How much water should I toss on the sauna rocks?

Just as Minnesota Fats, the famous pool player, would advise that there are two ways to hit a pool shot – soft and softer, there are two ways to toss water on sauna rocks: start with a little water, then add a little more.

You can always toss more water as you go.letting loyly hit your skin

As Clint points out, all sauna stoves are made to take water.  Rocks on sauna stoves are a thermal mass of heat energy.  That heat is transferred to steam, as water gets tossed on rocks.  That steam then gets transferred to your body as it comes in contact with your skin.

You can toss a liter of water on the rocks and try to “ride it out” but this macho ploy is best reserved for the art of reverse cycling.

Loyly supports the rubber band theory of sauna, great for your skin and breathing.

Steam from water being tossed on sauna rocks, Loyly, is a spiritual thing, involving negative ions.  Fire (sauna stove), Earth (sauna rocks), and Water (via loyly) create an aura akin to water falls and rainbows, something beyond this writer’s ability to put into words without any mind altering assistance.

BONUS: Starting with a little water, then adding more doesn’t shock your sauna stove, so in theory, you stove will suffer less fatigue.

OTHER BONUS: Rocks will be less depleted of thermal mass and respond quicker to more water with a smile and a sizzle.

MISNOMER: The temperature in a sauna does not go up when you toss water on sauna rocks.  It just feels hotter because heat is transferred via water vapor onto your skin.

JAB: Infrared is NOT a sauna.

Sauna Timers Are Worthless

“How long should I stay in the sauna?”

I get this question a lot and here is the answer:

“Until pouring ice cold water over your head is the best idea you’ve ever heard.”

There are far too many factors that negate a specified time, such as:

  1. When you last ate.
  2. Your body weight.
  3. Your level of hydration.
  4. Your individual tolerance of extreme temperatures.

If anything, I would argue that timers can be dangerous, so don’t use them at all. Wait until pouring ice cold water over your head is the best idea you’ve ever heard.

Note: substitute a jump in the lake or a roll in the snow when applicable.

Cheers!

All Sauna Stoves Are Made To Take Water

If it has rocks on it, it takes water. There is no such thing as a “dry sauna.” Regardless of what the sign at the hotel says, where there are rocks, there should be water. No company in the world makes a sauna stove that is intended to be dry.

There. Now you can confidently sneak a large bottle of water into the sauna at your hotel so you can have a proper Finnish sauna.

Enjoy!

Le Scandinave Spa in the forest of Whistler, BC restores faith in public sauna

Yours truly got a little critical critiquing Spa Palace in New York, so it’s only fair to project a different vibe towards Scandinave Spa Whistler.  The compelling difference can be summed up by one word: nature.  Scandinave Spa: “20,000-square feet of Scandinavian baths artfully concealed in the forest” reports Michael McCarthy, for The Province, “your online source for news in British Columbia.”

Michael relates his romantic off season weekend experience in Whistler: hiking, spa, relaxing, great food & wine.  This is the kind of place and environment where sauna fits so well. For sauna complements well unhurried, amongst nature.

Reminds me of a friend, who was dragged along by his wife, redeeming their anniversary present for his and her massage:  “how long is this going to take, honey?  I promised Jim i’d come over after and hang some sheet rock.”

Have you been to Scandinave Spa?

A hot sauna on a hot day?

It’s 102 in Minneapolis, MN today and I’ve mentioned to several people that I’ll be taking a sauna later, in case they’d like to join me.

“What? Are you crazy? It’s 102 today!”

Exactly. It’s 102. Just as some runners use saunas to train for hot weather running, I use saunas to tolerate hot weather in general. It works remarkably well.

When you’re first introduced to the sauna, your inclination is to head for the hills when the steam comes barreling toward you. After a few sessions you start to realize that, not only is it quite tolerable, but it actually feels gooooooooood! When the steam hits, you learn to just let it in.

And so it is when I walk out of my 73 degree air conditioned house into 102 degrees…

I just let it in.

Portable Bike Sauna Is Incredible

I’ve drooled over every mobile sauna online for longer than I care to admit. A mobile sauna provides opportunities for a community gather like no other; if I had room in my yard to store one I’d already own one.

Then I see this incredible unit! A portable bike sauna! Are you kidding me? Look at that design too. Elegant, simple, and effective. Just like saunas should be. There is no end to the places I could bring this thing in Minneapolis, MN in the summer.

Kudos to the Czech design team at H3T Architects for designing this amazing mobile sauna powered by the eagerness in your own legs to pull up next to a lake and throw an impromptu sauna party. Splendid!

Sauna-Yoga: Much more than just VERY hot yoga.

Robin Bailey-Callahan, RD - Certified Yoga Instructor

While developing Sauna-Yoga, it became clear that it needed to be a holistic experience.  Here is the protocol that emerged for a three-round Sauna-Yoga experience:

Round 1YOGA: See Developing Sauna-Yoga: part 2 for the demonstration of six poses that can be completed in a sauna at 170°F within 12 minutes.

Round 2MEDITATION: Both yoga and sauna indirectly include meditation. We found it useful to make meditation a prominent feature. See Sauna Meditation for guidelines. You might think the yoga round is the most intense of the three rounds. It’s not. The meditation round is by far the most intense and challenging round, hands down.

Round 3SOCIALIZE: A main purpose of sauna and in fact, all sweat rituals, is to relax and connect with others. Relax, interact and have fun. Soulful rock music works nicely during this round.

Each round refers to the interval inside a sauna. The interval should be approximately 15 minutes and the temperature should range from 160°-180°F. Each round is separated by a 5-minute cooling off period outside the sauna and don’t neglect your recuperation period.

Sweat Therapy Theoretical Model

From Sweat Therapy Theory, we know that sweat rituals operate by a combination of Exercise, Self-Regulation, Interpersonal Factors, and Metaphorical Contextual Elements. Adding Yoga to Sauna, kicks up the intensity in Exercise and Self-Regulation. According to the theory, this should create the opportunity for corresponding amplification of Interpersonal and Metaphorical Contextual Elements thereby causing greater positive effects to Mind, Body, & Spirit.

In other words, if these four factors make up the sauna engine, we’re souping it up.

Sauna Meditation

Yvette Rivera-Colmant, MSW

There are several qualities of the sauna experience that are conducive to meditation and that make the combination, especially intense. Think Extreme Meditation.

The intense physical experience pushes the person to naturally bring thinking inwards to become more introspective as one appreciates their personal reactions to the heat. The effects of heat on muscle relaxation help the person to get into a deep state of relaxation. Introspection and deep relaxation characterize the altered state of consciousness one gains while sweating. As time passes, one’s reactions to the heat become more intense and create a challenge. One can allow negative thoughts and feelings related to the heat become the focus of their experience.  Alternatively, one can engage in a process of disidentification, by which awareness (mindfulness) precisely observes, and therefore ceases to identify with, mental content such as thoughts, feelings, and images. Disidentification opens the person to then also observe positive mental content – thoughts and feelings that help one to adapt, cope, and thrive when faced with adversity.  This can grow to include the development of other mental qualities such as concentration, love, or wisdom. 

As is true with any discipline, to become skilled in meditation takes time and practice.  Yet anyone can meditate. 

One of the most intense ways to meditate in a sauna is to simply sit in silence and focus on your breathing. Alternatively, it is also very pleasant to have some chill-out meditation music playing in the background. A guided meditation I designed specifically for sauna can be purchased through CD Baby and soon Itunes for $0.99. See Sauna Meditation. This track is taken from the album, Sweat Therapy Audio. The Sauna Meditation track starts with guided meditation followed by several minutes of silence and then incorporates meditation music.

Here are some thoughts and reflections to consider for a sauna meditation: 

Sitting erect but not rigid, lean against the back of the sauna, placing your hands comfortably in your lap.  Let your body and mind rest and relax and get into the heat. 

When you feel comfortable with it, allow your eyes to gently close.  Tune in to the feeling of the breath moving in and out of your body, allowing yourself to breathe mostly through your mouth as the hot air stings the nostrils.  Focus on the sensation of the hot air moving in and out of your mouth.

Let your body relax and as you sweat, think about the stress leaving your body.  Negative energy leaves your body as you sweat.  As the sweat leaves the pores of your skin so does anger, frustration, and tension.  Relax and enjoy the heat. 

Just become as comfortable as possible.  The intense heat of the sauna is gentle at first, providing a very warm, relaxing feeling. 

Some people sweat immediately and others take longer.  Notice how your body reacts to the heat.  As the sweat begins coming to the surface of your skin.  Notice the feeling of your body.

Feeling relaxed and calm, the intensity of the heat grows.  You may begin to struggle slightly as the heat works its way through your body.  As the heat intensifies, so does the amount of stress and anxiety that is released.

Each time that you find your mind wandering off, simply bring it back to your breathing.

SWEAT THERAPY AUDIO

Sweat Therapy Audio (STA) is an audio recording designed to be listened to with a personal audio player using headphones in a Finnish-style sauna. STA combines meditation, music, and sweating while the participant is encouraged to confront personal challenges. Music was produced and performed by Sam Greene and Alex Rivera

Slip on your headphones and get in the sauna. Sit back and relax, get into the heat, and go off into your altered state of consciousness.

Sweat Therapy Audio combines three ancient wisdom practices – meditation, music, and sweating while Dr. Colmant encourages you to confront your personal priority challenge. Sweating procedures have been used throughout the world for thousands of years to help people gain greater physical, mental and spiritual well-being. Examples include the Finnish Sauna, the American Indian Sweat Lodge, and the Russian Bania to name a few. A sweat session is a powerful way to mark the beginning or completion of a personal journey or other personal commitment to change. It is also a great way to help keep your life in balance and harmony.

Sauna bathing is beneficial for the prevention and treatment of some lung, heart, and skin problems. It promotes deeper sleep, pain relief, muscle relaxation, and has been helpful in treating insomnia and arthritis. It also promotes positive effects on feeling states.

Stephen Colmant, Ph.D. is a Licensed Psychologist and has more than 15 years experience working with people with a wide range of treatment issues in a variety of settings. He is the author of Using the Sweat Lodge Ceremony as Group Therapy for Navajo Youth and Sweat therapy. Dr. Colmant lives with his wife and daughter on the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains in Bryson City, NC.

SAUNA

This activity was designed to be performed with the use of a Finnish-style sauna. The temperature inside the sauna should be between 62 degrees Celsius (145 degrees Fahrenheit) to 85 degrees Celsius (185 degrees Fahrenheit). The hotter it is, the harder this session will be to complete.

What You Will Need

• 1 quart of water.

• Audio player such as a Personal Audio Player with Headphones.

• Two towels (one for inside the sauna and one for rinsing off in the shower afterwards).

Instructions

  1. Put on your headphones of your portable audio player.
  2. Enter the sauna and lay a towel down on the bench.
  3. Sit down on your towel and hit play on your portable audio player.

The session includes three, 11-minute intervals inside the sauna with two, 5-minute breaks and a 15-minute recovery period. Listen to the recording throughout the sauna intervals, the breaks, and the recovery period. You will be prompted when to leave and re-enter the sauna. The entire session will take a little less than an hour.  BUY NOW for just $9.99.

Sweat Therapy Theory

The Sweat Therapy Theoretical Model explains the mechanism for how sweat practices work to cause therapeutic effects. The model begins with examination of cultural priming. Beyond a cultural predisposition toward the activity, four main factors are hypothesized to account for the psychotherapeutic benefits: (1) Exercise, (2) Self-Regulation, (3) Interpersonal Factors, and (4) Metaphorical Contextual Elements. These factors interact in a reciprocal manner to produce positive effects upon the body, mind, and spirit.

CULTURAL PRIMING

The practice of group sweating has been present throughout the world for thousands of years and is central to community life among many cultural groups. Different forms of indigenous sweat practices can be found across many geographically and culturally distinct regions of the world: (1) American Indian Sweat Lodge; (2) Finnish Sauna; (3) Greek Sweat Bath; (4) Irish Sweat House; (5) Japanese Mushi-Buro and Korean Jim Jil Bang; (6) Jewish Shvitz; (7) Islamic Hammam; (8) Mayan Sweat House; (9) Mexican and Central American Temescal and Inipi; (10) Roman Balnea and Thermae; (11) Russian Bania; and (12) Scythian Sweatbath; and (13) South African Sifutu. Many of these sweat practices have been present for more than 2,000 years. Before ever entering a sauna or sweat lodge, many participants already have beliefs and expectations about the experience. They are predisposed to the activity based upon its passing from one generation to another. Since sweat rituals have existed for thousands of years throughout the world, people will be attracted to it and are primed to receive benefits from it that are consistent with their cultural background. The more prominent the practice exists in the individual’s background, the stronger the priming.

EXERCISE

From clinical experience, sweating induces commonly observed effects of exercise on mental health, such as reducing anxiety, depression, and stress and improving body image, self-esteem, and sense of well being. The sweating experience produces profound physiological changes and perceptions of physical symptoms. Sauna is similar to exercise as it causes the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system, activation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal hormonal axis, and an increase in noradrenaline. However, sauna is different from exercise in a few important ways. Unlike in typical forms of exercise, sauna causes an increase in B-endorphins and does not increase the concentration of adrenaline in the blood stream. Sauna also contrasts with the majority of exercise activities because it does not require muscle tension, the movement of large muscle groups, and attentional capacities to be focused on muscle coordination. Sauna is a unique form of exercise as it causes muscle relaxation and allows focal attention to be focused on another activity, such as group content and process. The state of arousal that accompanies being in exercise mode stimulates learning involved in the other three factors.

SELF REGULATION

Heat exposure in an enclosed area goes beyond being a form of exercise by creating an altered state of consciousness characterized by a dynamic balance between alertness and relaxation. At first, the heat is soothing and as the body begins to respond to the heat through sweating, the body’s muscles experience a release of tension, promoting a deeper state of relaxation. However, rather than slipping into a state of relaxation resembling rest or sleep, further heat exposure keeps the mind and body active through the process of sweating. As the heat becomes more intense, the participant is challenged to keep the mind relaxed, requiring meditative attentiveness. Walsh and Shapiro (2006, p. 3-4) defined meditation as the “family of self-regulation practices that focus on training attention and awareness in order to bring mental processes under greater voluntary control and thereby foster general mental well-being and development and/or specific capacities such as calm, clarity, and concentration.” One can allow negative thoughts and feelings related to the heat become the focus of their experience. Alternatively, one can focus on thoughts and feelings that help one to adapt, cope, and thrive when faced with adversity. Learning to endure the heat requires a form of meditation and leaves the person feeling a sense of accomplishment. This meditative attentiveness and sense of positive adaptation influence the depth of appreciation for metaphors and encourage problem solving.

METAPHORICAL CONTEXTUAL ELEMENTS

The contextual elements involved in group sweating include taking breaks, dimmed lighting, wearing sparse or no clothing, drinking large quantities of water, and the use of fire as a symbol. These contextual elements serve to maximize the therapeutic properties of heat exposure and are common to the many forms of sweat rituals used throughout the world. The psychological effects of sweat therapy may be partially accounted for by the metaphorical meaning stemming from the contextual elements of group sweating. The symbolism of fire can be understood across languages and cultures as the basis of heat and light, of warmth and illumination. A safe therapeutic atmosphere is represented by the gentle womb-like warmth of the enclosed sauna, which encourages relaxation and openness versus anxiety and defensiveness. Whereas many current social norms encourage us to keep distance from one another, especially when sweating, the sauna symbolizes closeness and promotes genuineness. Sitting together in a sauna symbolically promotes a safe and open therapeutic atmosphere, which may be considered the building blocks of effective group therapy. In addition to safety and openness, change is critical to any therapeutic endeavor. Mind-body purification occurs as a natural consequence of intense sweating; toxins are sweated out through the pores of the skin, bringing clarity to the mind and homeostasis to the body. The intense physical experience pushes us to become more introspective and appreciate personal, symbolic reactions to the heat. Intense heat comes to represent life’s greatest challenges while enduring the heat is a symbol of human will and resiliency. In addressing life’s challenges, taking breaks and drinking water are symbols of self-care and rejuvenation. The shared experience of sweating and enduring the heat promotes group members’ common humanness and a sense of existential togetherness. Through the symbolism of the shared, enclosed womb-like purification, group members come to accept and learn from one another. The experiential, symbolic process of group sweating appears to stimulate and reinforce the critical group therapeutic factors of cohesion and interpersonal learning.

INTERPERSONAL FACTORS

Socialization is a main purpose of the many forms of sweat rituals used throughout the world. Sweat practices have long been a place for the interpersonal exchange of trials and tribulations. Exercise, metaphor, and self-regulation seem to intensify group dynamics. At the same time, group interaction provides an opportunity for participants to process the experience. From clinical experience with sweat therapy, group members perceive the sweating experience as a moderate challenge to which they respond by seeking social support and engaging in thinking that promotes self-esteem (e.g.: “Although I’m uncomfortably hot, I am staying in the sauna because doing so will make me better in some way.”). The sweat condition prompts altruism which quickly translates into cohesion. Group members work together as a unit to get through the heat by offering towels and water to one another and showing frequent concern for one another’s ability to handle the heat. These seemingly simple expressions of sharing and concern for one another become part of the group norms and transcend into people showing greater care and concern for one another when discussing deeper topics. Self-Disclosure, Interpersonal Learning, and Group Cohesion were the most prominent group therapeutic factors identified for the sweat groups in two controlled/randomized studies. Sweating and interpersonal interaction are natural catalysts for one another.

References

Eason, E. A., Colmant, S. A., and Winterowd, C.L. (2009). Sweat Therapy Theory, Practice, and Efficacy. Journal of Experiential Education, Volume 32, 2 pp 121-136.