11 GHP Holistic Health Awards 2026 hough civilisation has made outstanding advancements through centralisation and analysis, new forms of human distress have emerged as unfortunate by-products of this progress. While it has led to structured social systems, it has also intensified expectations of efficiency, correctness, and self-regulation. Over time, these pressures can internalise and contribute to psychological and physiological strain, forming an artificial “self-held centre”. These internalisations also shape social norms: dependency is seen as weakness, vulnerability is judged, and self-worth is valued only when measured against productivity and performance. Oriénsis seeks to dissolve these artificial centres, providing a process of internal reintegration through which suffering becomes growth. The philosophy approaches health as the natural result of integration rather than the absence of disease, offering a structured yet poetic discipline that cultivates harmony in the individual and, by extension, within wider society. This school of thought is built upon three foundational pillars, emerging from long-established lineages. The first pillar draws upon the principles of Traditional Chinese Medicine, informed by the assessment sensitivity cultivated through Qigong. Oriénsis utilises an assessment approach that includes enquiry, palpation, and visual observation, guided by Yin– Yang and Five Elements theory. The second pillar is centred on Buddhist philosophy, which explores the laws of mind and consciousness. Oriénsis integrates somatic meditation and mindful enquiry to work with inner stagnation, attachment, and patterns of mental division. Individuals learn to observe experience without judgement and, over time, perceive suffering as an opportunity for clarity and growth, not a punishment or failure. Founded on a unique understanding of the connection between body, mind, and spirit, Oriénsis is an educational and therapeutic methodology that approaches healing as a holistic process of reintegration. It accompanies a path of growth, particularly for people living with chronic or complex conditions. Human distress is approached through the lens of deeper psychological, physiological, and cultural divisions—what Oriénsis describes as social disease. We heard more about Oriénsis below, as we spoke with founder Sachie Croizé Tsuyuki. Most Innovative Holistic Medicine Philosophy 2026: Oriénsis The third pillar, Japanese aesthetics, lies at the heart of Oriénsis’ education. This philosophy recognises that language, while essential for teaching, can be divisive; the act of naming can fragment experience into categories such as “normal” and “abnormal”, or “healthy” and “unhealthy”. Oriénsis aims to move beyond these dualities by reintroducing a poetic dimension to education, allowing learners to alternate between the moral space of health and the artistic realm of expression. This movement provides both structure and freedom, ensuring that each individual’s process is guided with respect, subtlety, and precision. Through Oriénsis’ pillars, Sachie offers a one-to-one therapeutic and educational programme, available online and in person. With tailored guidance, she accompanies the client through self-enquiry and practice. The individual’s physical and mental state becomes a gateway to self-understanding, and healing becomes an act of education. “From the perspective of Oriénsis, no symptom is ever identical,” Sachie told us. “Each individual carries a unique biography, rhythm, and set of conditions, and therefore each healing journey unfolds differently.” Throughout 2026, Sachie will focus on refining the conceptual framework of Oriénsis. For her, this work marks a significant personal transition: moving from preservation of lineage towards a more innovative, lived application of what she has received. After two decades of traditional training, she carried a strong responsibility for authenticity. Allowing the work to evolve required letting go of certainty and entering a more vulnerable creative space. “It demanded trust,” she explains—“both in the teachings themselves and in my capacity to let them grow in contemporary conditions.” A key part of this next phase is writing. Sachie plans to shape her analytical sensitivity and lived insights into a structured form—not as abstract theory, but as a record of practice, embodiment, and cultural dialogue. She describes the emergence of Oriénsis as the fruit of this transition: by integrating Japanese aesthetic philosophy into holistic medicine, a period of questioning became a methodology. What initially felt like instability became clarity; what seemed like risk became direction, deepening her understanding of how healing unfolds when self-held centres soften. “Alongside this, I will continue one-to-one work and pedagogical refinement,” she concluded. “Rather than expanding rapidly, 2026 is a period of consolidation and articulation—laying the groundwork for future educational or institutional collaborations as Oriénsis matures.” Contact: Sachie Croizé Tsuyuki Email: [email protected] Web Address: www.oriensis.fr T
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTUyMDQwMA==