Everything about Bolster totally explained
A
bolster (etymology: Middle English, derived from Old English, and before that the Germanic word
bulgstraz) is a long narrow
pillow or
cushion filled with cotton, down, or fibre. In western countries, it's usually placed at the head of bed and functions as head or back support. In southeast Asian countries, in particular
Indonesia,
Malaysia,
Singapore, and
Thailand, the bolster is designed to be hugged when sleeping. It is called a
dakimakura in Japanese. In Chinese, its
hanyu pinyin is "bao zhen" (lit. "hugging pillow"). In cantonese, it's called "Lam Chim". The Indonesian/Malay folks called it "bantal peluk" or "bantal guling".
Tradition suggests that a wife would fashion the bolster out of bamboo and give it to her husband when he travelled away from home so that he wouldn't be lonely at night, hence the name "bamboo wife," or "
Dutch wife," or
chikufujin in Japanese.
In many Chinese and Malay families, children are provided with a bolster and the habit of sleeping with a bolster carries over into adulthood. It is said that hugging a bolster will calm one's mind when sleeping, and, in the hot tropical climate of Singapore and Malaysia, it's often too hot to cover oneself with a blanket when sleeping, especially in a non-air-conditioned room, hence hugging a bolster.
In the past, it was common for people to make their own bolsters. Old folks usually made the inner cover with a slit at its centre and stuff cotton wool until it's fairly compact and then sewing the slit up. A bolster cover is then made, with tie strings at its end, to keep it clean. Now most shopping centres and Department Store like Robinson, John Little, do sell ready made bolsters with different insert/fillings to cater to different needs and price ranges. Because of its popularity among the locals, bedsheet sets often come with matching pillow and bolster cases.
In more traditional Chinese families, a newly-wed couple's wedding chamber will most likely have a bed that comes with two pillows and one bolster with embroideries of love birds, flowers etc and are usually bright red in colour. It is said that the bolster is to provide the husband with something to hug when the wife isn't in the mood or vice versa.
The use of the bolster is so common among Indonesian people that most local hotels provide bolsters for their guests. However, this is less common in westernized hotels in bigger cities in Indonesia. In Singapore, most hotels don't provide bolster for guests unless they specifically request it. One hotel that does provide a bolster is Grand Mercure Roxy Hotel at East Coast Road.
The equivalent of bolster in the western countries is the
body pillow which is also part of the Halloween tradition of collecting candy in pillow sacks.
Further Information
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