Want more beautiful skin and enhanced health
?
It's easier than you think once you understand the principle of detoxification.
This article details the traditional Finnish process of steam sauna
usage and how you can benefit using more modern but natural methodology.
With the recent popularity of far infrared
saunas and steam saunas comes the necessity of learning to use them properly
and safely. Listed below are the traditional steps the Finns would take
in order to benefit fully from their cleansing saunas. And the Finns
should know; roughly one in five inhabitants possesses a sauna.
Standard safety advice is that sauna users consult their
health care practitioner/s before embarking on any kind of sauna program.
Nevertheless, sauna usage doesn't seem to harm the five million plus
Finns and many others who know how to take a sauna correctly.
How to Take a Sauna - Traditional Finnish Style:
- First of all one should disrobe completely before entering. It
is also important to remove watches, rings and all other jewelry because
the heat of the sauna may distort the metal and burn the flesh that
wears
it.
Contact lenses and glasses should also be removed, as should dental
plates and the like.
It is common to wear kick-off sandals to walk into
the sauna though these are usually left on the floor and never used when
on the benches. In the
old country, sandals were not used, but instead a bowel of water is placed
inside the sauna on the floor and the feet are dipped in this as one
enters.
- Hikoilu - When entering the sauna for the first stage, it is
important to remember that there will be at least two levels of benches
- the high
bench is always the hotter, and the corner of the room diagonally opposite
the stove is always the hottest.
This stage is a dry heat where the
outside cares of your life can be discarded and the mind and body refreshed.
By tradition hikoilu is invariably
a period of silence and lasts about 10 to 20 minutes.
- Vilvoittelu -
When a heavy sweat has been reached - one can hear the perspiration
dripping down to the floor - this next phase of "vilvoittelu" has
been reached and one can then leave the sauna. Traditionally users have
sought a cool place of any kind like a swim in the lake or pool, maybe
a cold shower, a roll in the snow, or just a bucket of very cold water.
Some people simply sit down in the cool outside air.
Instinct will tell
you when the correct time comes to return to the hot room, usually
when the heartbeat returns to the regular rhythm. Both
the heat and the cold produce a slight increase in the rate of the heart
beat, but this adjusts quickly to normal in healthy people. If there
is a pounding or feeling of faintness, the person must leave the heated
room and sit quietly. Drinking water with electrolytes would prove helpful
also as well as fresh fruit juice.
- Vihtominen loylyssa - This is the
second session inside the hot sauna room. Traditionally birch twigs
were heated in a bowel of warm water
near the stove and the bathers sitting on the benches would use them
to beat their bodies back
and front to release the oil from the leaves and to open the skin's
pores.
Perhaps in modern situations, a dry skin brush would prove helpful
before one's sauna session to open up the pores and remove dead skin
cells.
This third stage lasts about 10 minutes followed by a second cooling
off before proceeding to the next step.
- Peseytyminen - One brings a
bucket of cold water, soap and scrubbing brushes into the sauna and
scrubs the body. Traditionally, people would
pair off to scrub each other's backs.
- Huuhtelu - This is a longer
session outside, rolling in the snow, a long swim or a washing with
shower or buckets in the coldest water
available.
- Jalkilammittely - A fairly short warm up in the sauna
which is usually followed by another short swim, dip or shower. Always
finish with the
cold, but not for a long exposure.
- Jaahdyttely ja kuivattelu - This
is an air bath for cooling and relaxation. Generally, except in harsh
winters, one dries with a towel only the hair
and back of the neck; after a good sauna the body can dry itself and
adjust naturally to any temperature without difficulties or harm.
The Finns really know how to take a sauna !
You may notice
that a sauna is far from being another steam bath. The idea is that
enough water is used to keep the hot, dry air from drying eyes and mucous
membranes,
but this depends upon the host. In Northern Finland, it was a social
status symbol to be a man who could take a lot of hot steam and smile
about it. This information about how to take a sauna may sound old-fashioned
or impractical but in a few localities it still works and works well.
The same principle of cleansing impurities from the skin can be found
in aromatherapy portable steam saunas that come in convenient home or
office structures.
Far infrared saunas have also become popular due to their ability
to penetrate deep into the sweat and sebaceous glands to remove toxins.
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Published: 4 August 2005
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