Lolinda
J'aime nager dans le froid style Wim Hof.. 🏊♀️🙃
- Messages
- 432
How to resolve chills using a simple household grill
Anyone interested in this thread, I just found a damn simple method for resolving chills. I did some health experiment today and got chills. My chills were just as usual: so bad that hugging two hot water bottles and being under two thick sheepwool winter-blankets did nothing to them. Drinking hot water neither. Now, what I did: I have a small household grill that has four heating rods inside. They turn glowing red when it grills food. I though they must emit infrared. Red all the benefits of saunas and infrared saunas. So I opened the front door and positioned me some 15cm from the grill, such that my belly or my back got a nice comfortable warmth out of that front door.
➞ A few minutes later all chills gone!!!
I am amazed. It feels as nice and cosy in my body as if there never had been any chills at all... How come? It cant be the heat in itself because I did not come close enough to the opened grill door that it would be hot. It just felt pleasantly warm, simillar to a warm water bottle. So I ascribe it to the infrared as such.... It also had another amazing effects I did not have from heat alone: I felt like all my intestines started working intensely. Infrared rays penetrate the body some cm deep.
➞ I am curious if this works for other people plagued by chills, too?
I guess it might work only for people w/o much fat under the skin, thus, where IR penetration depth really reaches inside...
I did some fact-checking if it is really possible that a infrared from a cheap household grill has some health effects. My conclusion: a clear yes.
Here a Harvard-professor with >300 publications thinks that:
"Well, therapy is only effective at certain light lengths. 700-760nm has very little to no effect, and when you get to 800, the effects come back.
...all the wavelengths from 800-10,000nm do the same things"
And here you learn which range it is what we humans sense as heat.
➞ My conclusion: if I sense it as heat then I can be sure it is in the therapeutic range. My simple kitchen grill is.
Anyone interested in this thread, I just found a damn simple method for resolving chills. I did some health experiment today and got chills. My chills were just as usual: so bad that hugging two hot water bottles and being under two thick sheepwool winter-blankets did nothing to them. Drinking hot water neither. Now, what I did: I have a small household grill that has four heating rods inside. They turn glowing red when it grills food. I though they must emit infrared. Red all the benefits of saunas and infrared saunas. So I opened the front door and positioned me some 15cm from the grill, such that my belly or my back got a nice comfortable warmth out of that front door.
➞ A few minutes later all chills gone!!!
I am amazed. It feels as nice and cosy in my body as if there never had been any chills at all... How come? It cant be the heat in itself because I did not come close enough to the opened grill door that it would be hot. It just felt pleasantly warm, simillar to a warm water bottle. So I ascribe it to the infrared as such.... It also had another amazing effects I did not have from heat alone: I felt like all my intestines started working intensely. Infrared rays penetrate the body some cm deep.
➞ I am curious if this works for other people plagued by chills, too?
I guess it might work only for people w/o much fat under the skin, thus, where IR penetration depth really reaches inside...
I did some fact-checking if it is really possible that a infrared from a cheap household grill has some health effects. My conclusion: a clear yes.
Here a Harvard-professor with >300 publications thinks that:
"Well, therapy is only effective at certain light lengths. 700-760nm has very little to no effect, and when you get to 800, the effects come back.
...all the wavelengths from 800-10,000nm do the same things"
And here you learn which range it is what we humans sense as heat.
➞ My conclusion: if I sense it as heat then I can be sure it is in the therapeutic range. My simple kitchen grill is.
Last edited: