring balance through contact with holy spring water channeled through carved stone spouts. Your driver-guide, a local with deep knowledge of Balinese Hinduism and personal intention embedded in every explanation, collects you from your hotel and begins the journey with a walk through Sangeh Monkey Forest, a sacred nutmeg forest home to a large Balinese macaque population and three Hindu temples. After the forest, the tour moves to Taman Beji Gria Temple, where local priests guide the water purification ritual with prayer, canang sari offerings of flowers and incense, and reflection on personal intention. The spiritual cleansing experience here is serious, respectful, and deeply moving, and visitors are expected to participate with genuine care and openness rather than as passive observers. The balinese ritual of melukat is not performance tourism. It is a living healing tradition, and the guide provides cultural context, insights, and recommendation on proper dress and behavior before you arrive.

Tips for Your Bali Spiritual Healer Tour

Practical tips for a spiritually meaningful and comfortable experience:

  • Wear a sarong and temple sash. Both are required for entry to Taman Beji Gria Temple. Your driver-guide usually carries spares, but confirm at booking.
  • Bring a change of clothes. The water purification ritual involves standing under flowing spring water. A dry set of clothes makes the journey home comfortable.
  • Approach the ritual with intention. The balinese believe personal intention sets the energy of the healing. Come with something specific you want to release or invite.
  • Best season is April to October. Bali's dry season keeps the jungle trails and temple grounds accessible without heavy rain.
  • No prior knowledge of Balinese spirituality is required. Your guide explains everything, including the meaning of canang sari offerings and the prayer structure.
  • Leave your phone in your bag during the ritual. Photography during the water purification ceremony is generally discouraged out of respect for the priests and other participants.

The tour includes hotel pickup and entrance fees, so the experience is logistically straightforward from start to finish.

More Facts About This Balinese Experience

Bali's healer tradition entered global pop culture through Elizabeth Gilbert's memoir Eat Pray Love (2006) and its 2010 film adaptation starring Julia Roberts, which depicted a Balinese healer named Ketut Liyer in Ubud. The film brought a surge of visitors to Bali specifically seeking spiritual and healing experiences, and the island's water temple tradition has since become one of the most requested authentic cultural experiences among travelers. Taman Beji Gria, the temple visited on this tour, is one of several sacred spring temples in the Ubud region used specifically for melukat water purification rituals by local Balinese Hindus.

What to Combine with This Bali Spiritual Tour

After a morning of spiritual cleansing and forest walking, Bali's landscape offers several ways to continue the journey. A 3-hour adventure through Hidden Canyon Beji Guwang near Gianyar, a narrow volcanic gorge requiring some light scrambling, offers a physical contrast to the morning's quiet reflection. A full 10-hour tour through Ubud's rice terraces, waterfalls, and Hindu temples extends the cultural depth of the day across northern Bali's most photographed landscape. The Taman Beji Gria purification ceremony itself is also available as a standalone 2-hour focused experience for those who want to go deeper into the ritual without the Sangeh forest component.

Who Gets the Most from This Tour

Solo travelers going through significant life transitions find the water purification ritual format profoundly useful. Couples visiting Bali for the first time who want genuine cultural immersion rather than a beach package get a deeply meaningful shared experience from this tour. Travelers who have read Eat Pray Love and want to engage with Balinese spirituality directly rather than just visiting temples from the outside find this the most authentic version available. Groups of friends with an interest in wellness and culture naturally gravitate toward this format as Bali's most personal offering.

Free cancellation

Plans are subject to change, and sometimes unexpectedly. So you can cancel your event free of charge 24 hours before the start.
Ketut
With GetExperience since 2022

Meeting point

Ubud, Gianyar Regency, Bali, Indonesia

©GetExperience Inc. GetExperience™ is a trademark of GetExperience Inc. All rights reserved.
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