A Year of Natural Health & Beauty Tip #18: Take a Cold Shower

By Ordinary Guy (O.G.) via Wikimedia Commons

To view all tips so far, click here or simply scroll to the top of the screen and click on 52 Tips.

When I was in high school, I read an interview with a beautifully-aged Katherine Hepburn, who claimed that her number one beauty secret was taking cold showers. It sounded nuts to me at the time, but I was young and impressionable and decided to try it. I’ve been ending my showers with a cold rinse ever since, and these days, I can hardly imagine leaving the shower still warm :-)

If you’re not used to them, the idea of taking a cold shower might seem like some kind of horrible, cruel joke.

But that’s just a modern fear! For a long time throughout history, humans bathed in cool rivers, streams, lakes, and oceans. Many ancient societies, including the Greeks, bathed in cold water for physical, mental, and even spiritual benefits. Some people claim we’re not even biologically adapted to warm ~ or hot! ~ water and that bathing in it can damage our skin and immune systems.

And while it can’t be argued that mild, temperate water is neutral and won’t cause harm or good, there’s plenty of evidence that cold water can be good for our overall health and wellbeing!

A German farmer named Vincenz Priessnitz popularized the concept of “hydrotherapy” ~ bathing in cold water for health benefits ~ in the 1820s, and had Charles Darwin as a huge proponent, in addition to dukes and duchesses, counts and countesses. The easy and free benefits of hydrotherapy caused some tension between natural healers and modern (Western) medicine, who disregarded it as quackery; yet even today, the benefits can’t be disputed!

Some Benefits of Bathing in Cold Water

  • Many modern athletes, in particular, take ice baths and cold plunges to help their bodies heal and become stronger.
  • Cold water increases circulation, which helps the body to heal from injury and overuse, but also helps to sharpen your mental powers!
  • It increases your metabolic rate and stimulates the immune system.
  • It’s energizing!
  • It makes your hair shiny and gives you glowing, rosy skin.
  • It’s been claimed that cold showers alleviate depression.
  • Bathing in cold water can increase hormone production and might help with fertility.
  • Cold water even stimulates your lymphatic system to remove waste!

How to take a cold shower:

I probably don’t need to explain this in excruciating detail :-)

Start small.

Take a shower at your normal temperature. Gradually decrease the hot water and increase the cold water as your shower ends. Over time, you’ll be able to turn the hot water all the way off and enjoy the cold water for longer and longer periods. A word of warning, though ~ once you go cold, you might never go back!

Stuff to Know:

  • This post is not intended as medical advice. If you are suffering from depression, bipolar disorder, an eating disorder, severe sleep disruption, or any other mental state that is causing concern to you or your loved ones, please seek the help of a professional.
  • Those with high blood pressure, heart disease, or a fever should not take cold showers or baths. Keep the water temperate, instead.

Do you ever take cold showers?


A Year of Natural Health & Beauty Tip #17: Get Dirty to Get Happy

By Theornamentalist via Wikimedia Commons

To view all tips so far, click here or simply scroll to the top of the screen and click on 52 Tips.

If you’ve ever spent a day pulling weeds or planting trees, you might be familiar with the feelings of pure joy, peace, happiness, and contentment that come over you after only a short while.

And you might think it’s just because you got some fresh air and sunshine… which certainly can boost your mood!

But a more surprising factor behind your gardening smile lies in the soil itself. A British study conducted a few years ago discovered that touching soil actually increases your brain’s production of serotonin, your body’s natural “happiness” chemical! If you’re unfamiliar with the neurotransmitter serotonin, the easiest way to describe it is as a messenger produced in your brain, nerves, and gut that tells your body how to feel and regulates your mood.

Certain foods, healthy sleep and exercise habits, and lifestyle patterns can increase your levels of serotonin, which can give you a mood lift, altering your levels (or perceived levels) of happiness. Researchers found that coming in contact with a certain “friendly” bacteria found in soil also activates the brain to produce more serotonin. According to the study, getting your hands dirty can boost your serotonin levels in the same way antidepressant drugs can!

So the next time you need a lift, ditch the gardening gloves and dig your hands in the soil. Mess up your pedicure and go barefoot in the dirt. Give in to your childish impulses and play in the mud! You’ll do your emotional state a world of good!

Stuff to Know:

  • This post is not intended as medical advice. If you are suffering from depression, bipolar disorder, an eating disorder, severe sleep disruption, or any other mental state that is causing concern to you or your loved ones, please seek the help of a professional.

Do you keep your hands and feet clean all the time?

Do you garden?

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