What Happens During Wim Hof Breathing?

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Hello Health Champions.

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Wim Hof, also known as The Iceman, is known for certain breathing technique and also for

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being able to withstand extreme cold.

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They’ve done some study that suggests there's some health benefits to the Wim Hof method,

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but I haven't found anywhere where they talk about how these benefits would come about.

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So today I'm going to talk about the mechanism and what really happens in the body when you

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do that type of breathing and when you do ice baths, so that when you understand the

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mechanism then you can adapt the method to fit your lifestyle and you can get all or

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most of the benefits without having to become an Iceman.

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Unless of course that's your idea of fun.

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Coming right up I’m Dr. Ekberg I'm a holistic doctor and a former Olympic decathlete and

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if you want to truly master your health by understanding how the body really works make

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sure you subscribe, hit that bell, and turn on all the notifications so you never miss

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a life-saving video.

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The Wim Hof method according to the founder includes 3 things: breathing, cold therapy

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and mind focus. The Wim Hof breathing

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starts out with 30 power breaths and this is where you breathe in as much as

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you can and then you blow it all out as much as you can and you keep doing this rather

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forcefully you go very powerfully on purpose.

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And what might happen is you get dizzy and/or lightheaded and you might even pass out so

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it's a good idea to lay down or being a recliner or you're not going to fall anywhere if you

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actually pass out.

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Then when you've done these 30 power breaths now you blow all the air out to exhale and

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hold.

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And you do that for as long as you can and when you can't hold your breath anymore you take a deep breath

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in and then you hold it and when you are done with that now you can exhale and hold and

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you repeat this up to 10 times.

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To understand anything about the Wim Hof method we need to understand the autonomic nervous

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system because Wim Hof has been known to control his autonomic nervous system by will and

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this is the part of the nervous system that controls the things you don't have to think

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about normally.

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So blood pressure and digestion and muscle tone and so forth.

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They are at a certain level automatically.

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These functions are managed for you.

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And that two branches are sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system and this is

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kind of like a see-saw whenever one goes up the other side goes down same as when you're

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driving a car you can't speed up and slow down at the same time.

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You have to pick one, and this is hardwired into your nervous system that they're going

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to alternate.

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This is your resource allocation system and the sympathetic is going to allocate resources

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to defend you.

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This is called a fight flight system and it’s your alarm system.

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If you were standing in the street and a car comes rushing up or if you're in the woods

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somewhere and a bear comes running up to you then you're in an alarm state your body is

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going to mobilize resources it's going to increase heart rate it's going to increase blood pressure

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to pump more blood it's going to increase muscle tone to get you ready to get out of there as quickly

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as possible.

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It's also going to increase stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol to raise blood

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sugar and mobilize energy and everything about the sympathetic nervous system is about

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focusing outward that if there's a threat out there you have to defend yourself against

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that threat first so you can survive before anything on the inside makes sense.

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An interesting thing to know is that any time that you breathe in your heart speeds up and

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the only time the hearts beat up is when there is sympathetic activation.

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Therefore, your breathing is tied to the balance of your sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous

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system.

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So we're going to talk about how this fits in with the different breathing patterns.

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And the parasympathetic obviously is the opposite.

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It's known as the feed breed or rest digest system it does the opposite it lowers blood

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pressure lower heart rate lower stress hormones and it's involved with inside functions like

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digestion, immune system, reproduction and sex.

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Now of course this is about directing resources inward so you can pretty much understand how

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this balance works then you can allocate resources inside to heal or you can allocate resources

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outside against the outside to defend yourself but you can't do more of both at the same

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time.

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The seesaw principle is going to make the nervous system pick one or the other.

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And of course when you breathe out now your heart rate is going to go down.

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And this makes a lot of sense because the body is smart.

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When you breathe in there's more air in the lungs more oxygen to be absorbed and therefore

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it make sense to speed up the heart and send some more blood there to pick up the oxygen

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when there is more of it there and when we breathe out we don't want to waste our energy

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waste our resources to the heart slows down.

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And this is called heart rate variability (HRV).

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I talked about breathing in the past and after that people always ask me which kind of breathing

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is the best because I've heard about different kinds of breathing that are different from

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yours.

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It's not that one is bad and another one is good it’s that they are different and once

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you understand what's happening with this breathing mechanism now we can kind of understand

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when and how do it.

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So the breath I usually proposed is an even five seconds in and 5 seconds out maybe a

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little bit longer on the out breath and here why.

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Most people breathe in for 2 to 3 seconds and then breathe out really fast.

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And then they breathe in for 2 to 3 seconds and then breathe out really fast.

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So with the in breath they are activating their sympathetic nervous system but they

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are breathing too fast to allow that parasympathetic nervous system to kick in and balance out

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the sympathetic.

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So most people get stuck in that state of stress and anxiety and of course then the

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anxiety makes you breathe even faster so your sorta stuck in a vicious cycle there. But if you allow five or six seconds

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to breathe out your allowing the parasympathetic and balance is sympathetic that's the purpose

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of this particular breath. To balance your automatic nervous system and bring you into a state of relaxation.

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Two things happen when we breathe. First, you take oxygen in and also you take

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carbon dioxide out. And the thing about carbon dioxide is that it is acidic so this is the way that the body can

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regulate pH of the blood. If you don't breathe enough then the carbon dioxide builds up and your blood

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gets acidic. And this is actually the trigger for your body to breathe more. There is a sensor in your brainstem that says your blood is too acidic

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breathe more and this is a much stronger influence actually than the oxygen need. Now when you

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breathe in balance like this, the purpose is to create balance. Also known as homeostasis. When they

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measure heart rate variability, when they measure the pattern of how the heart rate increases and decreases with the breath

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when you get into a perfect smooth and rhythmic pattern it's called coherence and that's a very healthy

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place to be that means that your brain and your heart are working together. They're cooperating in harmony.

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This kind of breathing is also very relaxing obviously. And when you do it and you stay within these relaxed

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physiological parameters then the body is going to regulate the PH, and the CO2, and O2 and put them

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all within optimal levels. Then what about the Wim Hof breathing? Well it is not a relaxed breath

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you breathe in as much as you can and as much as you can and repeat repeat 30 * and also

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time to get busy or even saying so this is a reading unbalanced it is stressful unnatural

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and what happens now is because you're forcing the breathing you're blowing off way more

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carbon dioxide in your body calls for you artificially bringing your pH up you're making

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your blood alcohol and this is why you get dizzy and lightheaded at the same time your

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field new levels go down and your oxygen levels go up then once you're done with 30 breaths

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and the blow out and you hold now your body is really alkaline your blood is really alkaline

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and because it's the CO2, the acid CO2 that makes you want to breathe, that gives

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you that air hunger you're not going to have any air hunger when your blood is alkaline. So it's

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very easy to hold your breath. It might be 30, 40 seconds before you have any urge to breathe and you might be able

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to hold this for quite some time and then of course you alternate breathing in and breathing out

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but whenever you're holding your breath you are increasing growth hormone. They've done studies

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on this. They've taken people and have them hold their breath for as long as they can repeat a few times and their

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growth hormone levels increase. And Now Cold Therapy. This is something that you can practice from the

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discomfort of your own home I added the discomfort part because I don't know about you it may

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or may not be your idea of comfort however it is an extreme stress it is an increase

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it's a powerful massive increase in sympathetic drive it causes vasoconstriction and it has

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the blood pressure shoot through the roof you could probably, if you managed to measure it

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right in that moment it would probably be 200, 250 something like that anytime you

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shock your body, or stress it significantly the body is also going to make growth hormone so that

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it can adapt. Now that we understand a little bit about the breathing and the cold therapy. What really happens in the body,

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the next question is is this actually a good thing? Well, we have to start understanding

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a little bit more what stress is and what it does in the different types. Short-term physical

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stress is very very normal this is when you have to get out of the way from the car this

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is where your response to something physical you defend yourself you do a workout you have

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a physical strain of some sort and now it's adaptive that type of stress is adaptive

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It gives your body a chance to adapt and get better for when it's going to happen next time therefore

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it's very healthy and it's very constructive it gives the body of reason to improve so now if

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you understand these parts then we also see that it's necessary because if you don't have

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these if you don't have this short-term physical stress then the not giving your body a reason

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for that to not giving it a reason to get better and in one word that's called De-generation

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other kind of stress is destructive That's The chronic stress. We're designed for short-term physical

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stress but chronic stress is the stuff that we can't bounce back from because if it goes

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on and on in a lot of emotional and if we have anger or anxiety or depression or worry or

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fear, the4n these are emotional habit patterns that break us down we can also have excess

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physical stress and even though exercise is necessary and hugely beneficial if we do too

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much then it breaks us down. Exercise is break down and when we recover, when we rest we

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allow the body to build back up but if you work out too much we don't allow enough time

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to the next workout now we're just adding insult to injury and we break the body down

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more and more. So this chronic stress we're not designed for. It's abnormal it's maladaptive it's unhealthy

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destructive and in the case of emotional stress these are habitual patterns that we create and just like you

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can create a skill of any kind. You can create a language skill or the skill of catching a ball.

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these are neurological patterns. They work for you but they also work against you in

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the case of negative emotions like anger and fear. Wim Hof talks about the mind and it takes a certain amount of dedication

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and commitment of determination to jump into that ice water so you have to sort of focus

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I have to make a commitment and then wants to jump in this is a massive sensory input

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the firing off all types of receptors halfway normal response to self massive sensor input

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it's a type of shock and when you do that in an extreme form increase supposed to jump

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into that ice water and you're not going to stay back and say whom I wonder if I remember

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to feed the dogs before I left for worry about what I'm going to do later on today I'm not

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going to do that right now we're going to be present in the moment and focus on what's

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going on in the ice water and that includes a focus which is a good thing it involved

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frontal lobe activation and cancel oh it's like a muscle you work out muscles with weights

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you work out his frontal lobes with signal stimulation and then once the frontal lobe

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is activated and strengthen it actually gets better as in Hibbett at sympathetic nervous

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system is also like a rubber band but if you really want to relax a muscle it can help

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to contracted first and then notice and accentuate the contract before it works the same way

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to jump in the ice water and really spiral that sympathetic but then that makes it easier

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to notice the contract and relax and parasympathetic several benefits you have a pattern into this

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is very very powerful.

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Wim Hof breathing problem most of our emotional problems is because we get our pathway to

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get a nervous system stuck in certain tax rate in one of those powerful things you can

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do is to interrupt that have it make the nervous system just do something else anything else

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at all is good and you also get hormonal burst you activate survival circuits you have

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sirtuins to have survival genes and if you expose your body to something harsh than the purpose

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of the survival game system help the truth that crises, that harsh period.

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So in the short-term you make adrenalin which is stress hormone but as soon as you get out

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of the water that adrenaline is going to go down very quickly but instead you have a long-acting

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benefit from the human growth hormone that decays. that have a much slower half-life. You

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get the brain stimulation which is like a workout for your brain and it helps

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you get even more after see if you are Lord of 3 or benefits of being this message now

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that you even more calm after, so now that you understand its benefits now I'm sure you are worndering, well? Do I have to do all of that? and how

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much do I have to do? Do I have to become an Iceman to get these benefits. Well let's talk about it if it

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thrills you. Then I think you should be a iceman. If you really getting kicked out

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of walking on coals and jumping out of airplanes and sitting in ice water you can look back

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and feel good about the fact that you did that and that's an added benefit. So if that is

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your personality then we can go for it. The only thing I want to point out is about is about your

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particular health state and the duration. Because when it comes to the ice bath for example they

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talked about starting off with 32/62 to maybe working up to 15 minutes. As humans we tend

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to think that it's a little bit is good then more has to be better but that's not really

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how it works as we saw was a discussion on stress before. That our bodies are designed for short stress. That is what creates

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the trigger the body gets the point and then it makes changes so I'm not convinced that

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15 minutes is better than 60 seconds okay this is my opinion I don't know that anyone

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is really studied this but the other part is that if you're not super healthy if you

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have a weak heart because you could get in a lot of trouble you can actually trigger a

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heart attack if you have a weak heart and you jump into icewater it's like you lockdown

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all of your blood vessels and it's like a heart is trying to pump against concrete and a healthy

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heart can handle that a weak heart might not. Same thing with adrenals. That a little bit might

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be good might be just get like a little stimulation but if it goes on and on and on now you might

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actually sort of whip those adrenals beyond the point of health. So if you like doing

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this and you are healthy I would say go for it. There are certainly benefits. Now what about the softies? What if

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we're not looking forward to the next time we plunged into the ice water then we have

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other alternatives that in my opinion can probably create most if not all the benefits. Fasting

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is the single most powerful way growth hormone and the longer you fast the more growth hormone you

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make. I've done several videos on that. Fasting alone is not going to get to keep it not going to

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stimulate your brain tremendously even though it has benefits so you always want to do more

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than one thing and high intensity interval (HIIT) training is excellent way to stimulate your

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brain to create more growth hormone to challenge these survival circuits and adaptive circuits. So Wim Hoff

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breathing is an excellent idea I think it's a good addition but again understand why you're

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doing it that it stressful and again I don't think that more is better but I would use

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it as an introduction as a warm-up to a relaxing breath. So you do the power breaths with the Wim Hoff.

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You can do some breath-holding if you like. But then you sit down and relax because now you're stirred

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things up. Your are in a very receptive state for your body to relax and now you do that five seconds in and five seconds

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out and you allow your nervous system to get back into homeostatic and create some

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long neuroplasticity. When it comes to cold therapy in turned out that both hot and cold

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will produce growth hormone, it will stimulate the autonomic nervous system shake things

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up if you don't like ice bath you could just alternate a warm and cold shower. So you do your shower and

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then at the end of it to turn up the heat a little bit and then you're cold and you just do

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that back and forth a little bit and you have created a lot of the same effects. Now the Scandinavian

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the Finns and Swedes have known this for centuries they have something called sauna and this is a

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very hot place. You throw on some logs on the fire and you create tons of heat and steam

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and you sit there and roast and that hot in itself is quite effective but then if you

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go outside and you jump in ice water or in a cold shower now you accentuate the effect

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of the contract. And here is the interesting thing for those who have the facilities, the availability,

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to do this, I strongly suggest to do a sauna and then jump into cold water or ice water

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and you'll be amazed because it's not going to feel cold when you're really really hot

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and you create that contrast for the first five or ten seconds before he doesn't know

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what happened but does not feel cold 10 seconds into it it you start getting cold but it's not really

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unpleasant because you don't have to freeze to get the benefits.

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The create the contract and then you jump out at the ice water and the stand there after

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a minute and it feels really nice warm. You're steaming your skin. You look like a red lobster but you are

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feeling so peaceful and so wonderful. So if you have a chance give it a try but not just work with

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it in the shower. If you enjoy this video and you like learning about how the body works

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and how to get really healthy I would suggest watch that one next thank you so much for

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watching.

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I will see you next time.

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