The Wellness Benefits Of A Good Shower! – Ajit Patel Sanda Wellness
Whether you’re a
gym bunny, weekend runner or enjoy a daily brisk walk, showering after you’ve
worked up a sweat is essential. But,
rather than simply keeping you clean, a post-workout shower can also enhance muscle
recovery, boost immunity, reduce stress and even help with weight loss.
Some sports
actively encourage showering as an integral part of their training regime. The
Tae Kwando moral code, for example suggests that a cold shower
(known as naengsoo machal) helps students ‘build pride and tenacity’. Exposure
to cold water has also been found to increase the body’s
supply of a powerful antioxidant called glutathione which is important for
liver health
and immune response. Don’t overdo it, however, as excessive exposure to cold
can have the opposite effect and increase your susceptibility to infection
(as can over-exercising).
Hygiene Showering is especially important if
you play contact sports – sweat
will mix with small cuts and abrasions and needs to be cleaned as soon as
possible to prevent infection. For swimmers this is equally important as swimming
pool chlorine can damage your hair and skin if you simply towel off after
getting out.
Recovery Your shower can help reduce aching after a hard
session, as delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) can be prevented with an
ice-cold shower
in which you hold the showerhead directly over the muscles you’ve worked. Elite
athletes use an ice-bath, but putting your shower on the coldest setting is a
quick and easy alternative. If you exercise daily or more
than once a day, this simple tip means you can start your next session without
the DOMS that might otherwise reduce the intensity of
your next session. And if you still feel ‘tight’ in the morning, a hot shower
will increase blood flow, allowing your muscles to relax.
Fat loss However unlikely it sounds, a cold
shower can help with weight
loss. Why? Because your metabolic rate can increase up to five times its
resting level during a cold shower to maintain your core body
temperature at 37 degrees C – meaning you burn more calories just to stay warm.
Most of this extra heat comes from increased fat
burning in your liver,
by increasing heat production in a type of fat known as brown adipose tissue ,
and from the act of muscle shivering – research shows the energy used by
shivering muscles
mostly comes from stored fat. If you don’t fancy a freezing
cold shower, you can still gain benefits from a shower that’s cold enough to
cause shivering without shaking, which increases muscle
tone. Experts in cold immersion suggest immersing your face first. This
triggers a nerve reflex that decreases your heart
rate as part of the so-called diving response. Then immerse your whole body
in the cold flow for ten to twenty seconds before turning the shower off. This
short exposure is all you need to start burning fat for heat. Lather up with body
gel and shampoo for a minute, then turn the cold shower back on. It won’t feel
so cold,
as your body has already adapted. Alternatively, start with a warm shower,
then slowly reduce the temperature
to the coldest setting for a maximum of three minutes.
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