Welcome to the land of Oat Milk & Manuka Honey
Women's Health Australia|June 2020
Nestled in the rural outskirts of Atlanta, Georgia, lies the town of Serenbe: a revolutionary wellness utopia designed to keep its residents fit, thriving and happy – for life. Could it hold the cure for the maladies of urban living? Or should its promises be taken with a healthy pinch of Himalayan salt? Before the world went into lockdown, one zen-seeking writer made the journey to find out
Ted Lane
Welcome to the land of Oat Milk & Manuka Honey

“Kind of creepy here, don’t you think?” These are the first words I hear over my granola and almond milk as I eavesdrop on a nearby group of bankers – bad suits, slicked hair – here for a business conference. “I feel like I’m on The Truman Show,” says another. It’s not hard to see his point. Earlier, driving to breakfast in my golf buggy, I passed through a picture-perfect postcard of country Americana, complete with rolling pastures, horses and grandparents sitting on their porches. The sun was shining and the locals waved at me (avoiding eye contact with strangers while keeping 1.5 metres apart wasn’t a thing yet). Without exception, everyone seemed jubilantly happy – a far cry from my usual, dreary commute. The parallels between my current reality and the Jim Carrey classic were enough to make me worry my buggy would crash into the horizon.

But this is not Seahaven Island, the counterfeit town created for Truman Burbank. It’s Serenbe, a purpose-built wellness community 30 minutes south of Atlanta, Georgia. While the name – a portmanteau of ‘serene’ and ‘being’ – might elicit a raised eyebrow, the concept isn’t without logic. Research by the World Health Organization suggests that up to 90 per cent of health outcomes are tied to where and how we live, with non-communicable diseases (such as cancer and heart disease), many of which are linked to your environments and behaviour, now expected to account for nearly three quarters of all deaths worldwide. A big problem then, to which a town founded expressly to promote the wellbeing of its residents offers a radical, albeit wacky, solution.

This story is from the June 2020 edition of Women's Health Australia.

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This story is from the June 2020 edition of Women's Health Australia.

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