What Happens After 30 Days of Cold Showers

Learn exactly how to setup your cold showers to reap 6 AMAZING benefits that'll improve your life, mindset, and body. You'll find out how to work up to taking a cold shower every morning, and how to slowly lower the temperature over time. Cold therapy (ice baths, cold plunges, cold showers) has been used by people like Wim Hoff to develop seemingly superhuman abilities. Discover why you should stop taking hot showers immediately and switch them for cold ones.

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Taking a cold shower can feel very uncomfortable, give you goosebumps, and make your whole body feel freezing. However cold showers and cold therapy, in general, can help you feel more alert and energized, it can improve your health, and can even help you burn fat. These are just some of the benefits that you can use to justify going through the unpleasantness of using cold emersion as a therapeutic agent. (*) And really there are 6 amazing scientifically proven benefits when cold therapy is used correctly and I want you to understand what those are and how to start using the cold to reap those benefits today 

Now the first thing that most people don't realize is that cold therapy can drastically improve your mood, and your mental health to the point that it may help prevent and even treat depression. (1) One of the ways that cold exposure is able to improve your mental state is thanks to norepinephrine. When you're body is exposed to cold temperatures norepinephrine is rapidly released into the bloodstream. This is a neurotransmitter that's associated with things like vigilance, attention, focus, and mood. And this isn't debatable, the fact that cold exposure can increase norepinephrine is shown in multiple studies, both in mice and humans. (2) Interestingly, when norepinephrine is depleted in a person, that person becomes depressed, and we actually see this in a study published in the journal Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment. (3) That’s why ice plunges and cold showers might help prevent and treat depression. Cold therapy drastically increases norepinephrine levels, which, helps support a better mood and cognitive function.

Now of course the question is how cold should the temperature be to get the benefits of a boost in norepinephrine? Well, one study found that one hour of cold water immersion at a relatively regular temperature of 68° Fahrenheit did not activate norepinephrine release, meanwhile, one hour at 57° Fahrenheit increased norepinephrine levels by a whopping 530%. (4) of course one hour sounds painfully long, but fortunately, you can get similar benefits in a shorter time frame if you turn the temperature down further. And we have evidence of this. A long-term study found that by immersing yourself in cold water at 40° Fahrenheit for only 20 seconds and sticking to that routine consistently for twelve weeks, that can increase norepinephrine levels by 200 to 300%. (5) And it could be possible that taking an ice bath in freezing cold water, would require even less time to reap the benefits. Now you don't want to go straight to freezing cold water, you do want to work up to it, and I'll go over that process in a bit
But first, you should be aware that one of the best benefits of exposing your body to the cold is that it leads to a reduction in overall inflammation throughout your body.

Now you've probably heard that inflammation is the route cause of most modern diseases. And even though inflammation gets a pretty bad wrap, inflammation itself isn't entirely a bad thing. In fact, it's vital for your health and well-being because it's the first step of the healing process that's used to prevent further damage by eliminating the initial cause of the cell injury, and then the inflammation helps clears out the damaged tissues and dead cells. This is actually what starts the process of repairing damaged tissues. However, when the inflammation process goes into overdrive, so when you have chronically high inflammation markers for seemingly no reason, that's when inflammation causes a lot of trouble for a lot of people. For example, as stated by the Harvard Medical School, “chronic inflammation is associated with heart disease, diabetes, cancer, arthritis, and bowel diseases like Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis.” (6) Research also identifies inflammation as the key driver of the aging process. (7) One specific study looked closely at elderly people ranging from 85 to over 110 years old and researchers found that low inflammation was the only biomarker that accurately predicted survival and cognitive capabilities across all the age groups. Remember that cognitive decline is what leads to the rising rates of dementia and Alzheimer's that we see today. The researchers also came to the conclusion that Inflammation is one of the most important variables that determine mortality, capability, and cognition up to very old…

Leroy Johnson
 

  • Gravity Transformation - Fat Loss Experts says:

    References

    1. There is anecdotal evidence that cold exposure improves mood and it has been suggested that cold showers may even be used to prevent and treat depression.
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17993252

    2. The fact that cold exposure can increase norepinephrine is shown in multiple studies, both in mice and humans
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18461718/
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s004210050065

    3. When norepinephrine is depleted in people via a pharmacological intervention, a person can become depressed, as shown by a study published in the journal Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment.
    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3131098/

    4. Norepinephrine went up 530% from an hour of cold immersion at 57 degrees Fahrenheit
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s004210050065

    5. A long-term study found that immersing yourself in cold water at 40°F (4.4°C) for 20 seconds for twelve weeks increased norepinephrine by 200 to 300%.
    https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00365510701516350

    6. “Chronic inflammation is associated with heart disease, diabetes, cancer, arthritis, and bowel diseases like Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.”
    https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/understanding-acute-and-chronic-inflammation

    7. Research identifies inflammation as the key driver of the aging process.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352396415300815

    8. “Inflammation is the prime candidate amongst potential determinants of mortality, capability and cognition up to extreme old age.”
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352396415300815

    9. Norepinephrine inhibits the inflammatory pathway in the body by decreasing levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha, also known as TNF-alpha.
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1845768

    10. Norepinephrine decreases other inflammatory chemicals like macrophage inflammatory protein-1α.
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1038/sj.bjp.0702179/full

    11. A 1996 study by Janský et al., looked at whether cold water immersion (14 degrees C for 1 h) impacts biomarkers of the immune system in young, healthy men. Ultimately, they found that cold water immersion (57 degrees Fahrenheit) three times per week for six weeks increased the number of 
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8925815/

    12.A study found that winter swimming decreased the incidence of respiratory tract infections by 40%.
    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306987703002706

    13. Cold­ water immersion (head out) in 68°F (20°C) for one hour raised metabolic rate by 93% and one hour at 57°F (14°C) raised metabolic rate by 350%.
    https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s004210050065

    14. Men that were immersed in cold water at 50°F (10°C) for 15 minutes 3 times a week for four weeks after running were able to increase mitochondrial biogenesis occurring in their muscle tissue.
    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26041108/

    15. Cold water exposure (50°F or 10°C) following high intensity running increased PGC­1α, a gene that increases the number of mitochondria in muscle.
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24561815

  • I M says:

    0:40 improves mood and depression
    2:40 reduces inflammation
    5:22 benefits immunity
    6:46 increases mental toughness
    7:44 helps burn fat
    9:08 improves endurance capacity
    10:11 how to experience its benefits

  • Mavah says:

    I’m doing cold showers for almost half a year and I feel so good, haven’t been sick, always feel very focused and pumped after one. Especially after a workout

  • Daxis Perry says:

    This just shows that physical suffering makes you stronger.

  • T2D says:

    Cold water does cure depression, after using it for a week, you start to appreciate a life where hot water is available

  • Reuterss says:

    It takes like 2 weeks and after that you do not care much about the cold anymore. The biggest hurdle is to overcome yourself because your head is telling you that its gonna be uncomfortable. I still have this often even though I take cold showers for like 10 years. But once I step under the shower the feeling is completely gone. And the energy boost and feeling of vitality afterwards is just awesome.
    Taking ice baths is next level stuff tho. 😀

  • Sigman says:

    the hardest part about taking a cold shower is trying not to tell everyone you took a cold shower

  • tjgrafiks says:

    I had a sudden onset of severe inflammation in august of 2020 which now looks like an autoimmune disease. It literally aged me like 15 years ins 4-6 months. I went from having no joint and muscle pain to being in severe pain every single day. swollen joints, weak muscles and screwed up digestion. my liver, neck and spine are always on fire. some days I can’t even raise or use my arms. this is like the twilight zone. I was fit and working out one day and weeks later can’t do anything. I lost 30lbs of muscle over 4-5 months and can’t put back not even 10lbs in over a year! the cold showers have been helping with my inflammation and joint pain.

  • Sup Brah…I’m Hammer. says:

    What works great for me is in the morning before exercise, take a HOT shower and keep it hot until you’re clean, this loosens my muscles and helps get my blood flowing, it literally warms me up for my exercise. When you’re done and all sweaty, sore and tired, I take a COLD shower to quickly rinse off. It not only works like an ice bath to dull soreness and help heal, but helps motivate and put you in a better mood to take on the rest of your day despite being so tired and sore from exercise.

    • Supreme.gamers&rs⭐️ says:

      I take shower/bath my whole life nothing happens

    • Iknowthelaw says:

      Dang, your water bill’s gotta be high. Lol

    • Sup Brah…I’m Hammer. says:

      @Iknowthelaw not really, in the summer, instead of cold showers, I clean up in the 55 degree river across from my house. No need to waste money on a water bill when you live next to a river

    • Mr White says:

      I would NOT recommend taking a cold shower just after finishing your workout because it’ll kill all your gains. Much rather take one 4-5h after or take one in the morning and a hot shower after your workout

    • Redzuan Akim says:

      @Mr White can you elaborate more on how it will kill all your gains?

  • a glitch in the matrix says:

    This also helps overcome subconscious fear. Forcing yourself to do something that is completely out of your comfort zone. So in a way it’s reprogramming the brain. I find this method being crucial since I do MMA. It also can have slight DMT like effects, which is the buzz a lot of people get.

    • Knowledge of Self 144k says:

      To-reprogram the brain….I’ve been cold showering off and on the last 4 yrs. I’ve recently set a goal for myself to cold shower for 6 months I’ve set milestones on my calendar 21 days, 40, 90, 180 days. Also for accountability it would be a bummer if I break my streak I’m on day 3 💪 ❄

  • Logan S says:

    Been doing this for several years after learning about it. I can vouch to the increase in positive mood and higher energy, as well as feeling healthy to start the day. However, I would only do this consistently in the summer, spring, or early fall. Winter, another story, hot/warm showers return.

    • Jones Jones says:

      Exactly what I was thinking. If I take a cold shower in the middle of winter I’m going to be too angry to get depressed! Lol

    • martin kerr says:

      Why not winter too ,your house not got heating ? lol

    • Logan S says:

      @martin kerr My house has heating, it’s nature that does not have heating when I go out to work or socialize outdoors in the winter.

  • HealingMushroom says:

    I am taking cold showers since beginning of january. I must say that I hated it for the first week and I even got a headache after every shower. I was about to stop my experiment when suddenly in the second week I started to feel a change.

    My body adapted and my recovery after sports went so much quicker. I drank a lot of coffee before and didn’t have the need anymore because I was already so sharp and awake after the showers. In the cold winter months I was walking outside with just a shirt or light pullover when everyone else was wearing heavy coats.

    Whenever I am in places where they don’t have cold water e.g. certain gyms I feel really weird after. I must say after almost 7 months in it was the best thing I did in a long time. My goal is to never stop taking cold showers 🙂

    Give it a try, you won’t be disappointed!

    ps: I shower between 4-6 minutes around the coldest setting

  • Mike Smith says:

    I started taking cold showers about 8 weeks ago and I love it. First two times were a little jarring but after that, I didn’t even notice the cold water. Cold things as a whole don’t affect me as much anymore. I wouldn’t go back to hot showers if I had to.

  • Grace Valdez says:

    I started doing a cold shower a few weeks ago. At first it was super cold and I couldn’t take it, so I put a lot of hot water so it could be warm. I got a lot of goosebumps on my arms. I then decided to ignore how cold I was and kept showering. It was really hard because I wasn’t used to cold showers. Honestly It helped me feel energized and it made me feel great. I didnt even want to leave the shower. I definitely recommend cold showers, but don’t do immediately. Get your body to adjust to it little by little and you will automatically get used to it. I will never get to hot showers again.😂

  • bear says:

    I started taking cold showers when my ac broke this summer. I haven’t gone back because the post- workout cold shower feels so good. Glad to hear there’s so many benefits.

  • Reflex Construction says:

    I’ve had muscle issues and need two hip replacements. I have terrible pain due to avascular necrosis. This really helps. What he says here is 100% true in my experience. Whether or not I have the balls to do it all the time is up to me. It does work though. You will feel mentally and physically better over time. I swam in 60 degrees F* for about a year. I didn’t even go below that. But it really helps!!!!!

    • Solarris says:

      Cold water immersion stunts and prevents muscle recovery within a 24hr period after doing a workout. Stay away from cold showers if you are someone that goes to the gym regularly, stick to normal temp showers.

    • Reflex Construction says:

      ​@Solarris Can’t agree on that one. I’ve only decreased pain with cold water. For my condition at least. It’s extremely uncomfortable but it actually gets rid of inflammation better than an NSAID. The combination of both does wonders. Not a permanent solution though.

    • Solarris says:

      @Reflex Construction Yes, cold water therapy does stop muscle inflammation therefore preventing/decreasing pain, however for muscle hypertrophy, it stimulates the muscle when the muscle shouldn’t be, and instead should be recovering.

    • assassin says:

      @Solarris Hey dude, I’m going to be doing my first plunge when I get my bucket soon. I was thinking of doing morning plunge first and then go for a run and not doing post plunge. What do you think? Can you help me out.

    • Solarris says:

      @assassin Post or Pre plunge, it’s really up to you. If your going for long runs and are expecting to feel sore and tired after a cold plunge could reduce feet/leg muscle inflammation. However on the other hand, having a cold plunge before can get your muscles stimulated before a run. Just make sure you warmup/stretch before you run.

  • Yonah Greene says:

    I did this as a soldier in the army in the beginning it was really uncomfortable/painful but I knew straight from the start that it was healthy. after just a few weeks I could take freezing cold showers in the dead of winter and at full pressure with almost no discomfort after the first minute. Everything he said in this video I saw in research studies and experienced first-hand. An additional benefit I didn’t see listed here is self-discipline and will-power. Both of which do not come naturally and you must work on consistently in order to build them up and strengthen. Having the ability to excersize both to the extreme will make you that successful in pretty much anything you set your mind to.

  • Dr. Ura Ambulocetus says:

    I like cold showers only because of when you exit the shower you won’t be hesitant in leaving the great warmth.

  • Gus Stevens says:

    I’ve taken cold showers and I feel so refreshed and calm after. It is hard at first but worth it.

  • grahamt19781 says:

    I’ve done this before. It’s actually fascinating how if you endure the freezing water for a minute you actually get used to it and start feeling comfortable.

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