| | mmmmm hot baths. feel so so good. especially being in the hot tub! hahaha After like maybe 10 mins or so i feel like sleeping. I think its because your blood is circulating better in the hot water. |
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I love hot baths! They're the best thing in the world. So relaxing.
I also prefer a hot bath over a shower. Kinda funny, since I used to take showers in the morning all the time. I started taking baths in the evening about a year ago and I realized how much more relaxing it can be. I used to think that I didn't feel awake until after I had the shower, but the down side was that it was one more thing for me to do in the morning before heading off for school/work. Worse still if I was in a hurry (for example...sleeping in on a weekday). At least now when I take a bath, I can relax and get the blood circulating before I go to bed. Of course, if I soak in the bath for too long, I might fall asleep in it.
I agree with you.. I too dont know the exact reason ,behind why a hot bath always feels so good. Especially, taking a warm water shower at night, after a day full of work.
I think it might be due to the fact that hot water could increase body temprature a bit, and also make blood flow more easier. This might sound stupid, but the reason i said that was, i think my physics classes at school taught me so. Increase in temperature could increase size of substances. A warm water bath also removes dirt from the body more effectively than a cold water bath. And what would be better than a hot shower on a cold night.
I love a hot shower/bath! I take one almost every night it dose relax you, makes you feel as if you are in bead ready to go to sleep.
I wish I had a bath tub! I only get to use a bath tub when I go overseas and I stay in hotels that have nice toilets and bath tubs. A good warm soak improves blood circulation and opens up your pores to intoxicate you. Hence, you are healthier, and you'll feel more comfortable physically and mentally too. I also like a hot shower, since I don't have a bath tub.
I would suggest, that when you are returning from long and tiring job, and it is summer, you (I) will decide to take a pretty cold shower, which will take out the unnecessary heat of your body. Conversely, if you are tired at the winter, you will get colder when you are returning back from the work, so you decide to take a hot shower.
The hot shower in the winter will make your muscles relax, you will be hot and somehow protected from the flu (yeah, you could combine it with hot cup of tea...). Don't overdo the cold shower in the summer, couse you will get opposite effect... I got sick few times couse of that.
For me, a shower is just a quick way to get clean. No relaxing time really.
If I want to really relax (not often), then I take a nice big hot bath. QUOTE A hot bath is probably the original hydrotherapy treatment, and still the best. But as much as you may already enjoy a hot bath, you may not be tapping its full potential. At its best, a hot bath can be a very powerful tool for healing. But to get the most out of it, a little knowledge is very helpful. Bathing for relaxation A hot bath is relaxing. It was the original psychotherapy, and I suspect it is still the best. Technically speaking, however, hot baths are neurologically stimulating. The sensation of relaxation is an illusion, caused by the need to be still while body temperature is restored to normal. While some people do get drowsy after a hot bath, most remain alert for at least an hour. The most relaxing baths are actually in lukewarm water. Most people I know still prefer a good hot soak, but your nervous system is the most sedated by a not-so-hot bath. If you are taking a bath to get to sleep, try this kind of bath instead. Bathing for elimination You sweat under water. In a very hot bath, oddly enough, you can lose a lot of fluid. Sweating is an important form of excretion, and many waste metabolites and toxins are removed from the body this way. Exercise is one way to do this. A hot bath is a lot easier — and, in fact, people usually sweat much more in a bath than they ever do when exercising. Some people will call this “detoxification,” a word that gets thrown around too casually, usually to make something sound more therapeutic than it really is. A good sweat is a good thing, but it isn’t “detoxifying” any more (or any less) than having a bowel movement! It is more level-headed to simply say that it stimulates “elimination” of waste products. But sweating a lot in a bath also means that you must drink water — before, during and after! This is a vital key that most people miss. If you don’t hydrate, a hot bath may actually be stressful to your system — and I think this is why some people do not like baths. You must replace lost fluids to feel good later. Baths for relieving muscle aching Hot baths are good for muscle soreness. I don’t believe there is any “official” scientific reason for this — it’s not exactly a hot target for research dollars. However, I have some ideas … Systemic heating can do something for muscles that no hot pack can ever do. As good as a nice hot pack can feel, the effect is mainly neurological — heat is soothing to a muscle in distress. A hot bath has this effect also, but it additionally is able to actually increase the temperature inside a hurting muscle without exercising it. Hot packs cannot increase the heat inside your muscles. The human body is incredibly good at getting rid of heat. When you try to heat a muscle with a hot pack, you end up heating just the superficial blood, which quickly gets pumped away and immediately cooled. It has been shown that local heating never “penetrates” much deeper into the tissue than a centimeter, if that. The only really effective way to heat a specific muscle is by making it work, produce heat from the inside out, metabolically. But often this is not desirable in an injured or very fatigued muscle. So what to do? How to get the benefits of heating? The hot bath may work. In a hot bath, excess heat has nowhere to go. The body cannot get rid of it, anywhere. The entire system heats up slightly, like a fever. It’s not a lot, but it’s much more than you can manage with a hot pack. And this is probably good for sore muscles in several ways. Another common idea for bathing is that Epsom salts assist with detoxification and recovery from minor injuries, aches and pain. Do they? Do epsom salts work? Almost certainly not. Unfortunately, evidence and careful consideration of the evidence strongly suggests that dissolving Epsom salts — magnesium sulfate heptahydrate — in your bath doesn’t do anything at all except make the water feel kind of silky. It’s a pleasant effect, but not therapeutic, or even cosmetic … just aesthetic! The skin is almost completely waterproof, and passes no molecules or ions except via pores. Osmotic effect is irrelevant, and magnesium sulfate ions can’t get in. The final word is that “anything is possible,” but the smart money says, “don’t bother!” Not convinced? Epsom salt baths are discussed in (surprising) detail in the article Reality Check! Don't Bother With Epsom Salt Baths. Much better for backs A hot bath is not only a much better choice for the great majority of low back pain than icing — which is usually harmful — soaking in the tub may even be the single best therapy there is for low back pain. Or at least the best bang for your buck! The great majority of low back pain is muscular in origin. Specifically, the immediate cause of the pain is myofascial trigger points (“knots” in your muscles), which can cause far more grief than most people realize — and yet they are relatively treatable. A little reassurance, rubbing, and a hot bath go a surprisingly long way, even with the most horrendous case of low back pain. And while massage therapy is probably the single most effective therapy for most people, most of the time … a hot bath is pretty effective too, and the price sure is right. Trigger points are eased by heat, and usually irritated by cold. For more information about why you shouldn’t ice low back pain, see (Almost) Never Ice Low Back Pain!. For (much) more information about the nature of low back pain, see Save Yourself from Low Back Pain!. Keep a cool head One of the best things you can do to get the most from a hot bath is to keep a cool head. Or feet or hands. Or all three. As beneficial as it can be, your body doesn’t really like to be heated up entirely, with no opportunity at all for heat shedding. This creates an artificial fever, which can have some unpleasant side effects, such as headaches. So dump glasses of cool water over yourself! Drape a cool washcloth over your neck. Spray your feet with a shower hose. Give your body some opportunity to shed a little heat. Your core body temperature will still go up, but it will cause less physiological stress. You may be quite surprised at how much this improves the quality of the experience.
Hi when i get in a hot nice bath i always fell relaxed calm and tired Here are some reasons i think cause this: The main reason i think is that people have had a hard days work and that there muscles tense up. having are bath lossens them thuss making us fell relaxed. Well i love a long hot bath or shower! ofcourse i do! it just makes me so calm.. and takes me out of the world.. u know just standing in the shower jamming to ur favoritye songs.. american idol style baby XD i heart taking showers.. gives me an exccuse to not see my parents
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