Wim Hof, Dutch 'Iceman,' Controls Body Through Meditation

http://weirdnews.aol.com/2011/05/22/wim-hof-dutch-iceman-cont_n_865203.html

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands -- The sun beams down on a warm Dutch spring morning, 
and the Iceman's students look wary as they watch him dump bag after bag of ice 
into the tub of water where they will soon be taking a dip.

The plan is to try to overcome the normal human reaction to immersion in 
freezing slush: gasping for air, shivering uncontrollably, and getting back out 
again as soon as possible.

Instead, under the direction of "Iceman" Wim Hof, the group of athletes is 
going to stay in the water for minutes practicing his meditation techniques, 
seeking possible performance or health benefits.

Hof, 52, earned his nickname from feats such as remaining in a tank of ice in 
Hong Kong for almost 2 hours; swimming half the length of a football field 
under a sheet of ice in the Arctic; and making the Guinness record books for 
running a half-marathon barefoot in Finnish snow in deep subzero conditions.

He tried to climb Mt. Everest in 2007 wearing only sandals and shorts, but 
suffered frostbite and turned back at 7,400 meters (24,300 feet) – he wants to 
test the limits of human potential, not die trying. He climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro 
instead the same way in 2009.

Hof tells his students meditation in the cold strengthens mind and body. Some 
scientists also say ice bath treatments may have circulatory benefits for 
athletes, or help them recover quicker after training, although this remains 
controversial.

For most people, hypothermia begins shortly after exposure to freezing 
temperatures without adequate clothing, and it can quickly lead to death once 
the body's core temperature falls below 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 degrees 
Celsius).

Hof says he can endure cold so well because he has learned to activate parts of 
his mind beyond the reach of most people's conscious control, and crank up what 
he calls his "inner thermostat."

In one well-documented demonstration in 2008, Hof remained encased in a glass 
box filled with ice on a New York City street for 71 minutes, at that time a 
record. Doctors monitoring his vital signs said his body temperature descended 
gradually to 93.6 degrees as his heart rate rose slowly into the 120s. He 
didn't shiver.

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