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Immerse yourself into a space inspired by the Onsens (bathhouses) of Japan, infused with Nordic cultural tradition of contrast therapy with heat, cold and ice, designed to induce relaxation, reset and resiliency.
Our luxurious five person Finnish sauna provides 190 degrees of rejuvenating heat, kicking off a series of temperature exposures that will reinvigorate every cell in your body. Enjoy it alone, as a couple, or make it social.
The Nordic cold dunk delivers five gallons of 60F water from overhead, stimulating your entire body and delivering an effective contrasting cold shock reset to your entire nervous system.
Our Contrast Therapy experience includes either unscented or aromatherapy-infused ice to either help cool off or to increase contrasting and stimulating sensation while in the sauna.
Complete the cycles of contrast therapy with intentional rest periods to allow the effects of relaxing heat and stimulating cold to fully integrate throughout your body. Prepare to feel amazing for the rest of your day.
So why do all this temperature contrasting? What’s the point?
The human body evolved for millennia without much protection from the elements, compared to our luxurious lives today. Compared to the length of our 300,000 years of having to adapt to various conditions, we’ve been living for a relatively minute amount of time in a tiny temperature range. We keep our homes at 72 degree homes, we work in 72 degree offices, and we wear clothing that keep us comfortable in a few-degree range 24/7. We’ve conquered our environment with novel technologies … and made our brilliant biological technologies redundant in the process.
We are not well adapted for this new-found constant comfort. Our human bodies evolved to be adaptable and resilient to extremes. All this modern comfort is alien to our immune systems and nervous systems. It’s making them lazy and disordered, and making us biologically inefficient and sick in the process.
Contrast Therapy helps us rediscover and retrain our innate capacities for adaptability and resiliency. During temperature extremes, our bodies produce heat- and cold-shock proteins. These proteins essentially act like emergency repair crews in our bodies. They’re part of our body’s built-in defense system against stress. While our culture of constant comfort has the intention of minimizing stress, it ironically actually makes us less adaptable and more stressed, leading to chronic states of inflammation and their mental manifestations depression, anxiety and burnout.
The culture of Contrast Therapy seeks to expose us, in short and controlled bursts, to the very stresses that help make us more resilient by triggering the very mechanisms that help us self-repair.
Supports brain health and memory
Reduces inflammation
Helps muscles recover
May protect against age-related diseases
Reduces inflammation and pain
Builds stress resilience
May protect brain cells and slow degeneration
It also activates when the head and face is submerged in any form of cold water.
It triggers a cascade of changes in the body, including a slowing of heart rate and increased peripheral vasoconstriction. These changes help to reduce oxygen consumption and direct blood flow to vital organs like the brain and heart, ensuring their continued function during a period of oxygen deprivation.
The felt experience is a deep relaxation response.
You can play around with this using the Nordic dunk. We've personally found that a dunk directly to the top of the head creates a more intense sense of contrast and cold shock, while tipping your head forward and letting it hit the back of the neck tends to trigger - after the initial cold shock - more of a parasympathetic response. In a way, you can feel it moving the stress from your head and neck down through your feet. Try to visualize that as you try MDR with the Nordic dunk and see if you could use as a tool to move whatever stresses may be stuck in your body down your spine, legs and out through your feet.
Here's a few more details on what the Mammalian Dive Reflex triggers:
Trigeminal Nerve Activation:
Submersion in cold water, particularly the face, activates the trigeminal nerve (fifth cranial nerve).
Vagus Nerve Stimulation:
The trigeminal nerve signals the brain, which then activates the vagus nerve (tenth cranial nerve), part of the parasympathetic nervous system.
Bradycardia and Apnea:
The vagus nerve slows the heart rate (bradycardia) and causes the individual to hold their breath (apnea).
Peripheral Vasoconstriction:
Blood vessels in the extremities constrict, diverting blood flow to the brain and heart.
Spleen Contraction:
In some mammals, the spleen may contract, releasing stored red blood cells to enhance oxygen-carrying capacity.
Increased Oxygen-Carrying Capacity:
Aquatic mammals have adaptations like increased blood volume, hemoglobin, and myoglobin to enhance their oxygen storage and utilization.