December

December 17, 2009

Happy December!  Here’s hoping that winter and holiday celebrations/preparations are going well for you.  Things here surely are.  Many seem to be noticing some stress and anxiety in their loved ones and co-workers, as many gift certificates have been picked up.  Soem folks tell me that the intended recipients just really likes the water.  Whatever works!  With Chanukah almost over, and Christmas just over a week away, it is still high gift-giving season, and every day here reflects that reality.

Last weekend, three seniors from a local high school came in for a float.  We have had some younger folks in, but this visit was unique in the social and experimental qualities the experience seemed to have for them.  They were off to eat some fast food on leaving, and the float itself seems to have been very much a part of the evening’s entertainment for them.  I applaud the exploratory spirit, the willingness to try a new and different approach, the healthy indulgence of curiosity in healthy ways.

For me, floating is fun, and I welcome others open to testing that possibility.  Beyond the quest for fun, I think there was, too, an investigational aspect to the venture for those students.  Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy (REST) is one approach among many to the study of consciousness.  The publisher of The Book of Floating, Michael Hutchinson’s definitive popular treatment of the practice, lists the book in its “Consciousness Classics” collection. Pull away the noise, the strife, the screens, cars, books, bags, bother and “ado”, and what is left is you.   For some, that is a intimidating proposition, for others, an adventure like no other.

In what seems to be the only current US academic research on floating, Penn State runs a REST lab, for “an ever proliferating list of reasons.”  Among them: “What are the mechanisms of the relaxation response induced by flotation-R.E.S.T.? Does flotation-R.E.S.T. offer lasting benefits? Is there a training effect, an expectancy effect, a setting effect?  The REST Laboratory is a valid and potent mode of inquiry into the complex negotiations of mind, body, and environment. As such, we are always interested in cultivating colloboration from individuals of far-flung fields of expertise.”  My hope is that such serious study, more common in previous decades, continues and expands in the coming years.

The post-float writing questions administered to PSU REST subjects reveal the focus:  * How do you feel today?  Did the tank affect how you were feeling?  If yes, please explain. * Did you have any visual or auditory experiences while in the tank?  Please describe. *  How would you say the tank affected your experience of your body? * What effect would you say this REST session had on your experience of identity, the feeling of who and what you are? The REST lab’s reference page lists published results of several previous studies, one of which found that floatation REST “was shown to produce a significant decrease in self-rated anxiety and arousal”, and that subjects in a separate phase of research, “experienced similar changes in mood and arousal, [and] reported that autobiographical memories retrieved in REST were more pleasant and intense, and had been more frequently recalled in the past, than those recollected in a control environment.”

For me, floating opens a new way for consideration of what it is to be alive, me, in this body, this world.  I often tell people that, on my first-ever float, I discovered an ability to “touch my brain”.  That’s just a bit cryptic–the words don’t really speak to the experience, and somewhat blank, quizzical looks often follow.  Consider the last time you heard a live orchestra, or maybe a choir–that spine-tingling, pleasantly dizzying rush down the spine as the sound builds, dips and crescendoes.  Whatever really happens when I “touch my brain”, it creates that sensation, and I am both thrilled audience and conductor.  The ability remains with me, even outside the tank, allowing access to those perceptions, sensations and perspectives I now associate so strongly with floating.  Some amount of concentration is required, in or out of the water.  It’s worth the effort.

Below is a brief, anonymized response from one of our student visitors last week.   It looks as if he’d conscientiously answered the questions put by the PSU researchers.  FInally, I share the idea that it is never too early, and certainly not too late, to consider one’s self, one’s life, from the unique perspective floating provides.  It’s worth the effort.

I went for a float session on Friday with two of my friends.  I’m writing you because you said you liked to hear about our experiences in the tank.  For me, it was physically the most comfortable I’ve ever been, I was able to completely relax.  I didn’t experience any hallucinations while in the tank but I experienced some really interesting sensations.  At the beginning,  I felt like I was drifting through the water, like I was being pulled.  Other times I felt as if I were spinning.  My thoughts seemed much louder and I would hear something and not be able to tell if it was in my head.  When I couldn’t distinguish water from air, I couldn’t tell where my limbs were.  I thought my hands were touching for a while but when I moved one, I realized that they had been apart.  Being so still I sometimes felt as if I wouldn’t be able to move if I tried and I had no desire to try to move.   At the very end, my mind drifted off and I felt like I was in this weird dreamy state which I’m assuming is theta waves.  When I got out, I felt like I was mentally sharper and a “high on life” sensation which I think was from the endorphins.  I’m eager to try it again and I’ve been telling my friends about the experience. After I explained the experience to my parents, they are eager to try it too.


Holidays and New Beginnings . . .

November 21, 2009

With Thanksgiving still several days away, planning of gifts and celebration for December are already much on people’s minds. To help encourage gift-giving of a different sort, ifloat makes available 3-for-1 gift certificate purchases–and has already started! If you share one float each with three friends, you’ll have one for yourself. Pick up three 3-float-packages for friends, coworkers or loved ones, and you’ll have the opportunity for three floats of your own. This latter package provides a chance to share the experience at least once with each of those three people–and floating is a great experience to share, for the opportunity to discuss and debrief with someone after a session. Many of our first-time floaters bring a friend or family-member, and watching them interact and process the experience together after their sessions always gratifies.

Since the gift-giving season happens just prior to the new calendar year, the gift of relaxation has particular benefit, for both giver and receiver. One of our clients who has already given some certificates shared a lovely idea with us: The gift of an experience is often more valued, and valuable, than the accumulation of more things, dubious and ephemeral as they often are. January brings new requirements, new deadlines and newly-made plans for a happy, healthier approach to life. Stress management, often overlooked in the rush, is one resolution important for anyone juggling a hectic calendar and sizable set of demands. Floating is one great way to counteract the problematic effects of stress, and one we’ll continue providing education about and access to for the area’s busy residents.

Among the less-considered aspects of stress is its influence in the decision-making process. In a book entitled Annals of Gullibility by Stephen Greenspan (published by an imprint of Greenwood Press, right here in Westport, CT), this psychologist makes a direct link between the drain of stress and diminished decision-making capacity. Citing extensive recent findings by other clinical psychologists, Greenspan describes “self-regulatory depletion” as that “distinct lessening of perseverance and performance occurring on a variety of tasks as one’s energy becomes depleted.” Dr. Greenspan, Emeritus Professor of Educational Psychology and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at University of Colorado, goes on to conclude that there is an easy inference to the idea that “externally induced exhaustion will cause increased susceptibility toward appeals or pressures that might otherwise be resisted.” Indeed, the studies Grenspan cites indicate “that stress causes a breakdown in willpower and self-control, whereas these can be replenished and substantially restored through rest.” I hasten to add that one form of rest is that kind with the big letters: R.E.S.T. (restricted environmental stimulation therapy)–better known outside clinical psychology labs as floating.

That unaddressed stress is deleterious to bodily function and health is a truism. That it is harmful to mind and thought process should logically follow, and from Dr. Greenspan’s perspective, certainly does. This potential for ill-considered and often harmful decisions extends, unfortunately, into all areas of life–from health care to child care, from financial planning for the future to daily budgeting of dollars, calories and attention. That extra portion or dessert we can’t resist seems trivial, but the effects of even these smaller decisions can accumulate unpleasantly. Larger family, financial, career and education choices are trivial to no one, and deserve the clearest heads we can bring to bear. Certainly, many other factors as discussed by Greenspan can lead to gullibility and poor decisions, but stress deserves closer consideration in this context.

To close on a semi-comic note, Greenspan’s includes a comment from former President Bill Clinton. Whatever the political perspective, or one’s personal opinion on Mr. Clinton, it would be hard to argue that Clinton’s active political life was not, at least partially, defined by his various gaffes. Of these blunders, Mr. Clinton has said, “every major error I have made in my life I have made when I was tired.” I was unable to verify the quote, but will trust in Greenwood’s fact-checkers and lawyers on its veracity.

If he didn’t actually say it, it is still true enough to be “true”, and not just for presidents.

Get some R.E.S.T. (and rest) this holiday season.  Now is the time.


So it begins, thanks for coming along . . .

September 8, 2009

ifloat_logo

Again, a thanks–for your interest and attention. Since reading David Foster Wallace’s Kenyon commencent address, my appreciation for the direction and content of individual attention often looms large. I don’t want to sound too recursive, just to share that I now pay much more attention to that which I give my attention. Your time here is appreciated.

As ifloat grows and evolves, I’ll do my best to share thoughts and progress here. I look forward to your reactions and comments, and the influence they may provide in the directing our evolution. One wonderful bit of forward motion that I wanted to share is our upcoming open house here at ifloat to celebrate and mark our opening.

On September 19th, we will be hosting the grand opening from 3 to 9 p.m. Please do join us for light food and drinks. We are really looking forward to sharing the results of the many months of bureaucracy-juggling, dust, noise, anticipation and hard work. We see the place every day, but I never tire of hearing people’s reaction to the warm and peaceful environment that issued from all of that activity. This is a nice place to be. If you can join us, please call at 203.226.7378, or send a message to ifloatspa@gmail.com and let us know.

Our opening, on the 19th and all the days that follow, also allows an opportunity to share with friends, family and community what we have learned about Restricted Environmental Stimulation Technique (REST). Also known as floatation, floatation therapy or wet REST, floating provides a novel and singularly effective way to address a much-talked-about if little-addressed aspect of all our lives: Stress.

At the end of the post, I’ll include a number of links to guide you to resources that detail the science and philosophy behind the application of floatation REST to the problem of stress. These will do a better job than I might in making clear connections for you. I invite you to use just a bit of that limited quantity known as your attention in reviewing some of the material linked. One of the pioneers in the study of REST, Dr. Roderick Borrie, puts it in this way:

Being able to unwind from the tangle of stress and enter a state of deep relaxation is one of the most important skills you can learn. It is a skill that will benefit both your physical and mental health as well as making you happier and giving you a sense of having more control.
Not only is it possible for everyone to relax, it is necessary.

I guess that, to return to my running theme, I am asking you to pay attention to you. Floating may not be for you, but surely, there is some event or activity that will allow you the required relaxation to which Dr. Borrie refers. Even without consideration of the voluminous data behind the links below documenting the subjective joy and objective efficacy of REST, I can share that, for real people, people like you, floating is a profoundly peaceful practice. Come see the space on the 19th, come another time and pay attention to the space between your ears.

One final thought before the links for your consideration: Below is a message, from what I can guess, sent just as our guests returned home. Upon finding us on the web, this married couple called and scheduled that day. To get here, they’d driven two and a half hours from upstate NY. Based on what you’ll read below, I think they’ll be mking the trip again sometime soon. Now that’s paying attention.

Dear Sean ~
I just wanted to write and tell you how much Jim and I enjoyed ourselves at your new place today. It was totally worth the trip, and I’m sure we’ll be seeing you again. My son-in-law owns a restaurant, so I know it’s nice to get feedback when you open a new business, and it was such an enjoyable experience for us that I felt compelled to write. Your place is immaculately clean, very beautifully decorated and I love the way you have the tanks and the shower all in one private space. It was so kind and considerate of you to not only give us a good rate, but to allow us to float for 95 minutes! Neither of us were too hungry after the float, so we didn’t make it to the restaurant you recommended; we just drove home — unfortunately, we forgot that it was the Friday of Labor Day weekend and we hit all kinds of traffic, but we were so relaxed and happy that it didn’t even bother us.
Thanks again, and hope to see you soon.

http://floatforhealth.net/

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/floattalk/

http://hailthefloaters.pbworks.com/

Float Finder-Research Links

Consciousness Classic-The Book of Floating

Wikipedia on REST


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