Mind over
matter
Wency Leung The Globe
and Mail Jul. 20, 2017
Can people warm or cool their bodies using
only their thoughts? Wency Leung investigates the physiological
effects of meditation and breathing techniques in extreme
environments
Vitina Blumenthal rolled out her yoga mat on
the back patio of the Nicaragua hotel, where she was recently
leading a wellness retreat. Seeking relief from the 35-degree
Celsius heat, she sat down, cross-legged, with her hands in
her lap.
The Toronto mindfulness coach straightened her
spine, closed her eyes and took three deep breaths. Then, curling
up the sides of her tongue and sticking it out, she slowly inhaled
through the tunnel she had formed, and exhaled.
After repeating this several times, she could
feel herself becoming calmer, lighter and less bothered by the
oppressive heat.
“I get really overwhelmed sometimes when I’m
super-heated and I can feel frustrated,” says Blumenthal, founder
of the luxury wellness travel company WanderfulSoul. “That breath
is a nice way to kind of trick the mind that you’re
now cool.”
Blumenthal, who has been practising yoga for
more than a decade, explains she learned the meditative breathing
technique, called sitali, while living in an ashram in India.
Whenever she feels unbearably hot, she uses the technique to make
herself feel cooler, whether she’s travelling abroad or riding out
a humid Toronto heat wave.
Meditative techniques for regulating body
temperature are part of ancient
spiritual practices.
Yoga practitioners, for instance, refer to
sitali and the similar sitkara, which involves positioning the
tongue just behind the teeth, as breathing exercises that lower
one’s body temperature.
Other yoga breathing exercises such as
kapalbhati, which involves forceful breaths using the diaphragm,
are meant to increase body heat. Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns
are known to practice tummo meditation, which is believed to create
“inner fire,” allowing them to withstand
frigid temperatures.
Similarly, Wim Hof, a daredevil from the
Netherlands, is renowned for incredible feats such as submerging
himself in ice for more than an hour at a time and climbing Mount
Everest clothed in only a pair of shorts.
He attributes his seemingly superhuman
resilience to his eponymous method of breathing and
meditation exercises.
Such phenomena have prompted researchers to
investigate the physiological effects of meditation on body
temperature. Can people actually think their way to becoming hotter
or cooler?
Inner fire
One of the first Western scientists to examine
this type of meditative practice is Dr. Herbert Benson, a mind body
professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and now director
emeritus of the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at
Massachusetts General Hospital. In February, 1981, Benson and his
team travelled to the Himalayan town of Upper Dharamsala in India
to study monks as they practised tummo meditation.
As they reported in a 1982 paper published in
the journal Nature, the only descriptions of this esoteric practice
that existed previously were unscientific eye-witness accounts.
These depicted novice monks sitting naked and cross-legged on the
ground, then wrapping themselves with sheets dipped in icy water.
The men were then said to have dried the sheets with their
body heat.
Benson says he observed seasoned monks
practising tummo meditation in temperatures of 4 C to 10 C. He
noticed they first entered what he calls a “relaxation response”
state, which he describes as the opposite of the “fight or flight”
stress response, slowing their breaths and settling into a deep
rest. Then, they visualized their bodies being heated by fire,
which they explained comes from “the scattered consciousness,”
he says.
“The purpose of that is to burn away the
harmful effects of stress,” Benson says, noting that at such low
environmental temperatures, “You and I would go into uncontrollable
shivering. [But] here, they were able to actually have the sheets
steam on their bodies. That was for them, a sign of
successful meditation.”
Benson and his team took a number of
measurements of three monks, aged 46 to 59, including temperatures
of various parts of their body. They recorded no change in their
rectal temperature, but found the monks were able to increase the
temperature of their fingers and toes by as much as
8.3 C.
“This was fascinating,” Benson says. He noted
the monks were able to keep their peripheral body temperature
raised for as long as they were visualizing heat generated in
the body.
The question, though, is how? Benson never
found the answer. After the study was complete, he didn’t end up
researching tummo further. The financial costs of returning to
India were too high, he says, and instead, he turned his attention
to examining the impact of meditation on health issues such as high
blood pressure.
Mental imagery
Dr. Maria Kozhevnikov has since picked up
where Benson and his team left off.
Kozhevnikov, an associate professor of
psychology at the National University of Singapore, has studied the
physiological effects of Vajrayana techniques (Vajrayana is another
name for Tantric Buddhism), including tummo meditation, on
practitioners in Nepal, the Chinese province of Qinghai (also known
as eastern Tibet) and Bhutan. Unlike mindfulness practices that
induce relaxation, Vajrayana techniques elicit an arousal response
controlled by the sympathetic nervous system,
she explains.
Practitioners “use stress to go to a higher
state of consciousness, not a relaxed state of mind,” she says. So
contrary to what Benson believed he observed, practitioners of
tummo and other Vajrayana techniques don’t dial down the stress
response during meditation; they actively crank it up,
she found.
Kozhevnikov, who is also a visiting associate
professor of radiology at Harvard Medical School and specializes in
the neural mechanisms of visual imagery, believes the answer to how
tummo practitioners raise their body temperature consists of two
parts: breathing and intense visualization.
The breathing, which in tummo practice is
forceful and involves abdominal and pelvic muscle contractions, “is
not that interesting,” she says. Rather, it’s just one of a few
mundane techniques, such as engaging in physical exercise, that
allow people to increase their core body temperature to a certain
point. Typically, once they hit 37 C, the body’s cooling mechanisms
automatically kick in. They start to sweat, their blood vessels
dilate and they’re unable to raise their body temperature
any further.
This is where she believes intense
visualization comes in. In tummo meditation, practitioners conjure
mental images, such as flames, and imagine sensations of intense
heat. Kozhevnikov suggests this visualization allows practitioners
to override the body’s automatic cooling response, allowing them to
push past their typical threshold.
“By using the visualization, apparently, the
body doesn’t understand what’s happening and they can go on and on
and on, and higher … than 37” degrees, she says.
Kozhevnikov says she’s still trying to figure
out how visualization may produce this overriding effect. This
summer, she has been recording the brain activity of nuns in Bhutan
using electroencephalography as part of her efforts to understand
the mechanisms at work.
Acclimatization training
Some scientists are skeptical that this kind
of body-temperature regulation can be explained by the powers of
the mind. Dr. Maria Hopman, professor of integrative physiology at
Radboud University in the Netherlands, thinks the answers are
likely more physical than mental.
Hopman has performed several highly publicized
experiments on Hof, also known as “The Iceman,” whose training
method has gained followers around the world.
One of her most “amazing” findings, she says,
was Hof’s ability to maintain his core body temperature at close to
37 C, even after an hour and a half of being submerged in ice
water, while his skin temperature plummeted. Hopman believes the
main factor behind his resilience appears to be his
vasoconstriction ability, or his ability to reduce blood flow to
the skin in response to cold, so that he doesn’t lose too much
heat. She suggests he has acquired this ability over many years
of training.
Even though Hof’s method involves meditation
and breathing exercises and is described as similar to tummo and
yogic breathing, Hopman says she has witnessed him perform stunts
in extreme cold without much time to meditate
in preparation.
“I don’t know that the meditation is so
important,” she says. “I think the most important thing is the
training and the adjustment of the body.”
If you were to take daily minute-long cold
showers, for instance, and gradually increase the length of your
showers over time, you’d likely be able to withstand a 15-minute
cold shower by the end of a year, Hopman says. “I really think it’s
an adaptation of the body as you exposure yourself to
it regularly.”
Hopman notes Hof’s extraordinary abilities do
not extend to tolerating heat. One of her colleagues once studied
him as he ran a marathon in the heat of a desert in Namibia, she
says, noting, “He was not extremely good at it. He really was not
any better than anyone else with some strength and a
fit body.”
Cooling down
If these hypotheses provide possible
explanations for how one might keep warm in cold temperatures, what
could be behind yoga and meditation techniques that are meant to
cool you down?
Indeed, it’s possible to improve your
tolerance to heat through similar repeated exposure. For instance,
Bikram yoga, which is practised in a heated room, can be considered
a form of heat training, says Dr. Jessica Mee, a lecturer and
researcher in the school of sport, health and exercise sciences at
Bangor University in Wales. Typically, after 15 sessions over four
weeks, people start to experience certain physical adaptations that
allow them to better cope in heat, such as an increase in sweating,
more dilute sweat, and lower cardiovascular strain, she says. These
adaptations may, over time, help you feel less uncomfortable in
heat and become more efficient at cooling
yourself down.
The acute effects of specific cooling postures
and breathing techniques, however, such as the sitali breathing
that Blumenthal practices, are not well studied. While they’re
widely recognized and practised in yoga, there’s a lack of
scientific literature on the effects of these techniques on body
temperature, Mee says.
But ultimately, Mee explains, our body
temperature is dictated by our heat storage, which is determined by
our heat production, or metabolic rate, and our ability to lose
heat, which is typically through the evaporation of sweat. She
suggests certain meditation and breathing techniques may help relax
the body, reducing one’s metabolic rate to
resting levels.
“So when we’re rested or calm and in a
meditative state, you would likely expect a lower heat production,”
she says, noting this is likely achieved through multiple responses
including a lower heart rate, a lower respiratory rate and less
skeletal muscle activity.
Psychological resilience
None of these practices for consciously
controlling one’s body temperature are particularly mystical, says
Dr. Norman Farb, an assistant professor of psychology at the
University of Toronto Mississauga.
But he suggests our bodies may be capable of
more than we think. How we interpret our state of being hot or cold
can contribute to how well we tolerate extreme temperatures, he
says. For example, he explains, if we feel as though the summer
heat is unbearable, the stress of that discomfort can itself affect
our physiology, such as causing our heart rates to increase and our
metabolism to speed up, thus making us even hotter and making the
situation feel worse.
“That’s going to create a vicious cycle, like,
‘Oh, it’s too hot, and now I’m getting stressed about getting too
hot and so I feel even hotter and I get more stressed,’” Farb says,
noting many meditation practices are aimed at helping people
distinguish between the primary sensation of what they’re
experiencing and the interpretive layer they add
on top.
“If you can stay with the primary sensation,
it lends itself to psychological resilience because the things that
often make people quit or or panic or fail are appraisals that they
can’t cope,” he says.
Blumenthal, the Toronto mindfulness coach,
believes this is what sitali enables her to do. While it may not
actually change her body temperature, it calms her nerves and
relieves her frustration over the heat, allowing her to better deal
with the sweltering weather, she says.
Farb warns, however, that the body still has
its physical limits. People who are good at breaking away from
their concerns about the heat or cold may actually put themselves
at risk of becoming overheated or making themselves vulnerable
to hypothermia.
“It isn’t always just mind over matter,” he
says. “You could get to the point where you still freeze to death
or overheat. And in fact, this is a practice that would let you get
to that place.”