What Happens During Wim Hof Breathing?
Hello Health Champions.
Wim Hof, also known as The Iceman, is known for certain breathing technique and also for
being able to withstand extreme cold.
They’ve done some study that suggests there's some health benefits to the Wim Hof method,
but I haven't found anywhere where they talk about how these benefits would come about.
So today I'm going to talk about the mechanism and what really happens in the body when you
do that type of breathing and when you do ice baths, so that when you understand the
mechanism then you can adapt the method to fit your lifestyle and you can get all or
most of the benefits without having to become an Iceman.
Unless of course that's your idea of fun.
Coming right up I’m Dr. Ekberg I'm a holistic doctor and a former Olympic decathlete and
if you want to truly master your health by understanding how the body really works make
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The Wim Hof method according to the founder includes 3 things: breathing, cold therapy
and mind focus. The Wim Hof breathing
starts out with 30 power breaths and this is where you breathe in as much as
you can and then you blow it all out as much as you can and you keep doing this rather
forcefully you go very powerfully on purpose.
And what might happen is you get dizzy and/or lightheaded and you might even pass out so
it's a good idea to lay down or being a recliner or you're not going to fall anywhere if you
actually pass out.
Then when you've done these 30 power breaths now you blow all the air out to exhale and
hold.
And you do that for as long as you can and when you can't hold your breath anymore you take a deep breath
in and then you hold it and when you are done with that now you can exhale and hold and
you repeat this up to 10 times.
To understand anything about the Wim Hof method we need to understand the autonomic nervous
system because Wim Hof has been known to control his autonomic nervous system by will and
this is the part of the nervous system that controls the things you don't have to think
about normally.
So blood pressure and digestion and muscle tone and so forth.
They are at a certain level automatically.
These functions are managed for you.
And that two branches are sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system and this is
kind of like a see-saw whenever one goes up the other side goes down same as when you're
driving a car you can't speed up and slow down at the same time.
You have to pick one, and this is hardwired into your nervous system that they're going
to alternate.
This is your resource allocation system and the sympathetic is going to allocate resources
to defend you.
This is called a fight flight system and it’s your alarm system.
If you were standing in the street and a car comes rushing up or if you're in the woods
somewhere and a bear comes running up to you then you're in an alarm state your body is
going to mobilize resources it's going to increase heart rate it's going to increase blood pressure
to pump more blood it's going to increase muscle tone to get you ready to get out of there as quickly
as possible.
It's also going to increase stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol to raise blood
sugar and mobilize energy and everything about the sympathetic nervous system is about
focusing outward that if there's a threat out there you have to defend yourself against
that threat first so you can survive before anything on the inside makes sense.
An interesting thing to know is that any time that you breathe in your heart speeds up and
the only time the hearts beat up is when there is sympathetic activation.
Therefore, your breathing is tied to the balance of your sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous
system.
So we're going to talk about how this fits in with the different breathing patterns.
And the parasympathetic obviously is the opposite.
It's known as the feed breed or rest digest system it does the opposite it lowers blood
pressure lower heart rate lower stress hormones and it's involved with inside functions like
digestion, immune system, reproduction and sex.
Now of course this is about directing resources inward so you can pretty much understand how
this balance works then you can allocate resources inside to heal or you can allocate resources
outside against the outside to defend yourself but you can't do more of both at the same
time.
The seesaw principle is going to make the nervous system pick one or the other.
And of course when you breathe out now your heart rate is going to go down.
And this makes a lot of sense because the body is smart.
When you breathe in there's more air in the lungs more oxygen to be absorbed and therefore
it make sense to speed up the heart and send some more blood there to pick up the oxygen
when there is more of it there and when we breathe out we don't want to waste our energy
waste our resources to the heart slows down.
And this is called heart rate variability (HRV).
I talked about breathing in the past and after that people always ask me which kind of breathing
is the best because I've heard about different kinds of breathing that are different from
yours.
It's not that one is bad and another one is good it’s that they are different and once
you understand what's happening with this breathing mechanism now we can kind of understand
when and how do it.
So the breath I usually proposed is an even five seconds in and 5 seconds out maybe a
little bit longer on the out breath and here why.
Most people breathe in for 2 to 3 seconds and then breathe out really fast.
And then they breathe in for 2 to 3 seconds and then breathe out really fast.
So with the in breath they are activating their sympathetic nervous system but they
are breathing too fast to allow that parasympathetic nervous system to kick in and balance out
the sympathetic.
So most people get stuck in that state of stress and anxiety and of course then the
anxiety makes you breathe even faster so your sorta stuck in a vicious cycle there. But if you allow five or six seconds
to breathe out your allowing the parasympathetic and balance is sympathetic that's the purpose
of this particular breath. To balance your automatic nervous system and bring you into a state of relaxation.
Two things happen when we breathe. First, you take oxygen in and also you take
carbon dioxide out. And the thing about carbon dioxide is that it is acidic so this is the way that the body can
regulate pH of the blood. If you don't breathe enough then the carbon dioxide builds up and your blood
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
breathe more and this is a much stronger influence actually than the oxygen need. Now when you
breathe in balance like this, the purpose is to create balance. Also known as homeostasis. When they
measure heart rate variability, when they measure the pattern of how the heart rate increases and decreases with the breath
when you get into a perfect smooth and rhythmic pattern it's called coherence and that's a very healthy
place to be that means that your brain and your heart are working together. They're cooperating in harmony.
This kind of breathing is also very relaxing obviously. And when you do it and you stay within these relaxed
physiological parameters then the body is going to regulate the PH, and the CO2, and O2 and put them
all within optimal levels. Then what about the Wim Hof breathing? Well it is not a relaxed breath
you breathe in as much as you can and as much as you can and repeat repeat 30 * and also
time to get busy or even saying so this is a reading unbalanced it is stressful unnatural
and what happens now is because you're forcing the breathing you're blowing off way more
carbon dioxide in your body calls for you artificially bringing your pH up you're making
your blood alcohol and this is why you get dizzy and lightheaded at the same time your
field new levels go down and your oxygen levels go up then once you're done with 30 breaths
and the blow out and you hold now your body is really alkaline your blood is really alkaline
and because it's the CO2, the acid CO2 that makes you want to breathe, that gives
you that air hunger you're not going to have any air hunger when your blood is alkaline. So it's
very easy to hold your breath. It might be 30, 40 seconds before you have any urge to breathe and you might be able
to hold this for quite some time and then of course you alternate breathing in and breathing out
but whenever you're holding your breath you are increasing growth hormone. They've done studies
on this. They've taken people and have them hold their breath for as long as they can repeat a few times and their
growth hormone levels increase. And Now Cold Therapy. This is something that you can practice from the
discomfort of your own home I added the discomfort part because I don't know about you it may
or may not be your idea of comfort however it is an extreme stress it is an increase
it's a powerful massive increase in sympathetic drive it causes vasoconstriction and it has
the blood pressure shoot through the roof you could probably, if you managed to measure it
right in that moment it would probably be 200, 250 something like that anytime you
shock your body, or stress it significantly the body is also going to make growth hormone so that
it can adapt. Now that we understand a little bit about the breathing and the cold therapy. What really happens in the body,
the next question is is this actually a good thing? Well, we have to start understanding
a little bit more what stress is and what it does in the different types. Short-term physical
stress is very very normal this is when you have to get out of the way from the car this
is where your response to something physical you defend yourself you do a workout you have
a physical strain of some sort and now it's adaptive that type of stress is adaptive
It gives your body a chance to adapt and get better for when it's going to happen next time therefore
it's very healthy and it's very constructive it gives the body of reason to improve so now if
you understand these parts then we also see that it's necessary because if you don't have
these if you don't have this short-term physical stress then the not giving your body a reason
for that to not giving it a reason to get better and in one word that's called De-generation
other kind of stress is destructive That's The chronic stress. We're designed for short-term physical
stress but chronic stress is the stuff that we can't bounce back from because if it goes
on and on in a lot of emotional and if we have anger or anxiety or depression or worry or
fear, the4n these are emotional habit patterns that break us down we can also have excess
physical stress and even though exercise is necessary and hugely beneficial if we do too
much then it breaks us down. Exercise is break down and when we recover, when we rest we
allow the body to build back up but if you work out too much we don't allow enough time
to the next workout now we're just adding insult to injury and we break the body down
more and more. So this chronic stress we're not designed for. It's abnormal it's maladaptive it's unhealthy
destructive and in the case of emotional stress these are habitual patterns that we create and just like you
can create a skill of any kind. You can create a language skill or the skill of catching a ball.
these are neurological patterns. They work for you but they also work against you in
the case of negative emotions like anger and fear. Wim Hof talks about the mind and it takes a certain amount of dedication
and commitment of determination to jump into that ice water so you have to sort of focus
I have to make a commitment and then wants to jump in this is a massive sensory input
the firing off all types of receptors halfway normal response to self massive sensor input
it's a type of shock and when you do that in an extreme form increase supposed to jump
into that ice water and you're not going to stay back and say whom I wonder if I remember
to feed the dogs before I left for worry about what I'm going to do later on today I'm not
going to do that right now we're going to be present in the moment and focus on what's
going on in the ice water and that includes a focus which is a good thing it involved
frontal lobe activation and cancel oh it's like a muscle you work out muscles with weights
you work out his frontal lobes with signal stimulation and then once the frontal lobe
is activated and strengthen it actually gets better as in Hibbett at sympathetic nervous
system is also like a rubber band but if you really want to relax a muscle it can help
to contracted first and then notice and accentuate the contract before it works the same way
to jump in the ice water and really spiral that sympathetic but then that makes it easier
to notice the contract and relax and parasympathetic several benefits you have a pattern into this
is very very powerful.
Wim Hof breathing problem most of our emotional problems is because we get our pathway to
get a nervous system stuck in certain tax rate in one of those powerful things you can
do is to interrupt that have it make the nervous system just do something else anything else
at all is good and you also get hormonal burst you activate survival circuits you have
sirtuins to have survival genes and if you expose your body to something harsh than the purpose
of the survival game system help the truth that crises, that harsh period.
So in the short-term you make adrenalin which is stress hormone but as soon as you get out
of the water that adrenaline is going to go down very quickly but instead you have a long-acting
benefit from the human growth hormone that decays. that have a much slower half-life. You
get the brain stimulation which is like a workout for your brain and it helps
you get even more after see if you are Lord of 3 or benefits of being this message now
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
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
thrills you. Then I think you should be a iceman. If you really getting kicked out
of walking on coals and jumping out of airplanes and sitting in ice water you can look back
and feel good about the fact that you did that and that's an added benefit. So if that is
your personality then we can go for it. The only thing I want to point out is about is about your
particular health state and the duration. Because when it comes to the ice bath for example they
talked about starting off with 32/62 to maybe working up to 15 minutes. As humans we tend
to think that it's a little bit is good then more has to be better but that's not really
how it works as we saw was a discussion on stress before. That our bodies are designed for short stress. That is what creates
the trigger the body gets the point and then it makes changes so I'm not convinced that
15 minutes is better than 60 seconds okay this is my opinion I don't know that anyone
is really studied this but the other part is that if you're not super healthy if you
have a weak heart because you could get in a lot of trouble you can actually trigger a
heart attack if you have a weak heart and you jump into icewater it's like you lockdown
all of your blood vessels and it's like a heart is trying to pump against concrete and a healthy
heart can handle that a weak heart might not. Same thing with adrenals. That a little bit might
be good might be just get like a little stimulation but if it goes on and on and on now you might
actually sort of whip those adrenals beyond the point of health. So if you like doing
this and you are healthy I would say go for it. There are certainly benefits. Now what about the softies? What if
we're not looking forward to the next time we plunged into the ice water then we have
other alternatives that in my opinion can probably create most if not all the benefits. Fasting
is the single most powerful way growth hormone and the longer you fast the more growth hormone you
make. I've done several videos on that. Fasting alone is not going to get to keep it not going to
stimulate your brain tremendously even though it has benefits so you always want to do more
than one thing and high intensity interval (HIIT) training is excellent way to stimulate your
brain to create more growth hormone to challenge these survival circuits and adaptive circuits. So Wim Hoff
breathing is an excellent idea I think it's a good addition but again understand why you're
doing it that it stressful and again I don't think that more is better but I would use
it as an introduction as a warm-up to a relaxing breath. So you do the power breaths with the Wim Hoff.
You can do some breath-holding if you like. But then you sit down and relax because now you're stirred
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
out and you allow your nervous system to get back into homeostatic and create some
long neuroplasticity. When it comes to cold therapy in turned out that both hot and cold
will produce growth hormone, it will stimulate the autonomic nervous system shake things
up if you don't like ice bath you could just alternate a warm and cold shower. So you do your shower and
then at the end of it to turn up the heat a little bit and then you're cold and you just do
that back and forth a little bit and you have created a lot of the same effects. Now the Scandinavian
the Finns and Swedes have known this for centuries they have something called sauna and this is a
very hot place. You throw on some logs on the fire and you create tons of heat and steam
and you sit there and roast and that hot in itself is quite effective but then if you
go outside and you jump in ice water or in a cold shower now you accentuate the effect
of the contract. And here is the interesting thing for those who have the facilities, the availability,
to do this, I strongly suggest to do a sauna and then jump into cold water or ice water
and you'll be amazed because it's not going to feel cold when you're really really hot
and you create that contrast for the first five or ten seconds before he doesn't know
what happened but does not feel cold 10 seconds into it it you start getting cold but it's not really
unpleasant because you don't have to freeze to get the benefits.
The create the contract and then you jump out at the ice water and the stand there after
a minute and it feels really nice warm. You're steaming your skin. You look like a red lobster but you are
feeling so peaceful and so wonderful. So if you have a chance give it a try but not just work with
it in the shower. If you enjoy this video and you like learning about how the body works
and how to get really healthy I would suggest watch that one next thank you so much for
watching.
I will see you next time.