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    <title>Float North County</title>
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      <title>The Science of Floating and Mystical Experiences</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2023/02/21/the-science-of-floating-and-mystical-experiences</link>
      <description>The ideas of altered states of consciousness, mystical experiences, and voluntary self-isolation often bring with them images of shamans, spaced-out hippies, geometric art, and vibrant …
The post The Science of Floating and Mystical Experiences appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           The ideas of altered states of consciousness, mystical experiences, and voluntary self-isolation often bring with them images of shamans, spaced-out hippies, geometric art, and vibrant colors, as exaggerated stories and tales of these experiences get passed around. Along with these come equally exaggerated horror stories of being out of control, or seeing demons and messages from gods. Many people choose to stay clear of these potentially mind-bending scenarios that could lead them to having their worldview challenged in some unknown and uncontrollable way.
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           These misconceptions are reinforced through movies and TV shows. When float tanks make an appearance, they are often shown portraying people emerging from the tanks having a full-on-psychedelic-hallucination, or having gone mad from being alone for too long. They also tend to portray floaters having a spiritual experience in what looks like a drug-induced state, giving the often no-so-subtle implication that drugs are needed to achieve these states. Stories passed on through friends-of-friends often lead to misremembered details with an extra emphasis on the “wild” parts that then skew the view of the experience.
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           As many who have emerged from the tank can attest, it is often a much more dreamy, ethereal, and calming environment than is typically conveyed on screen. In the tranquility of the float tank, the mind chooses to slow down and relax instead of going into panic mode. While the environment of the tank can be foreign at the beginning, that feeling fades as the warm water becomes more welcoming, and the dark closed-off environment expands in the vastness, feeling more open than it appears. Although this is quite different from an automatic and uncontrollable plunge into a psychedelic-like state, the experience is still profound and impactful, and offers many benefits that do not require an intense experience to receive, such as anxiety reduction and body pain relief.
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           So, what exactly are mystical experiences and altered states of consciousness? And how do they relate to the floatation experience? With all the differing tales being told, defining these experiences can be very murky. We have documentation of early mystical experiences and traditions for at least as long as people began to settle and transition from a nomadic life. Many of these seem to stem from ancient religions, with mystic sects searching for methods to connect in a more spiritual way with gods and spirits.
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           Cultures from all corners of the earth have practiced ceremonies to achieve these states. These experiences have been described by philosopher and religious scholar Alan Watts as growing the understanding that all beings are connected as one with the world around them. This common theme of finding a unity between all life is well-documented across many who have had mystical experiences, both historically and in modern studies.
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           Another common theme of mystical experiences is the concept of ego-death: feeling your identity dissolve as a deep connection to all around you takes over. A mystical experience is often accompanied by many forms of altered states, such as feeling your sensations differently, having heightened perceptions, or having different thought patterns. It’s worth noting again that these altered states can be experienced in a variety of ways and through a variety of practices – a full blown psychedelic experience is not required!
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           In fact, people experience altered states everyday without the use of drugs, religious ceremonies, or even float tanks. At its most basic, an altered state is simply a different state of awareness than your normal day-to-day wakeful state. Yoga and other forms of exercise, for example, can alter your physiology, giving rise to heightened senses and a feeling of euphoria. Various meditation practices and breathing techniques can make one deeply relaxed and calmed, leading to a dreamy state of consciousness.
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           Finding the language to express and describe these otherworldly and dream-like experiences is often difficult, but that hasn’t stopped scientists from developing tests and scales to try to define these altered states. One such method, the Hood Mystical Experience Scale, was developed in the late 1970s and looks at 8 categories of mysticism (Ego Quality, Unifying Quality, Inner-subjective Quality, Temporal/Spatial Quality, Noetic Quality, Ineffability, Positive Effect, and Religious Quality). The scale was created by Dr. Ralph Hood, Jr. in an attempt to assess the frequency, intensity, and meaningfulness of mystical experiences, and it has been used in many areas of research since its development… including float tanks.
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           In Sweden, Dr. Anette Kjellgren has been conducting research on floatation and mystical experiences since 2008. Along with tests to determine the presence and strength of mystical experiences in the tank, Dr. Kjellgren and team looked at how other variables impacted and interacted with these altered states. One of their most notable findings was in the differences between people with different levels of sensitivity to external stimuli (as determined by the Highly Sensitive Personality Scale).
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           This study followed university students, with each completing two floats. The team was able to find that those with higher-sensitivity had a greater rate of both altered states of consciousness and mystical experiences. The highly-sensitive people rated their float experience higher on the Mystical Experience Scale in six out of 8 subcategories:
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            Ego Quality
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            Unifying Quality
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            Noetic Quality (an experience giving new understanding)
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            Inner-Subjective Quality
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            Religious Quality
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            Temporal/Spatial Quality
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           In other words, the more that people are sensitive to external stimuli in their day-to-day lives, the more likely they were to rate their experience floating as more mystical and “altered.” This study is possibly the first to find a correlation between personality traits and the relation to altered states and mystical experiences.
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           The definitive reason for the increased intensity of these experiences in the highly-sensitive group when floating needs further exploration. There is data suggesting it could be related to the healing that goes on inside of the tank, both physiologically and psychologically, leading to more inner growth and developments. Future studies will need to be done to explore this relationship more deeply and build on these results.
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           While not every float will lead to a mystical experience, there are still many other benefits to be had, even just in the realm of experiencing different states both in and out of the tank. Floatation practitioners often enter a relaxed state, feeling like we just woke up from a dream, and once welcomed back into the world, our senses burst to life as information comes flowing in. A new look on the world is common both during and after a float, as our mind quiets and looks for new ways to experience the environment through the lack of sensation. Even without a profound mystical experience, all of this can lead to new thoughts and ideas, giving a more peaceful view, and different outlook, on the world.
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           —
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           Float Research Citations
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           Do Highly Sensitive Persons Experience More Nonordinary States Of Consciousness During Sensory Isolation?
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/268284429_Do_Highly_Sensitive_Persons_Experience_More_Nonordinary_States_Of_Consciousness_During_Sensory_Isolation" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.researchgate.net/publication/268284429_Do_Highly_Sensitive_Persons_Experience_More_Nonordinary_States_Of_Consciousness_During_Sensory_Isolation
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           Altered States of Consciousness and Mystical Experiences during Sensory Isolation in Flotation Tank: Is the Highly Sensitive Personality Variable of Importance?
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/247871617_Altered_States_of_Consciousness_and_Mystical_Experiences_during_Sensory_Isolation_in_Flotation_Tank_Is_the_Highly_Sensitive_Personality_Variable_of_Importance" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.researchgate.net/publication/247871617_Altered_States_of_Consciousness_and_Mystical_Experiences_during_Sensory_Isolation_in_Flotation_Tank_Is_the_Highly_Sensitive_Personality_Variable_of_Importance
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           Sensory Isolation in Flotation Tanks: Altered States of Consciousness and Effects on Well-Being
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228480782_Sensory_Isolation_in_Flotation_Tanks_Altered_States_of_Consciousness_and_Effects_on_Well-Being" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228480782_Sensory_Isolation_in_Flotation_Tanks_Altered_States_of_Consciousness_and_Effects_on_Well-Being
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           Altered consciousness in flotation-REST and chamber-REST: Experience of experimental pain and subjective stress
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233651903_Altered_consciousness_in_flotation-REST_and_chamber-REST_Experience_of_experimental_pain_and_subjective_stress" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233651903_Altered_consciousness_in_flotation-REST_and_chamber-REST_Experience_of_experimental_pain_and_subjective_stress
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           Other Citations
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            Classic Hallucinogens and Mystical Experiences: Phenomenology and Neural Correlates
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    &lt;a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6707356/#:~:text=%E2%80%9C%5BMystical%20experiences%20are%5D%20those,(Watts%2C%201970)" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6707356/#:~:text=%E2%80%9C%5BMystical%20experiences%20are%5D%20those,(Watts%2C%201970)
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           A Channel for Magic: Ralph Hood’s Mysticism Scale and the Occult Roots of the Johns Hopkins Psychedelic Research Program
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    &lt;a href="https://www.psymposia.com/magazine/a-channel-for-magic-ralph-hoods-mysticism-scale-and-the-occult-roots-of-the-johns-hopkins-psychedelic-research-program/" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.psymposia.com/magazine/a-channel-for-magic-ralph-hoods-mysticism-scale-and-the-occult-roots-of-the-johns-hopkins-psychedelic-research-program/
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           The God Mysticism Scale: a Brief Version
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    &lt;a href="https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11089-018-0856-7" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11089-018-0856-7
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           Healing Altered States of Consciousness
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    &lt;a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479903/#:~:text=An%20altered%20state%20of%20consciousness%20is%20a%20change%20in%20one%27s,The%20person%20is%20not%20unconscious" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479903/#:~:text=An%20altered%20state%20of%20consciousness%20is%20a%20change%20in%20one%27s,The%20person%20is%20not%20unconscious
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           Altered States of Consciousness
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           https://hraf.yale.edu/ehc/summaries/altered-states-of-consciousness
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      <pubDate>Tue, 21 Feb 2023 18:54:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2023/02/21/the-science-of-floating-and-mystical-experiences</guid>
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      <title>Tuning into your Inner Perception through Floating</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/11/17/tuning-into-your-inner-perception-through-floating7f04cd15</link>
      <description>Touch, sight, smell, hearing, and taste are what most people immediately think of when asked about the human senses. While these five major senses get …
The post Tuning into your Inner Perception through Floating appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           Touch, sight, smell, hearing, and taste are what most people immediately think of when asked about the human senses. While these five major senses get the most attention, there are numerous, often-overlooked senses of the body that can add a great depth of information about what is going on inside of us: for example thermoception (sense of temperature), nociception (sense of pain), and equilibrioception (sense of balance). One of these lesser known senses is interoception, or the sense of the sensations inside your own body, like your heartbeat and your breathing. “It’s like an inner selfie,” Dr. Sahib Khalsa, floatation researcher, says in his 
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           2016 Float Conference talk
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           Interoception can be compared to other forms of bodily sensations such as exteroception, which deals with sensations outside the body through stimulation of the five major senses, and proprioception,which deals with your spatial awareness. Together, these senses work to help the brain determine the answer to “how do you feel?” Through knowing where you are spatially, what is in your immediate environment, as well as what is going on in your body, you can identify how you feel, and what you need to do to correct anything that feels off. When one of these pathways for sensing our inner and outer worlds isn’t functioning properly, it can become challenging to articulate our feelings and emotions.
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           Research
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            has shown a link between how we regulate our emotions and our level of interoceptive awareness; a lower ability to recognize what is going on inside our bodies leads to a more difficult time working out our emotions, which in turn can make us more anxious. Interoception has been
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            to be a basis for our emotional regulation – if you know what is going on inside, you’ll likely be more in tune with your emotional states.
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           There is an evolutionary explanation for this, the more connected our ancestors were to their bodies, the more quickly they could act to solve a problem. Were they hungry and needed food? Or cold and needed shelter? Being able to decipher these messages sent to the brain in a fast and efficient way allowed ancient humans a better chance at survival.
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           The disconnect between what the body is feeling and what the brain is perceiving can slow us down, causing us to have trouble acting on our internal feelings, often bringing out feelings of distress and anxiety. Not knowing how to describe what you’re feeling leads to confusion as we are lost in describing what we feel. Previous research has shown that floating can increase the awareness of inner bodily sensations, especially when in the tank, when a beating heart suddenly becomes more prominent in the otherwise empty environment. That feeling of body-connectivity can carry on outside of the tank as well. This has led to current research looking at how floating can be used to help people with anxiety who struggle to connect their inner sensations to the proper emotions.
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           Anxiety Sensitivity (AS) is described as the fear that one will experience anxiety symptoms and sensations, specifically ones arising from inside the body, and is an underlying contributor to many forms of chronic anxiety. AS can be a large factor in anxiety levels for someone in their day-to-day life, and can have a variety of effects ranging from impacting how their immune system is functioning to being a cause of random panic attacks. Is it possible that getting people with high AS and low interoception into a float tank could help them get more in tune with their bodies through the reduction of all the outside stimulation? Dr. Justin Feinstein and Dr. Sahib Khalsa set out to answer that in a 
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           2017 study
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           The study took individuals with high AS and other forms of anxiety and looked at how floating might be beneficial for interoception compared to another relaxing treatment (watching a nature documentary). After floating (compared to the documentary) participants reported lower states of anxiety, while also having reduced blood pressure and muscle tension. Participants who floated also had an increase of sensations from the cardiorespiratory system – their breath and heartbeat became easy to focus on with all other stimulation swept away. Interestingly, participants found it easier to detect their heartbeat all throughout their body, including areas on the face, head, and on the back.The ability to regulate their focus on internal bodily sensations was also increased. The findings indicated that floating helped these participants see a reduction of general anxiety as well as increased interoception, specifically through the heartbeat and the breath.
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           Many anxiety disorders stem from a disconnect between the mind and body, lowering levels of interoception. This disconnect can cause other forms of anxiety, as emotions can feel out of sync, leading to internal confusion. Having a higher interception allows for someone to be more attentive to their emotions, as they can process internal stimulation quicker and more accurately gauge how they are feeling. While more work needs to be done, the results are promising, and early studies show that floating could be beneficial to increasing interoception, specifically within highly anxious individuals. There appears to be a strong connection between floating and heightened recognition of the heartbeat and breathing, making you more in tune with your body, and fostering a better understanding of the connection between your physical and mental states.
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      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2022 17:12:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/11/17/tuning-into-your-inner-perception-through-floating7f04cd15</guid>
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      <title>Latest in Float Research</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/09/30/latest-in-float-research78569c9b</link>
      <description>Similar to many float enthusiasts, if you ask us what floating is good for, our first answer is often, “What is it not good for?” …
The post Latest in Float Research appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           Similar to many float enthusiasts, if you ask us what floating is good for, our first answer is often, “What is it not good for?” Having witnessed floating help so many people, it’s easy to think of it as a panacea for all sorts of ailments and afflictions. However, despite decades of published research, some of those in the medical field still look at floating with a side-eye, skeptical of the claims made by floaters.
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           From curing insomnia to heightening your athletic abilities, there are personal stories from all over the globe of the benefits of floating. Unfortunately, large scale clinical trials are very expensive and time consuming, and most of these claims either receive funding for small scale studies, or aren’t able to be pursued at all with any kind of rigor.
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           As floating grows in prominence and popularity, the demand for this research has been getting stronger and stronger, and there are many researchers both in the US and internationally who are studying the effects of floatation therapy. The Float Lab at the 
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           Laureate Institute of Brain Research (LIBR)
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            is one of the best funded float labs in the world, and over the last decade it has been working to produce large, well-funded studies on floating as a treatment for a range of conditions.
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           More recently, they’re being joined by a new non-profit, 
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           The Float Research Collective
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            (FRC). The FRC was created by Dr. Justin Feinstein, who previously helped to found and head the float laboratory at LIBR. With the Float Research Collective, Dr. Feinstein wants to do two things: create a new, dedicated float research lab and cultivate a network of float centers who can contribute data from their own tanks. Through this, the FRC aims to combine classical lab research with a huge collaboration of citizen science to advance our understanding of floatation.
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           Both organizations are attempting new, robust studies with hopes of creating a renaissance of float research. If you’re curious about any of the previous, peer-reviewed studies on floatation, the FRC has a 
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           public list available
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           . Even just in the past several years there have been some very large strides forward in research of floating to help treat anxiety (one of the most prevalent mental disorders) and anorexia (the deadliest mental disorder).
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           In two 2018 articles, Dr. Feinstein showed how promising floating can be as a treatment for reducing anxiety. In a randomized study, participants across the board showed a decrease in anxiety and stress and an increase in relaxation and serenity. You can watch Dr. Feinstein report on the 
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           results of the studies
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            at the 2019 Float Conference, or read the articles themselves in 
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           Biological Psychiatry
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            and 
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    &lt;a href="https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0190292" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           PLOSone
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           .
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           More recently, Dr. Sahib Khalsa, who now leads the float lab at LIBR, started delving into how floating can help those with anorexia nervosa and bulimia. After running a successful safety study (to make sure participants wouldn’t have any adverse effects from the tanks – which they did not) the roadwork was set for a clinical study. The clinical trial was a success: there appeared to be a reduction in anxiety as well in body-image dissatisfaction, meaning they had a more positive perception of their body image. Read the 
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           full research article here
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           , and listen to Dr. Khalsa 
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           present on the results
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            during the 2021 Float Conference.
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           The success of this initial trial allowed for a follow up, full-scale randomized efficacy study. By taking a group with severe anorexia nervosa, a direct comparison was done with floating versus the usual personalized treatment plan done as a treatment at LIBR. The two treatments were compared over the course of 8 sessions, and through multiple follow-ups over the course of a year afterwards.
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           While we’ll have to wait a little bit for the results of the long-term follow-up to be published, we did get a preview of the results at the 2022 Float Conference this August. The initial results show that the float group saw a greater reduction in both body image dissatisfaction and in anxiety. The effect of change was small in body image dissatisfaction, but still significant with a 4.9% reduction in the float group, while the anxiety effect was large with nearly a 20% reduction in anxiety in the float group, compared to only a 0.2% reduction in the usual care group.
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           These studies and their effect sizes are wonderful to see, but there is still a lot to be done with float research. Building a database of clinical studies to begin exploring these and other general claims for floating are the big next steps. At that point, the studies can begin getting more into the specifics of how and why floating is helping people. If general anxiety can be reduced from floating, does that mean that anxiety that arises from other specific conditions also be treated through floating?
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            ﻿
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           Hard scientific findings are needed to further open the door for floatation treatments becoming mainstream, and the work of Dr. Feinstein and Dr. Khalsa, along with many other float researchers, is important for starting to illuminate the benefits. Further studies can now be done to delve deeper into the results, and to help establish floatation therapy as a viable, all-natural medical treatment. As more work stems from these studies, we look forward to floating being even more validated in the medical community, and to it becoming a more widely recognized and recommended treatment for a variety of afflictions.
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      <pubDate>Fri, 30 Sep 2022 16:06:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/09/30/latest-in-float-research78569c9b</guid>
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      <title>Some Things Never Change</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/06/07/some-things-never-change2a94a262</link>
      <description>Although the environment for floating is carefully constructed and controlled, it doesn’t stop every float being its own unique experience. This is true, not only …
The post Some Things Never Change appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           Although the environment for floating is carefully constructed and controlled, it doesn’t stop every float being its own unique experience. This is true, not only from person to person, but also from float to float. The float tank is a neutral environment, but every individual brings in their own unique state of mind and body. It’s one of the reasons we always recommend playing around with different times of day (and days of the week) when you’re starting to float, so that you can find what you enjoy most consistently for your own practice.
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           What you’ve been thinking about, how much you’ve exercised recently, how sleepy you are, and even how long it’s been since your last visit can all impact the nature of your experience. With that said, there are a few surprising things that have way LESS impact on your float experience than you might think. These include the temperature and weather outside, the style of tank that you use, and even what your intentions and expectations are going into your session.
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           Temperature and Weather
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           Many people who haven’t floated yet put float tanks into roughly the same category as hot tubs, or a nice warm bath. After all, the basic experience seems pretty closely related: lounging in heated water for rest and relaxation. However, the neutrality of the temperature in a float tank makes for a very different experience than hot tubs, baths, or even a heated pool.
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           For starters, floating feels the same regardless of whether it’s sweltering outside or freezing. Your core temperature may be different when you first come in, but after a shower and just a few minutes in the tank, your body naturally equalizes back towards your natural, default temperature. This means that on cold days, the float tank can really help by raising your core temperature and increasing your circulation. On hot days, though, floating actually helps your body to stay cool, which in turn lends a hand with focus and energy levels.
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           Breaking the mental connection between float tanks and hot tubs isn’t intuitive for a lot of people who haven’t yet tried floating, and we see this reflected in our schedule over the course of a year. When the weather gets hot, we see far more regulars than new-comers, as a lot of first-time floaters assume that floating in warm water when it’s already hot outside is going to be uncomfortable. They don’t understand yet that although the water is heated, it’s only warmed to skin-receptor neutral: the level at which your temperature receptors stop sending any signals – hot or cold – to your brain.
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           Amusingly, one of the most significant ways the outside temperature affects your floats is simply in the number of layers you need to take off and put on for your session. Especially when you have that cozy, post-float glow, it can be hard to imagine how you could have possibly needed so many clothes just to protect you from the elements on a cold day (at least, until you head back outside). We have a lot of guests who get their base layer on, and don’t don the rest of their sweaters, jackets, and boots until just before they leave the lobby.
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           Style of Float Tank
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           Let’s start out by saying that float tank manufacturers have to pay attention to a lot of little details to make sure that they provide safe, high-quality float experiences. These include things like aesthetics (such as contours, colors, and lighting) or ease of entry and exit (with handholds and slip proofing). Height, of course, also affects getting into and out of the tank, and the width and length of the tank determine how much you can stretch out inside.
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           However, once you’re actually in our center floating in one of our tanks, and you’ve found a comfortable position where you don’t need to move – the float tank could magically transform into a completely different shape and you wouldn’t be able to tell that anything had changed at all. The air and saltwater immediately next to your body form a bubble that matches your own external temperature almost perfectly, and as long as the float tank itself is well-maintained and calibrated, you can achieve that feeling of floating, weightless, in wide-open space regardless of what style of tank your physical body is actually occupying at the moment.
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            ﻿
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           Intentions and Expectations
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           The inventor of the float tank, Dr. John C. Lilly, was a huge proponent of going into your floats with no specific expectations. This is because the float tank is very good at giving your body and mind what they need, and this is often different from what you think you want.
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           Perhaps you have something stressful on your mind that you want to work through in the comfortable, distraction-free environment of a float tank… and then almost as soon as you enter the tank you go into a deep, sleepy state of theta brainwaves. When you wake up at the end of your session, you realize that you didn’t spend any time at all thinking through things like you intended. However, it’s likely that what you really needed was some physical and mental rest and, when you allowed your body a little room to check in on itself, that’s exactly what it gave you.
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           We had one customer come in because his doctor had recommended floatation therapy to help with an injured shoulder. He came out of his session talking about the colorful lights he saw, his reflections on his job and relationships, and how alive his senses felt. When we asked about his shoulder, he seemed almost surprised, raised up his arms a bit, and said, “Oh yeah – I forgot all about it. It feels great!”
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           As with so many things that are good for us, humans are excellent at finding small reasons to put off going in for a much-needed float. “It’s too hot outside,” or, “My favorite tank is booked up for the evening,” or, “I’m too tired,” or, “My brain is too busy.” Once you’re actually in the salt water, comfortable and buoyed, all of those objections fade into the distant background, and you’re able to rest, recover, and process in whatever way comes naturally at the moment. The particulars of an individual float are always uncertain, but the benefits from a regular float practice are consistent and irrefutable.
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          The post
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           Some Things Never Change
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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          .
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      <pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2022 17:32:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/06/07/some-things-never-change2a94a262</guid>
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      <title>Creative Notion from the Silent Ocean</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/04/08/creative-notion-from-the-silent-oceand856c1ca</link>
      <description>Creativity and convergence
If humanity defines itself by anything, it is by our capacities to think critically and to adapt through our creative abilities. Although …
The post Creative Notion from the Silent Ocean appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           Creativity and convergence
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           If humanity defines itself by anything, it is by our capacities to think critically and to adapt through our creative abilities. Although the critical thinking part gets a lot of attention, creativity is at the core of our being and is one of the main driving forces of productivity.
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           Unfortunately, society values this productive output so much that it’s often willing to sacrifice our health and sanity in the short term to get there. This can cause a perverse cycle where our health suffers, so our creative force takes a serious dip, and our productivity is brought along as an unwilling and unwitting passenger. The intimate relationship between self-care, creativity, and productivity is both fascinating and often frustratingly elusive to balance in our lives.
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            ﻿
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           Sometimes we “just get it” and everything seems to flow effortlessly from our intentions, through our actions, into being. However, when our creative fuel is running low our outlook can suddenly change, and lots of the creative tasks that would normally come easily to us end up being difficult to manage. This can manifest itself in things like writer’s block, listlessness, or even chronically cleaning the same spot in your kitchen over and over again in the hopes that you’ll somehow metaphorically wipe away your current mental obstacles.
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           Producing the flow state
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           Let’s talk brainwaves. Our brains create very small but measurable electrical activity that scientists measure in Hertz (Hz), which is defined as one cycle per second. These frequencies have shown themselves to be a reliable indicator to our state of consciousness. In our most common waking state, we produce 
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           Beta brainwaves
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           , associated with data processing and active consciousness. In our main sleeping state we produce 
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           Delta brainwaves, 
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           associated with deep, dreamless sleep.
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           As we settle down into a resting state, we slowly melt down through the different states from active Beta, through states known as Alpha and Theta, and eventually on to the slow Delta brainwaves. The Theta state (4Hz-7Hz) is where, creatively, a lot of the really interesting stuff happens, but we aren’t able to get there while our attention is alert and consciously focused.
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           Usually our brains are producing one dominant frequency, which generally determines our experience at that present time. However, our brains are complex enough that we rarely (if ever) have just a single type of brainwave at a time. Even the distinction between precise brainwave frequencies is blurry, and there are lots of in-between states and combinations that signify various mental states.
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           One of the most interesting relationships is where the Alpha and Theta states intersect (around 8Hz). This level of activity is associated with the flow state (named and studied by 
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           Dr. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
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           ) where creative ideas meet effortless implementation. When we relax enough, it becomes much easier to access this state, where we’re more easily able to gain access to novel insights through the subconscious mind. Our fascination with this realm of thought is not new, and one of the forefathers of modern psychology Carl Jung spent most of his career being highly interested in breaking down the dreamy symbolism that is created in these states, and the rich history of those symbols throughout various cultures across the world.
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           This is also where your brain spends a lot of time in the float tanks. That between-waking-and-sleeping, half-dreamy state that we get briefly every night as we fall asleep is prolonged in the float tank, and loosely associated thoughts come together, often feeling sublime and inspirational. Symbolically meaningful images and thoughts float to the surface, mirroring our own bodies in the dark quietude of the float tank.
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           For more in-depth information on the history of brainwave frequencies, including modern research showing how they’re affected by floating, be sure to check out our 
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    &lt;a href="https://www.floattanksolutions.com/theta-state-how-the-brain-signals-relaxation/" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           blog post on the Theta State
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           .
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           Making dreams a reality
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           There is a saying that if you don’t have time to meditate for an hour, you should probably meditate for two. We have a culture that encourages not only hard work and productivity, but also near-constant activity and distraction. This is not a recipe for mental well-being, and the productive work that is required of us is made that much harder when we’re stressed out and exhausted. Ultimately, this results in less creative, less efficient, and less enjoyable work time, and the effects can quickly spread into our personal time as well.
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           Spending time by yourself, in a relaxed mental state and free from distractions, is one of the most consistent ways to bring the puzzle pieces of self-care, labor, and creativity together. Any regular floater has definitely had the experience of receiving answers, solutions, and ideas for difficult problems we’re facing while laying still in the saltwater – often without trying.
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           Almost paradoxically, it’s precisely this “not trying” part that is so important for creative breakthroughs. It’s also the part that our logical mind has the most difficulty trying to understand and internalize – how do we get things done by not doing anything? This loop converges in the act of resting: freeing up our mental processing load, bringing our brainwaves into a slower, regenerative state, and allowing our bodies and minds to go from actively interacting to processing and recovering.
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           Check out our blog post on 
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           floating for creativity
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            for more information and links to studies on using floatation therapy to study everything from problem solving to improvisational jazz.
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           From outlook to insight
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           Although we might think of it as something passive, we can actually get better at hovering in and maintaining that in-between state of consciousness, whether you call it Theta, flow, or something even more simple like day-dreaming. When we’re floating, we can actively cultivate the theta state, essentially hacking into our own creative mind through ‘non-doing.’
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           Although some people go into a float with a clear intention of what they’d like to work on, others simply allow themselves to be surprised when the answer to a problem (that might not have even been front of mind) emerges from the subconscious. Somehow, allowing our bodies to get completely comfortable and melt away gives our minds the space they need to ruminate on our ideas, casually processing them and often leading (almost magically) to these spontaneous “Aha!” moments.
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           The tank is an amazing tool, which gives us easier access to these parts of ourselves that we so rarely give ourselves the space or time to achieve in our daily lives. Regularly allowing for these moments of time where we have no obligations, not even to fight gravity, can be truly life changing. To achieve better insight, it actually helps to focus your attention away from the outside world, literally spending more time looking inwards.
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           If you’re overworked, and underwhelmed with the progress on your goals, self-care in general (and floating specifically) could be the key to breaking out of the destructive cycle of modern life. Creativity and human insight will always be of the utmost importance to making progress in life, and we should all give ourselves the down-time that we need to let them thrive.
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&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Fri, 08 Apr 2022 17:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/04/08/creative-notion-from-the-silent-oceand856c1ca</guid>
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      <title>Improve Thyself: Betterment by Buoyancy</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/03/24/improve-thyself-betterment-by-buoyancyc77cbc24</link>
      <description> 
Imagine yourself – who are you and where are you REALLY going?
What do you truly know about yourself?
You’ve found your parking spot, …
The post Improve Thyself: Betterment by Buoyancy appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           Imagine yourself – who are you and where are you REALLY going?
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           What do you truly know about yourself?
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           You’ve found your parking spot, stop to take a few conscious breaths after turning off your car, and step out. You take the short walk to our float center, and as you open the door you’re greeted by our welcoming staff and feel instantly relaxed and at home. You sit down in a comfortable chair, wait for your room to be ready, and ponder on how floating has helped you connect with yourself.
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           As you reflect on the familiar sensation of letting go into your private sea, the question naturally arises: what else can floating help with?
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           Many people float to find their baseline – whether that be for general relaxation, “me” time (away from kids, partners, work, friends and family), basic physical recovery, or even just paying off some sleep debt. For others, though, floating as a practice has more of a pointed goal to it – something specific that you’re looking to achieve, whether it be physical, emotional, intellectual, or spiritual. Since one of the most fascinating things about floating is how versatile it can be, and how it appeals to people in so many different walks of life, we wanted to run through some different ways floating is used for self-improvement
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           .
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           Physical
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           In the physical realm, goals could be performance oriented: improving running times, training for an event or marathon, or improving precision skills required for something like disc golf. Several NFL, NBA, and MLB teams use floating as part of an action/recovery plan, along with other organizations such as the Australian Institute of Sport and the UFC Performance Institute Shanghai.
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           There have been a host of studies on the effectiveness of floating for this kind of training, from tennis players pushing past skill plateaus, to improved marksmanship in archery and rifle shooting, to shortened recovery times and less muscle soreness for heavy physical training. Incorporating floating into your training routine can help with injury prevention both before and during an event, and has even been shown to speed up reaction time.
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           Improving as an athlete, or in your physical performance, is only one of many acute goals that regular floaters come in for. Other areas for development in conjunction with floating include:
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           ● Spinal decompression
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           ● Relief from arthritis and fibromyalgia
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           ● Stretching (something called “Floga”)
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           ● Swifter recovery from surgery/injuries
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           ● Aiding in body work and physical therapy
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           ● Reducing high blood pressure
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           ● Improving quality of sleep
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           Emotional
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           Another interesting way that people use floating for self-improvement is related to emotions, and emotional regulation. Many people find the solitude of the float tank provides a perfect space for emotional healing, as it can help turn off the ordinary chatter and running narratives that our mind is always creating.
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           Deep relaxation in the float tank has a way of lending perspective on ourselves, or a particular relationship, as we are able to fully immerse and reflect. Whether it’s examining habits in your life that you want to adjust, or processing interactions with others that you wish were different, having a perfectly comfortable environment with no distractions is a tremendous tool.
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           Floaters have even referred to their time in a float tank as a salty therapy session, without the therapist. Here are just a few examples of emotional work that people do while floating:
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           ● Working through past issues and traumas
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           ● Coming to terms with a breakup or divorce
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           ● Finding balance and insight with work relationships
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           ● Floating before or after intentional communication with a significant other
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           ● Floating while pregnant to connect with the baby
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           Intellectual
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           Some people use floating to help learn new skills or solve difficult problems. Used before studying, floating can calm your nerves and help you to stay focused and attentive to the subject at hand. Used after you’ve absorbed a lot of information (like when you’re cramming for finals) is the perfect way to cement and internalize everything you just took in.
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           In addition to pure knowledge absorption, floating has also been shown to produce more subjective creativity in tasks as disparate as problem solving, writing, and jazz improvisation. Other mental goals that people float for include:
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           ● Breaking through writer’s block
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           Michael Crichton reportedly floated for precisely this purpose.
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           ● Learning languages
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           Apparently US Navy SEAL team 6 has used floating to reduce language acquisition time dramatically, although they haven’t released their studies to the public
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           ● Solving challenging problems
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           From architects to programmers to artists to mathematicians – people have found the float tank to be the perfect place for examining complicated challenges
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           ● Memorization and Recall
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           Without constant distraction and disruption, our ability to review and recall new information increases, as does long term retention of that information.
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           Spiritual
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           There are many who are attracted to floating as a method for enhancing their spiritual practices. This obviously means different things to different people, and the strategies involved are just as diverse. Most commonly, these will take the form of:
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           ● 
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           Meditation
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           Goals here can range in scope from practicing mindfulness, to achieving a pleasurable physical state, to separation from the mind/body, all the way to full samadhi and even out-of-body experiences.
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           ● 
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           Breath-work
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           Some people find breath-work in the tank to be a very immersive and beneficial experience. This can range from simple awareness of the breath as a point of concentration to a variety of more advanced breathing techniques.
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           ● 
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           Self-Hypnosis
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           Floating naturally puts you into a hypnogogic state, and learning to manipulate that for hypnosis is a popular strategy for self-exploration and development. Self-suggestion can be powerful, especially when deep in the theta state.
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           ● 
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           Dream work / Lucid Dreaming
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           With the dreamy, half-awake/half-asleep state that most floaters are familiar with, it’s easy to see how the tank could be used to encourage lucid dreaming, and work on better dream recall in general. Many people will use a “float journal” (in addition to a dream journal) as a further aid in the process.
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           ● 
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           Self-reflection
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           This comes very naturally in the float tank anyway, and is perhaps the most informal item on this list. Nonetheless, there is a lot to be gained from the simple act of reflecting on your life and goals – noticing areas that may be able to use improvement and acknowledging the progress that you’ve already made.
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           Next time you schedule a float, try spending a little time beforehand pondering if there’s anything specific you might want to work on during your session. You can always ask your friendly float attendant for more ideas, and for help creating a personal plan if you’re interested in exploring the benefits of floating for a set purpose.
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            ﻿
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           Stay inspired out there, and see you in the shop soon!
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      <pubDate>Thu, 24 Mar 2022 15:32:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/03/24/improve-thyself-betterment-by-buoyancyc77cbc24</guid>
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      <title>Floating: The Ultimate Wingman for New Year’s Resolutions</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/01/07/floating-the-ultimate-wingman-for-new-years-resolutionsacfcdb7f</link>
      <description>As you consider what changes you want to make in your life for the new year, it’s worth also spending some time thinking about how …
The post Floating: The Ultimate Wingman for New Year’s Resolutions appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           As you consider what changes you want to make in your life for the new year, it’s worth also spending some time thinking about how you are going to make sure that you actually follow through with them. There are people who joke that their main New Year’s resolution is to not break their New Year’s resolutions – and there is actually a good amount of wisdom in that quip. Especially for those of us who don’t have the best track record of following through with our well-intentioned goals, it’s important to engage in activities and behaviors that can help us on our journey.
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           There are many tools and tricks out there to help you keep your New Year’s resolutions, from goal journals, to accountability apps, to prescribed morning routines. These are all designed to help you overcome one of the frustrating realities of being human: we are creatures of habit. For the most part, this is a good thing – we have countless routines that allow us to live our lives and get through our days consistently and safely. There are also, of course, those adopted habits that we’d like to change, or eliminate altogether.
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           One of the practices that is especially useful in breaking bad habits and fostering new behaviors is floatation therapy. In fact, Dr. John Lilly, the inventor of the float tanks (and who would have been 107 this month) wrote several books about using the float tanks to take control of your habits, or as he would say, “to reprogram yourself.” Floating facilitates self-reflection &amp;amp; visualization, it’s incredibly effective at reducing stress &amp;amp; anxiety, and it provides you with all-important alone time.
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           Consistent reflection on your goals has been shown, time and again, to predict your ultimate success in achieving them. Reflecting, not just on the changes that you want to make in your life but the reasons you want to make those changes, is incredibly helpful in making them a reality. In the same vein, taking the time to visualize going through the steps to fulfill your resolutions better prepares you for accomplishing them in the real world when the time comes.
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           The float tank is an ideal place for both self-reflection and visualization, and those are actually two of the reasons that regular floaters commonly cite for coming in. Without any outside distractions, and perfectly comfortable physically, your mind can direct its attention wherever you’d like – for instance, on your New Year’s promises to yourself. Without starting to form these strong associations with your goals, it’s all too easy for your old habits to slip into their familiar places, like an old man slipping back into his favorite chair.
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           As numerous studies have shown, floating is also an incredible tool for relieving anxiety, as well as depression – which can both be huge obstacles in the way of us achieving our goals. With so many things in the modern world demanding our time and attention it’s not surprising that nearly everyone is operating at levels of heightened stress, hampering our efforts towards making real change.
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           Taking purposeful time out of the demands of everyday life, even for something as simple as 15 minutes of silent breathing, has been shown to help us manage our stress better. This in turn leads to improved focus, more self control, lower blood pressure, and a range of other benefits. Research continues to show us how important it is to disconnect, and floating is the perfect way to do that.
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           It’s tempting to think that we will, by simply declaring our resolutions, be able to effortlessly follow through with them – however, adopting new habits (and eliminating old ones) is most often a more challenging task than that. It’s important to use all the tools at your disposal to help you out, rather than just choosing one (or, as is often the case, none). Try journaling, experiment with goal tracking apps, try starting your day off with some new activities, and, of course, we recommend scheduling regular time to float.
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      <pubDate>Fri, 07 Jan 2022 17:54:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2022/01/07/floating-the-ultimate-wingman-for-new-years-resolutionsacfcdb7f</guid>
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      <title>Happy to be Alone</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/11/11/happy-to-be-alonea3c3f541</link>
      <description>In many ways, our culture has fostered an unhealthy relationship with time spent alone. Even the words that we use to describe alone time are …
The post Happy to be Alone appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           In many ways, our culture has fostered an unhealthy relationship with time spent alone. Even the words that we use to describe alone time are often steeped in some kind of negative connotation. Solitude. Seclusion. Withdrawal. Loneliness.
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           Loneliness is especially telling: the etymology of the word is simply in the act of being alone, but the modern meaning and most common definitions refer to it as an unpleasant emotional state in which you desire the company of others, but for one reason or another can’t satisfy that desire. When we’re thinking of things that we want to do next Friday night, being “lonely” rarely finds its way to the top of the list.
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           Fortunately, our relationship to loneliness is changing, and many of these terms and notions are being gradually replaced (or at least supplemented) with ideas that aren’t as negative: me-time, down-time, self-care, treating yourself, and decompressing. As our technology and culture have pushed us to be constantly connected to other people (along with their opinions and demands), we’ve seen an increase in research and general attention to the benefits that spending time alone can offer us.
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           Let’s take a moment to define what we mean by being “alone.” At its root, being alone is spending time by yourself, without interacting with other people. So, if you’re talking on the phone with someone, chatting online, or reading &amp;amp; responding to social media, we shouldn’t really call that “alone time.”
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           Another way to think of being alone is spending time with your own thoughts. Even watching a show or a movie is perhaps not truly “alone time.” There are a fair amount of studies that back this up, showing that when we’re watching media, especially serial TV shows, we overestimate how many relationships we have – our simple human brains have a hard time distinguishing between spending time with two-dimensional actors and three-dimensional friends.
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           The act of truly being alone – where your own internal monologue isn’t interrupted by the thoughts or actions of others – isn’t all that common for most people in their daily, or even weekly, lives. This is a shame, given the many benefits that often come with carving out at least a little time to be completely by yourself. These include:
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           ● emotional benefits (such as increased contentment, lowered anxiety, and a reduced chance of burnout)
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           ● physical benefits (like more awareness of physical stress and increased energy)
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           ● social benefits (counterintuitively, studies show that spending more time alone allows us to be more attentive to those around us, more enjoyable &amp;amp; engaging, and even better romantic partners)
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           ● hair growth benefits (well… maybe not… but when you’re alone, who cares about your hair anyway?)
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           These benefits of alone time parallel those that modern research is finding from meditation &amp;amp; mindfulness, as well as floating (which is, of course, one of our favorite ways to spend alone time). Not only is the mental stress from socializing removed during a float, the actual physical stresses of the world are lifted as well. The cognitive load from observing your environment, regulating your temperature, and even just constantly holding yourself up against gravity is freed up in a float tank.
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           This reduced cognitive load, combined with an extremely comfortable and relaxing environment, allows your brain to spend time reflecting, processing, and assessing pretty much everything – from past events &amp;amp; future obligations, to relationships, to muscle tension, to coiffures. Although there are many benefits of actively engaging your thoughts, there is definitely something to be said for making the transition from engaging, to observing, and finally to letting go of your internal monologue completely.
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           If you’ve practiced meditation (of almost any form), you’ll certainly recognize this process. Likewise, if you’ve spent any amount of time in a float tank, this will no doubt all sound very familiar. Just as our bodies need both exercise and rest, our minds need time for directed reflection as well as time to disengage and not think about anything at all. It’s an easy concept to grasp, but, just like going to the gym, it’s also easy to push aside when the demands of daily life rear their heads.
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           Just as the terminology around loneliness is evolving, it would be excellent to see progress in the overall relationship we have with being alone. Next time you feel overwhelmed with everything you have to get done, you should consider giving yourself a time out (for at least 15 minutes) to let your mind relax for a moment. Next time you find yourself messaging on social media, think about writing down some notes on paper to yourself instead. Next time you have some free time and you’re thinking about what you’d like to do with it, you should perhaps consider doing nothing at all.
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           Happy to be Alone
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Nov 2021 16:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/11/11/happy-to-be-alonea3c3f541</guid>
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      <title>Fight or Flight . . . or Float?</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/10/06/fight-or-flight-or-floata829749f</link>
      <description>You’ve probably heard of our fight or flight response – when we’re presented with stressful or threatening situations (like being chased by a hippopotamus), our …
The post Fight or Flight . . . or Float? appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           You’ve probably heard of our fight or flight response – when we’re presented with stressful or threatening situations (like being chased by a hippopotamus), our body’s autonomic nervous system responds by preparing for action. Our heart rate increases, our breathing picks up, and blood flows from our core out to our limbs (along with a lot of other changes, all focused on helping us get ready to defend ourselves or to get out of there as swiftly as possible).
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           In addition to this well known reaction to stressors, we have another autonomic response you may not have heard of, which is pretty much the polar opposite of fight or flight: the relaxation response. This is also referred to as the “rest and digest” response, and it takes over when we feel safe and secure. Our breathing and heart rate slow down, our circulation evens out, our digestive system becomes more active, and we’re more likely to become sexually aroused.
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           While our fight or flight serves us best in dangerous situations, our rest and digest response is useful for all those times when we’re NOT being threatened, and it makes more sense for our body to focus on taking care of itself. This allows us to store up energy, heal and recover, and even attempt to produce future generations. Both autonomic responses are incredibly useful to our survival, helping us to get through tough short-term situations and make sure that we have the resources and time to prepare for whatever may be coming in the future.
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           Unfortunately for modern humans, we’re often under constant stress (even if it’s not as immediately threatening as being chased by a hippo). Things like being cut off in traffic, being chewed out by our boss, or being woken up by a loud car in the middle of the night can make our fight or flight response kick in. Even before the global pandemic, stress levels were especially high for people living in cities, where all of the motion, noise, and interaction creates a more threatening environment for our psyche. It’s safe to say that many of us were going through our days in a state of constant and chronic stress, and having to deal with the Covid-19 virus and all of its impacts has 
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           certainly not helped
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           This isn’t an all-or-none situation: there is a large gradient of stress that people experience in everyday life and a large diversity in the effects of that stress. Regardless of both the exact causes and levels of stress, finding ways to unwind, de-stress, and cue the relaxation response is increasingly important for all of us. In fact, when the term Relaxation Response was first coined by Herbert Benson, it was presented alongside a 
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            and eliciting it in yourself.
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           Reading through his suggested steps, it may sound very similar to engaging in a simple meditative practice. You wouldn’t be the first to make that comparison – in fact Dr. Benson is often credited with familiarizing a Western audience with meditation, essentially through rebranding it as the Relaxation Effect and conducting studies on its measurable impacts.
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           With that in mind, it’s not surprising at all that numerous studies have found that floating in a float tank seems to bring on both the relaxation effect and its associated benefits. In fact, floating is often described outside the scientific community as “training wheels for meditation,” demonstrating that outside the lab, people have also been noticing the similarities between floating and the relaxation response for things like reducing stress, improving mood, and increasing focus.
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           The environment of a float tank is pretty much the perfect place to help turn off our nearly ever-present stress response (regardless of its current severity) and to help us to engage with our relaxation response. All of the examples above for triggering our fight or flight response involve things like loud noises, surprises, uncomfortable social interactions, hippopotamuses… all of which are notably absent in a float tank. In fact, the lights, noises, shocks, and demands on your system are about as reduced as you can possibly get in a float tank. Even the burden on your brain of trying to balance on these two awkward pillars we call legs and walk around the world without bumping into anyone (or anything) is eliminated.
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           So, the next time you feel like arguing with your partner or running away from your problems, consider giving yourself a time-out to meditate and practice engaging your relaxation response. Or better yet, treat yourself to a float and relax your entire musculature while your brain takes a well needed rest.
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          The post
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           Fight or Flight . . . or Float?
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      <pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2021 15:23:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>New Research in to Floating for Anorexia Nervosa</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/09/17/new-research-in-to-floating-for-anorexia-nervosab2ee376a</link>
      <description>From helping with anorexia nervosa, to regulating the immune system, to reducing general and acute anxiety, new findings on floatation continue to flow out from …
The post New Research in to Floating for Anorexia Nervosa appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           From helping with anorexia nervosa, to regulating the immune system, to reducing general and acute anxiety, new findings on floatation continue to flow out from researchers around the world. While much of the science news these days is taken up by stories and discoveries about covid, countless labs around the world carry on with their studies, many of which began years before the pandemic, and the world of floatation is no exception.
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           At the recent 2021 Float Conference at the end of August, we got to hear highlights from some of the world leaders in float research. Of special interest was the ongoing research at the Float Clinic and Research Center at LIBR (the Laureate Institute for Brain Research), and the research relating to patients with anorexia nervosa was the furthest along. In addition to the float clinic, LIBR houses a treatment and research center for anorexia, including a large population of inpatients who live there for longer periods of therapy and treatment.
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           Dr. Sahib Khalsa has been carrying on long term research on anorexia nervosa patients for the last 4 years, most recently as the director of the Float Clinic at LIBR. Anorexia nervosa has the highest mortality rate of any mental disorder, and it is notoriously difficult to treat. Even in-patient facilities like the one at LIBR, with multiple avenues of care and support, often show minimal long-term benefits in many of the participants. The severity of anorexia nervosa, and its resistance to conventional treatments, make it an especially impactful area for study and an interesting one for floatation research.
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           The benefits of floatation seem to be most notable in two main areas for anorexia patients – anxiety and body image. Although his study is waiting on the last of the follow up results to conclude, Dr. Khalsa presented on some of his initial findings at this year’s conference, building on the results in his paper published at the end of 2020. The largest effect was on the anxiety levels of the patients, which mirrors similar findings from other floatation studies done on healthy populations and on chronically anxious individuals.
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           In his controlled study, relative anxiety was reduced by up to 20% in patients, with the impact being the most notable on those who had the highest baseline levels of anxiety. This also parallels the findings from other studies done at LIBR by Dr. Justin Feinstein, Dr. Khalsa’s collaborator and predecessor as head of the Float Clinic. Even in those with lower levels of anxiety, however, there was a significant improvement in anxiety levels for those patients who floated.
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           The relative impact on perceived body image was smaller, but it is perhaps the most impressive result of the study (from the data so far). Anorexia nervosa is most often a chronic condition, and the misalignment between patients’ perceived body weight and real body weight is notoriously difficult to recalibrate. The patients who floated saw a shift in how they viewed their own body, tending more towards their real weight. They also saw the “ideal” body type as slightly heavier, and more aligned with a healthy body type. While the size of this shift was not large (around a 5% relative change), the fact that even a few floats were able to make a measurable impact is incredible.
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           Hearing the ongoing progress of this study is always exciting, and Dr. Khalsa’s full talk will be released soon on the Float Conference YouTube channel (although we’ll have to wait until at least 2023 before the last of the follow-up data comes in and we get to see the full results). In the meantime, if you know anyone who has anorexia, consider taking them in for some time in the tank. There is certainly no guarantee that it will make a positive impact, but there also isn’t any identifiable risk, either psychological or physical, for patients with anorexia: much of the lengthy, early work on this study was spent establishing the safety and lack of contraindications in patients.
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           Although Dr. Khalsa’s work has had some of the most concrete progress over the last year, we also heard from a few other LIBR contributors. Dr. Justin Feinstein, who retired last year from LIBR to pursue his own research, also presented on his progress to develop the Float Research Collective: an initiative which will gather data from float centers around the globe for peer reviewed studies. If this project is successful, it will dramatically increase the quantity and quality of data we’re able to gather on floatation. He is currently forming his 501c3 non-profit, but much like the anorexia study (and like so much scientific research in general) it will probably be at least a few years before the foundations and government approval are in place to start any studies.
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           Another LIBR contributor, Dr. Flux, explored a couple new ways to think about the previous work he’d done on floating and the immune system. In popular culture, we hear about all sorts of products and services that “boost our immune system,” but that’s not always the best thing for us. In fact, a whole host of issues arise from an overactive immune system, and often what we need is not to make our immune response stronger, but to regulate it more effectively. Although floating does seem to help with immune system regulation, the exact pathways that it works on are currently underexplored, and Dr. Flux is looking forward to further studies that will hopefully be able to shed more light on the mechanisms that are active (and inactive) in our immune systems during and after a float session.
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           Although this blog focused mainly on the work being done at LIBR in the United States, there are researchers in other countries such as Sweden, Australia, Germany, Canada, and China who are pushing forward our understanding of float therapy with their own studies. We look forward to sharing more of the progress being made on these other fronts soon, as more of their results are published and made public.
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           ________________________________________
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           Sources
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           1. [ARTICLE] Reduced Environmental Stimulation in Anorexia Nervosa: An Early-Phase Clinical Trial
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    &lt;a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.567499/full" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
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           https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.567499/full
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           2. [VIDEO – Talk] Sahib Khalsa – Float Conference 2017
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           3. [ARTICLE] The Elicitation of Relaxation and Interoceptive Awareness Using Floatation Therapy in Individuals With High Anxiety Sensitivity
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    &lt;a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451902218300491?via%3Dihub" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451902218300491?via%3Dihub
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           4. [ARTICLE] Examining the short-term anxiolytic and antidepressant effect of Floatation-REST
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    &lt;a href="https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0190292" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0190292
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/09/17/new-research-in-to-floating-for-anorexia-nervosab2ee376a/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           New Research in to Floating for Anorexia Nervosa
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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          .
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      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Sep 2021 20:29:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/09/17/new-research-in-to-floating-for-anorexia-nervosab2ee376a</guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Powerful Stories from the Tank</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/08/17/powerful-stories-from-the-tank81a0d6c4</link>
      <description>As a vehicle for both relaxation and recovery, float tanks are fairly unparalleled. There are lots of studies and anecdotes about the benefits that even …
The post Powerful Stories from the Tank appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           As a vehicle for both relaxation and recovery, float tanks are fairly unparalleled. There are lots of studies and anecdotes about the benefits that even a single hour float can offer. The most profound (and often inspiring) results, however, actually come from floating more regularly.
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            ﻿
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           We hear this everyday in our conversations with our members and regulars, and so for this month’s blog, we wanted to highlight some of the personal stories from long term floaters that have been shared publicly. While these are just a small sample of the incredible stories we’ve heard, they help to illustrate the wide variety of benefits floatation has to offer. Stories like these are why we opened our center, and why we’re so proud of the work that we do.
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           Emily Noren,
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            as a young teenager, developed anorexia and bulimia. Maintaining her weight occupied much of her thoughts and actions for the next decade and a half of her life, and the treatments and medications she tried never provided long-term solutions. All too often, eating disorders like this are more than just unhealthy – they can be tragically fatal. Floating, which started off as an uncomfortable and slightly unsettling experience, became the catalyst for change in Emily’s life. She credits floating with, not only helping her have a healthier and happier life, but also with her full recovery from anorexia and bulimia: an achievement that some experts in eating disorders have questioned is even possible. Here is a link to her talk: 
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           https://youtu.be/DyPIekihs8g
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           Here is a link to Emily Noren’s book, “
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           Unsinkable
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           ,” in case you want to read more about her story.
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           An Australian soldier, 
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           Michael Harding
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            was deployed to Afghanistan as an infantry machine gunner. He faced hostile contact, experienced the deaths of those around him, and was returned home experiencing severe symptoms of PTSD, including full body muscle spasms. He and his partner Bek tell the story of his trauma, his struggles and substance abuse upon returning, and his path towards recovery through a regimen of alternative treatments: including support groups, medical cannabis, yoga, and floating. Here is the link to their talk: 
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    &lt;a href="https://youtu.be/2c5CxbYfzT4" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://youtu.be/2c5CxbYfzT4
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           Read more about Michael’s story in 
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    &lt;a href="https://time.com/floating/" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           this article by Time magazine
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           .
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           Murphy Monroe
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            tells his story of nearly debilitating verbal and physical tics. He spent most of his life, from childhood on, working to overcome these through disciplined habits, such as clenching his whole body and running through mental distractions like adding large numbers in his head. He tells this story after his first year of floating, which completely reframed his control, and his views, of his previously uncontrollable habits: 
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    &lt;a href="https://youtu.be/ra_Amta_vZ8" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://youtu.be/ra_Amta_vZ8
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           Conclusions
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           In our own center, we have countless customers with stories like these. People who are struggling – with physical injuries, chronic stress, sleep disorders, and more – who find relief in floating as part of their ongoing efforts to better themselves. There is more and more evidence coming out showing how our long-term health and happiness depends on these habits of self-care.
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           Whether it’s a practice of stillness (like floating and meditation), or something more active (like yoga, bicycling, and running), routines that involve giving your mind a break from constant input are crucial. A single, novel experience can definitely be beneficial to people on many different levels, but there’s no doubt that for floating, as with so many things in life, the benefits become stronger as you integrate the experiences into your everyday life over time.
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           We want to leave you with 
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           Melissa Martinez
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           , who floats every week – not to overcome an acute disability or trauma, but instead to simply have time set aside for herself, and no one else. Time free from the demands of the world and the people around her. Time to think, to recover, and to relax. She talks about how the practice of floating regularly has impacted her joy and her stress levels, and why she believes that she will continue to float for the rest of her life. Here is her talk from the stage at the Float Conference: 
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    &lt;a href="https://youtu.be/_sgNCcdrqWo" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           https://youtu.be/_sgNCcdrqWo
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/08/17/powerful-stories-from-the-tank81a0d6c4/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Powerful Stories from the Tank
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          appeared first on
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    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.com"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Float North County
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          .
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&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Tue, 17 Aug 2021 20:37:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/08/17/powerful-stories-from-the-tank81a0d6c4</guid>
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      <title>History of Floating</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/07/13/history-of-floatingde0741fa</link>
      <description>Hopping into a soundproof, light-proof box filled with saltwater may be a popular relaxation therapy today, but those just discovering it are likely asking themselves: …
The post History of Floating appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           Hopping into a soundproof, light-proof box filled with saltwater may be a popular relaxation therapy today, but those just discovering it are likely asking themselves: “who came up with this strange device, and when were float tanks developed?” In order to answer those questions, we first have to ask “why did they want to make them in the first place?”
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           In the early 1950s, neuroscience was a relatively new field of study, and how the brain worked was much less understood than it is today. One prevalent theory at the time was that our brains were designed to react to stimulation and that everything we did was solely a reaction to something external. Because of this, some scientists thought that if we were to remove all sensory stimulation, our brains would simply shut down. Early experiments to test their theories involved rooms with white noise (such as fans) blocking out sound and goggles with bright lights to keep participants from seeing anything clearly.
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           Physician and neuroscientist John C. Lilly thought this theory was incomplete and the testing methods being used weren’t a good way to demonstrate sensory reduction. Lilly, along with his colleague Dr. Jay Shurley at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), wanted to create an even more optimal environment to remove all sensory input on the human mind. To that end, they created the first float tank (or “isolation tank” as they called them) in 1954. It involved being fully submerged in water, and looked nothing like the sleek fiberglass designs we see today. In fact, they looked like something more out of a Halloween Haunted Mansion rather than a relaxation device. They required operators to monitor the air supply, which was sent to cumbersome breathing helmets at all times during use.
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           Lilly and Shurley initially experimented on themselves and recorded their reactions to this sensory reduced environment before later bringing in other people to try it out. Most of the subjects they had in the tank (including the two researchers themselves), found the tank incredibly relaxing.
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           In fact, their time in the tanks completely subverted their expectations – it was entirely different from what other researchers had published at the time on “sensory deprivation.” They were not slipping into a comatose state, nor was it the least bit distressing. Instead, Lilly found his time in the tank surprisingly profound and physically rejuvenating. Shurley found the float experience equally impressive, and the two of them spent the next decade improving on the design.
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           Over the next few years, Lilly also experimented with lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) inside the float tanks. The drug was extremely novel at the time and was beginning to widely circulate in academic circles in the late 50s. This was a departure from what Shurley was interested in studying, but Dr. Lilly found the combination of LSD and sensory isolation to be life changing.
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           So much so that it inspired him to write several books on how this combination of therapies impacted his life, work, and philosophy.
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           Throughout the 70s Dr. Lilly did speaking tours and workshops, bringing awareness of floating to a broader, but still very small, audience. He found himself in the middle of a cultural revolution in the United States as the world experienced a wave of social and political change. In 1972, Lilly met Glenn Perry at one of his speaking engagements at Bear Rock in California.
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           The two quickly became good friends. Glenn was an engineer who was also deeply interested in the meditative benefits that came from floating. He offered some suggestions to Dr. Lilly about how to improve the tank by adding salt to the water to raise the specific gravity, making it easier to float on the surface. It wasn’t long before they were collaborating on a design for a commercial float tank intended to go in every house in America. Thus Samadhi, the first float tank company, was born!
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           They started manufacturing in 1973 and opened up a 20 float tank center in Beverly Hills. Celebrity endorsements quickly started rolling in: Susan Sarandon, Michael Crichton, and Robin Williams all shared their profound experiences in interviews. The world learned about floating and they liked it!
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            ﻿
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           Since those early years, a lot has changed. The tanks have evolved and a global industry has developed around floating, but that sense of discovery that inspired the first float tank is still a fundamental part of the experience. There’s still something to discover every time you go for a float: what will you find in the quiet darkness?
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/07/13/history-of-floatingde0741fa/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           History of Floating
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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          .
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      <pubDate>Tue, 13 Jul 2021 18:19:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Floating Into Your Best Summer</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/06/08/floating-into-your-best-summer8715c658</link>
      <description>2020 is unique in being the only year in living memory that has consisted of an entire decade. Needless to say, we’ve all got a …
The post Floating Into Your Best Summer appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           2020 is unique in being the only year in living memory that has consisted of an entire decade. Needless to say, we’ve all got a lot riding on the next few months. Floating is one of the best ways to enhance just about any experience, so it’s a natural fit for any big outings you may have planned.
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           Float to Cool Down after Getting Worked Up
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           Whether it’s from joining a local rugby team, going to a dance party, or just bicycling your local commute, going for a float after getting your heart rate up is a great way to bring you back to baseline.
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           Floating is also a great way to let your body rest after pushing your limits. Many athletes who incorporate floating into their training program have been able to recover faster and perform better than without it.
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           Appreciate the Little Things
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           That post-float vibe you get when hopping out of the tank is one of the best times to stop and appreciate the beauty around you. After being in a sensory reduced environment (like a float tank), your senses become heightened. What better time, then, to literally stop and smell the roses than immediately after a float? And it’s not just roses (and not just smelling): food tastes better, music sounds better, and sunshine feels cozier when getting out of a float.
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           All this to say, after a float, hit up your favorite restaurant or pop on your favorite album and you just might find new things to appreciate about them.
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           Book an Afternoon Float just in time to Catch the Sunset Afterwards
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           This just sounds like an obviously good idea… doesn’t it? It’s pretty common for floaters to adjust their schedules for the rest of the day after their floats, given how much it can affect behavior. Sunset is easily one of the most magical times of the day and taking the time to appreciate it is always a good idea – possibly during a hike, at the beach, or on a rooftop garden if there are good spots nearby.
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           Find a float center when you go on vacation
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           As your local float center we hope that you think of us as, if not a second home, at least a second living room. It can feel like a trade-off going on vacation because we’re going to miss out on the comforts of our familiar float tanks.
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           However, just because you’re out of town doesn’t mean you have to give up your weekly float. There are established float centers in nearly every major city across the world. Also, it can be fun to see how other float centers might operate. If you find any cool ideas, don’t hesitate to let us know!
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           And while it may feel strange to float in a new center, don’t feel guilty! Just make sure you book an extra float when you get back! Floating is also a great way to reset your circadian rhythms, which can do wonders for jetlag when traveling.
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           Late night floats are a great way to wind down
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           Like we said at the beginning, lots of people are going to make sure that these next few months will be big ones! One thing to look out for is to not overextend yourself when celebrating and carousing. Whether it’s running marathons, beach trips, bungee jumping, going to dance parties/wine tastings/bonfires – going for a float to decompress and relax is a great way to prevent exhaustion and burnout afterwards.
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           These are just a few ideas for how floating enhances all the enjoyable things about summer, and this list barely scratches the surface. Hopefully this gives you inspiration for other ways to make floating part of your vacation, staycation, or regular sunny schedule.
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            ﻿
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           After a year of FOMO, let’s get the most out of this year and make 2021 the Summer of the Float!
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/06/08/floating-into-your-best-summer8715c658/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Floating Into Your Best Summer
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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          .
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      <pubDate>Tue, 08 Jun 2021 17:28:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/06/08/floating-into-your-best-summer8715c658</guid>
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      <title>What Happens to your Brain when you Float? The Theta State</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/05/07/the-wonders-of-the-theta-state5b6ccfa7</link>
      <description>What’s happening to your brain when you float? How do you go from being awake, conscious, and stressed to relaxed and dreamy? While we still …
The post What Happens to your Brain when you Float? The Theta State appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           What’s happening to your brain when you float? How do you go from being awake, conscious, and stressed to relaxed and dreamy? While we still have a lot to discover when it comes to different states of consciousness, one key element is the “Theta State,” when our brain waves operate at a certain frequency most often linked to the moments between sleep and wakefulness. To really understand what the Theta State is and how it benefits us, we have to first explore a little bit about brain waves more broadly.
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           In 1924, German psychoanalyst Hans Berger recorded an electronic signal coming from the brain for the first time. The signal was chaotic, intermittent, and didn’t exactly fit with the contemporary understanding of how brains functioned. It took him five years to figure out what his findings meant before he could publish any meaningful results, and it took over a decade for the international scientific community to accept them as legitimate (some readers may notice that there are parallels to be drawn here with how float tank research has been received by academia).
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           Since then, scientists have discovered multiple frequency bands that brain waves operate on, including 
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           Alpha (aka “the Berger wave”), Beta, Gamma, Delta, and of course – Theta.
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            Whenever a certain frequency is dominant, we say the brain is in a certain “state.” As an example, when you’re holding a conversation, your brain is using resources that are alert, engaged, and focusing on details, so it is in the “Beta state.”
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           Theta brain waves are a lower frequency band, which means they’re typically more active when you’re less active. This type of brain activity is much more common in children and becomes less frequent as we get older. Theta State is also often associated with some really great benefits:
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            increased creativity, stress reduction, restfulness, and contentment.
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            These benefits extend beyond the moments when your mind is in Theta State and regular practice can prolong these benefits, leading to greater health outcomes.
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            ﻿
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           Since they were first discovered, Theta waves have been seen as a key to understanding the subconscious mind. Research has shown that theta waves are running the show when we’re in the moments between sleep and wakefulness, where consciousness is malleable and intuition is higher.
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           From the 1950s through the 1970s, neuroscientists were eagerly examining the brainwaves of all sorts of people performing a variety of different activities (not the easiest thing to do, given that early EEG technology 
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           looked a lot like this
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           ). One thing researchers discovered was that 
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           Buddhist monks were slipping deeply into Theta State when meditating
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           , demonstrating a clear physiological effect from this (at the time) poorly understood religious practice (
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           research has since shown that experienced meditators can also slip into Gamma State, as well
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           ).
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           This caused a flood of excitement and curiosity. What else could cause our minds to flip into this mental recharge state? When researchers began studying sensory reduced environments, it wasn’t long until they started looking to see what impacts it was having on the brain. Perhaps unsurprisingly, 
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           they found that there was a massive increase in theta waves in subjects
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           . One of the problems was that, given the limitations of technology, they couldn’t monitor brain waves until after people got out of a float tank, leading to gaps in understanding about what was happening during the floats themselves.
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           Until recently EEG technology just couldn’t handle the wet and salty environment of a float tank. But as of 2016, thanks to new developments in wireless EEG technology, 
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           we can watch people enter Theta State in a float tank in real time.
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            Because of this, we’re finally able to figure out what’s going on inside the brain during a float.
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           It turns out that even first time floaters are able to get into Theta State during a 90 minute float. Experienced floaters are not only likely to experience Theta State, but can do so much more easily, staying within that mental state for much longer stretches of time.
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           Given all this, it’s not exactly surprising that floating has been shown to significantly reduce stress, enhance creativity, and improve sleep – these benefits are all closely related to Theta brain activity. Also notable is that as people float more often, it gets easier to enter Theta State inside and outside of the tank. Interestingly, the scientific discovery of what happens to our minds during floating is actually more exciting now than when it was first discovered.
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           We now know that floating is great for general mental health improvements and in patients with stress or anxiety disorders, it can have even more profound effects. Low theta wave activity is associated with several mood disorders including PTSD and Depression. The increased activity in Theta may even contribute to why floating has such a remarkable ability 
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    &lt;a href="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hbm.25429" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           to alter the brain activity of people with anxiety conditions to bring them back to baseline stress levels like those found in healthy brains
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           .
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           While there’s been a long history of almost mythological deference to the Theta State in the alternative wellness community throughout the years, the science has never been more clear: the Theta State exists, is beneficial, and can be reached through floating.
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           So what are you waiting for? Go float yourself.
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/05/07/the-wonders-of-the-theta-state5b6ccfa7/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           What Happens to your Brain when you Float? The Theta State
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    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
    
          appeared first on
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    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.com"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Float North County
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          .
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&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Fri, 07 May 2021 17:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/05/07/the-wonders-of-the-theta-state5b6ccfa7</guid>
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      <title>What Did Mindfulness Lose Along the Way?</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/04/06/what-did-mindfulness-lose-along-the-wayc9df8070</link>
      <description>Spending time in an isolation tank is a great way to practice being present, removing external distractions about the past, worries about the future, and …
The post What Did Mindfulness Lose Along the Way? appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           Spending time in an isolation tank is a great way to practice being present, removing external distractions about the past, worries about the future, and escaping your stress. In a word, it’s a great place to be mindful.
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            ﻿
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           Over the last few years, mindfulness has become a popular tool for improving general mental wellness. When mental health professionals talk about mindfulness, they’re referring to a state of 
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           “moment-to-moment non-judgmental awareness.”
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           Studies have shown mindfulness offers remarkable results in dealing with stress-related conditions such as anxiety disorders, PTSD, and depression. The results have been so profound, in fact, that they were considered extremely unlikely from a non-invasive treatment (at least by the standards of Western medicine). As these problems become more ubiquitous, non-traditional methods for dealing with it also become more common.
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           In addition to this, our world has experienced a massive perspective shift recently. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us have found that much of our lives are now lived in front of screens. Our phones, computers, and televisions are operating as our gateways to the rest of the world as our social interactions have become increasingly more online. Which brings its own set of challenges.
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           Mindfulness becomes even more appealing as we cope with the newfound stresses of the modern world. And by “stresses of the modern world” we mean “how we function on a daily basis now.” Increased access to modern communication means that the expectation for more immediate responses to emails, texts, and phone calls; the gig economy has made it so we’re working even in our free time; and a whole host of other additional responsibilities that have been tacked onto daily lives as a result of being constantly plugged in.
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           We already know that floating is also a great way to unplug
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            from it all, much in the same way mindfulness is. It makes sense given that floating is such a great way to practice mindfulness more generally (along with a whole host of other benefits). Those intimately familiar with mindfulness, 
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           like those who practice traditional Buddhist meditation techniques, 
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           have said that floating makes it much easier to get into states of mindful awareness, especially for beginners.
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           While mindfulness techniques have had a noticeable impact on health and improving behavior generally, there are distinct differences between Eastern and Western visions of mindfulness that might help explain why, despite the increased popularity of mindfulness, 
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           health problems related to stress and anxiety are on the rise instead of decreasing
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           .
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           Is there something about how mindfulness is presented in Western culture that is keeping us from experiencing the full benefits of the practice? There are a few fundamental differences in Eastern and Western mindfulness that are worth looking at to see how our cultures handle anxiety and stress.
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           Eastern mindfulness (sati) dates back to the 5th century BC when the earliest version of Buddhism started taking shape in Southeast Asia. As part of a religious practice, sati is one tenet in a series of eight that layout the principles for how to live your life in a way that leads towards enlightenment. These eight principles, 
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           The Noble Eightfold Path
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           , are often presented as a wheel, with the spokes all connecting together.
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           You can already see how, presented in this way, mindfulness is more than just a stress reduction technique. It’s a guiding principle integrated into a broader philosophy about how to live your life, and as such, it impacts culture and behavior more broadly than when it’s presented as a treatment. Buddhism also places a heavy emphasis on how individual actions impact the greater community and The Noble Eightfold Path is much more about how to act in a way that serves the whole of humanity, not just personal betterment.
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           This Buddhist framing of mindfulness became popular in Western Culture in the 70s, when asian culture and philosophy was becoming much more widely accepted after World War II. Part of this process came about during a broad secularization of religious concepts as well. Some of the teachings about community and service to others got removed in favor of emphasizing individual self-improvement instead.
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           It’s worth noting that mindfulness as a concept has been around in Western society for a long time as well. Whereas Buddhism has The Noble Eightfold Path, Catholicism has a similar set of precepts called the 
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           7 Heavenly Virtues
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           , one of which is Prudence. While contemporarily, prudence has taken on the meaning of “cautious”, it’s earlier definitions include being able to discipline oneself through the use of reason, taking in information without judgement, and maintaining awareness. Sounds familiar, doesn’t it? Prudence was also deemed the “mother of all virtues” by philosopher Thomas Aquinas, who shaped a lot of early Western thought.
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           If Western culture already has a comparable philosophical principle to mindfulness in Eastern society, then what is it that’s being brought over to help address our mental health? Is it just using Buddhism as window dressing for a practice that Western society has forgotten about in favor of secularization? Probably not.
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           The important thing to remember about mindfulness when we practice is that “present awareness” isn’t enough to improve our lives. It’s an important facet to a better way of living, but without a fundamental readjustment to how we think about the world around us and our role within it, we cannot change the aspects of society that are causing this stress. If the only thing we’re doing when we practice mindfulness is acknowledging the present moment for several minutes so that we can reduce our own anxiety, then all that is providing for our problems is a band-aid. And while it is a useful tool, mindfulness alone isn’t enough to make a better life for ourselves or those around us.
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           While mindfulness is a major component of the benefits of wellness practices like floating, it’s also important to recognize that there are limits to how it’s discussed and that not all mindfulness is created equal. We can take comfort, at least, in knowing that floating forces a more deliberate form of mindfulness that removes us from outside stimulation and distraction far beyond what other mindfulness-based therapies can provide. This let’s us focus more deeply on the practice and carry that sense of being present into the rest of our lives, instead of using it solely as a retreat from our day-to-day existence. And, as with most things in life, if we approach our time in the tanks intentionally with this in mind, we can find deeper meaning than we may have otherwise.
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          The post
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           What Did Mindfulness Lose Along the Way?
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           Float North County
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      <pubDate>Tue, 06 Apr 2021 17:53:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Slowing Down Makes Life Better</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/03/09/slowing-down-makes-life-better29b8439a</link>
      <description>If you’ve ever gone on a walk after a good float, you’ve probably felt something similar to the experience of cresting a summit after a …
The post Slowing Down Makes Life Better appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           If you’ve ever gone on a walk after a good float, you’ve probably felt something similar to the experience of cresting a summit after a long hike or staring deeply into a beautiful painting. It’s that overwhelming feeling that comes from a profound sense of awe after being in the presence of something greater than yourself.
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           When we stop to smell the roses, it improves more than just the scent of the roses. When we slow down to appreciate the little things, those little things take up more of our mental focus. If we stop to think about this phenomenon, it can inspire some curious questions. What actually is awe? Why does it feel so good to experience it? Beyond being satisfying, how does it impact us?
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            ﻿
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           Brain scans of people experiencing awe give us a few insights into some of these questions.
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            Awe inspiring moments can reduce activation in an area of the brain called the Default Mode Network. While a lot happens in this area of the brain, some of what it’s responsible for is auto-biographical information like our memories, opinions, and personal traits. Essentially, the Default Mode Network helps us understand the world through the context of ourselves. As a result, it’s also what helps determine how we feel about ourselves, our memories of the past, and our thoughts about the future.
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           The Default Mode Network works opposite another part of our brain called the Executive Control Network, which is the part of the brain that helps us make observations, pay attention to things outside of ourselves, and perform tasks. They are anticorrelated, meaning they don’t typically work at the same time. It’s difficult to make observations about the world around us while focusing on something from our past, which is why it’s easy to get distracted nostalgically strolling down memory lane when we were supposed to be studying for that final exam in college.
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           Basically, when we experience awe 
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           we’re quieting down the part of our brain that makes us focus on ourselves, the past, the future, and the outside world
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           .These are the very same types of thought that we work to quiet in our brains when we float or practice mindfulness in other ways. That’s not just conjecture, either: the Float Clinic at the Laureate Institute of Brain Research has been researching what exactly happens to the brain when we float. We’ve learned that floating 
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           can be incredibly helpful for those who experience anxiety and other mental health conditions.
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           We’re also finally starting to see that part of the reason it’s so effective is because it’s reducing the activity in the Default Mode Network as well, which helps explain how it reduces anxiety. If we can’t think about social obligations, failures from the past, or worries we have for the future, it makes it much more difficult for our brains to perpetuate anxious thinking. This leaves more room for other parts of our brain to sit in the driver’s seat.
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           After a float, we’re likely at our most receptive to the sensations outside of ourselves, making it easier for us to appreciate the beauty of the world around us and the communities that we’re a part of. This is also a possible explanation for the profound sense of awe we can have when we observe beautiful artwork or when we meditate.
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           This makes mindfulness self-reinforcing. When we practice being more present and less focused on ourselves, it becomes a habit. The more often we practice stepping into this mental state, the easier it is to return to when we need to. It also enhances our appreciation for other things as well. Food tastes better, art is more captivating, we can engage in creative activities more easily, building connections between us and the rest of the world. This, in turn, has the potential to extend that enhanced sense of presence beyond just ourselves, into others around us.
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/03/09/slowing-down-makes-life-better29b8439a/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Slowing Down Makes Life Better
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Mar 2021 20:01:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/03/09/slowing-down-makes-life-better29b8439a</guid>
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      <title>How to Learn to Love Yourself (and Others)!</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/02/08/how-to-learn-to-love-yourself-and-others65abd346</link>
      <description>Let’s talk about loving yourself. It’s that time of year when partners and paramours really try to show their affection to their special …
The post How to Learn to Love Yourself (and Others)! appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           Let’s talk about loving yourself. It’s that time of year when partners and paramours really try to show their affection to their special someone. Alternatively, for the unattached, this time of year can be a reminder of our own isolation (and after 2020, that’s something we don’t need more of).
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           Whatever your Valentine’s Day might look like this year, you already have the perfect date: yourself. Even if you’ve already got a beau, belle, or similar beloved you intend to dote on, dedicating some affection internally can pay off for them as much as for you.
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           This means more than buying yourself something nice, giving yourself compliments, or going for a spa day. In fact, limiting your idea of self-love to such a surface level interpretation is going to be counterproductive in the long term.
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           If you’re going to date yourself, you gotta remember that it’s not going to be like a first date. You already know your best stories, after all. It’s more like going on a date night after a lifetime of marriage. The kind of date that reminds you why you fell in love in the first place. The important thing is to find ways to connect with yourself, to show that you care about your own well-being and you can appreciate the things about yourself that no one else will notice.
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           Self-love is as much about self-acceptance as it is self-care. When you accept yourself for who you are, it makes it easier to focus on others around you. Look at it this way: if we place most of our attention on our mistakes, then we are also failing to appreciate what’s truly important in life: the subtle flashes of beauty that come into existence before blinking away forever, the quiet moments of serenity that exist in between the big ones, or the joy that come from sharing these things with those closest to us.
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           Too much focus on your flaws can become a compounding issue, too. If you dwell on your negative traits and behaviors (
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           like many of us are prone to do
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           ) they can become self-reinforcing. Guilt isn’t a great motivator for change, and instead can lead to fatalistic conclusions about how inevitable our perceived inadequacies can be. And since we have 
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           a bias towards negative information
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           , we tend to seek out harsh or critical information over positive information, and if no one provides it, we’ll often provide it ourselves.
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           This is especially relevant right now on the heels of 2020. Most of us have probably been more than a little critical of ourselves lately, even if we’re not aware of it. We often blame ourselves for things that are outside our control, making it easy to feel like we’ve fallen short of our goals. Which means now more than ever – it’s important to handle yourself, your ambitions, and especially your failures, with a little grace.
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           So how do we address this? Are there things we can do on our self-love dates that can help make us the best version of ourselves?
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           Yes! As it turns out, mindfulness is a great way to counter this impulse of self-obsession, so long as we do it correctly. Mindfulness, as a practice, has been a fundamental part of Hinduism and Buddhism for centuries. The practice of quieting the mind and keeping the body still was about stepping outside of one’s regular, self-oriented experiences, and was essential to religious practices that helped emphasize how the individual could improve the greater community. 
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           As mindfulness in the Western world has become more popular, it has often been used to amplify our sense of self, instead of helping to diminish it.
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            So, while mindfulness can be extremely effective at reducing this cultural self-obsession, it needs to be approached intentionally to achieve that goal.
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           Floating is a great way to practice mindfulness and exercise being present. In fact, without any external stimulation, it can be difficult to do anything but live in the moment while your sense of self melts into the water and air around you. Dr. John C. Lilly, the creator of the float tank, used his invention to help develop his own radical personal improvement techniques.
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           So this Valentine’s Day, do yourself – and your loved ones – a favor. Treat yourself, not just to a pleasant and relaxing experience, but form that meaningful connection with who you are deep down. Go for a float, become one with the Nothingness you’re surrounded in, and come out ready to give everything you’ve got to those who need it. With the way this past year has been, it’s more important than ever to look out for each other, and that starts by looking out for yourself.
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          The post
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           How to Learn to Love Yourself (and Others)!
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          appeared first on
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           Float North County
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      <pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2021 20:59:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/02/08/how-to-learn-to-love-yourself-and-others65abd346</guid>
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      <title>Level Up with Floating</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/01/06/level-up-with-floating9d85c178</link>
      <description>The beginning of a new year is often a time for making plans and inspiring change, but 2021 has just started and already it has …
The post Level Up with Floating appeared first on Float North County.</description>
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           The beginning of a new year is often a time for making plans and inspiring change, but 2021 has just started and already it has a lot of expectations being placed upon it. With the pandemic, 2020 felt like a global “timeout” for a lot of people, so we’ve all had to push things off and are banking on this year being an opportunity for new beginnings.
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           In the spirit of pursuing positive change, here’s a collection of some lesser known benefits of floating for making changes in your life.
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           SLEEP
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           This one feels like cheating a little bit because it seems so obvious, but a better night’s sleep is actually one of the best ways to set yourself up for success when trying to create a new routine or build better habits. Maybe the better habit you’re trying to build is around sleep, in which case, hey – two birds, one stone!
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           Improving sleep is consistently one of the most reported benefits from float studies (right below reduced stress and anxiety).
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           IMPROVED LEARNING AND TRAINING
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           One of the really interesting ways floating impacts our minds is through our emotional state, which can, in turn, impact how we retain information. People experiencing negative emotions tend to have trouble remembering positive experiences and, even with neutral information, what they recall tends to be less specific.
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           Since floating is so good at reducing stress and anxiety, it’s probably no surprise that in clinical trials researchers found that memory recollection in people who floated was more vivid and intense compared to control groups.
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           Floating also helps with training skills as well. In high performing athletes who trained for precision, floating helped improve performance beyond their regular training plateau. Whether it was archery, marksmanship, or endurance, floating made it possible for them to do better more consistently.
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           ADDICTION
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           Anyone who’s recovered from addiction can tell you that isolating yourself from whatever is triggering your impulses can be extremely helpful, even for relatively short periods of time since it removes you from whatever the motivation is to break apart the impulse to relapse.
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           There was some excellent research done about sensory isolation to combat addiction of 
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           nicotine
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           , 
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           alcohol
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           , and 
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    &lt;a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/3392756/" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           narcotics
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           . The studies showed that prolonged isolation is really great at dealing with withdrawal symptoms as well, lessening their intensity and making them more manageable. It’s been so effective that there are certain recovery programs that have begun integrating floating into their treatment to help lower the risk of relapse in drug addiction.
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           In addition to the research, there are several personal stories that have attributed floating to helping with addiction. John Lennon, as shared in Lives of John Lennon by Albert Goldman, famously used floating to help him overcome his heroin addiction.
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            ﻿
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           No matter what your New Year’s Resolution may be, floating can be a really helpful tool in getting there. And even if you’re not sure what goals you’d like to focus on in the New Year, a float tank can be a great place to think about it.
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          The post
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    &lt;a href="/2021/01/06/level-up-with-floating9d85c178/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Level Up with Floating
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          appeared first on
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    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.com"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Float North County
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          .
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&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2021 18:56:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2021/01/06/level-up-with-floating9d85c178</guid>
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      <title>Floating and Creativity: Finding Inspiration in the Darkness</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2020/11/07/floating-and-creativity-finding-inspiration-in-the-darkness1ccdf549</link>
      <description>We tend to think of creativity as synonymous with expression (writing, music, art, etc.), but creativity is also how we respond to unusual situations, how …
The post Floating and Creativity: Finding Inspiration in the Darkness appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           We tend to think of creativity as synonymous with expression (writing, music, art, etc.), but creativity is also how we respond to unusual situations, how to approach old problems in new ways, as well as how we share this information in a way that is both entertaining and informative.
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           Creativity is such a fundamental part of what it means to be human that we often take it for granted. Change is one of the defining characteristics of the human experience, and being able to adapt to it and think laterally when problems arise has shaped our history in both big and small ways. Innovations like flight, the internet, and homogenized milk were all expressions of creativity. It’s something we use daily, even if we’re not thinking about it: developing a sense of style, finding ways to automate your work, or even creating a unique Zoom background for your digital meetings are more everyday examples of how creativity influences our lives.
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            ﻿
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           Floating has such an obvious effect on creativity, that it’s hard to find a float center that doesn’t celebrate it in some way, whether through float-inspired artwork on display, post-float journals for zen’d out floaters to express themselves in, or album releases of float-inspired music.
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           So what is the connection between floating and creativity? And how do you research something as nebulous and ubiquitous as creativity, anyhow?
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           For a long time, it was widely believed to be difficult (if not impossible) to manufacture creativity. Beautiful muses could apparently help, but it was still something intangible and unreliable. Either inspiration strikes or… it doesn’t.
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           For as long as written language has existed, we’ve struggled with how to make inspiration strike. The I Ching, one of the oldest texts in existence, is fundamentally about how to foster creativity to encourage change – in yourself and the rest of your life.
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           Despite being written thousands of years ago, many of the teachings are frighteningly contemporary. The text itself is non-linear and there’s a lot of debate about specific word choice in translation, which makes it difficult to quote out of context, but one of the fundamental principles it states clearly and repeatedly is a strong comparison between times of quiet rest and solitude and nurturing the mentality necessary to adapt to great change.
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           Saying that we should avoid distraction and overstimulation to foster creativity is not a new idea, as it turns out. In fact, it may be one of the oldest ones we’ve ever had!
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           Synthesizing an abstract and analytical approach
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           More recently, academia has taken a more methodical approach to looking at creativity. In 1954, poet and academic Brewster Ghiselin compiled a symposium, 
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    &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/creativeprocessa013702mbp" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           The Creative Process
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           , from some of history’s creative heavy hitters, including such greats as Einstein, Van Gogh, and Mozart to name a few.
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           Ghiselin took these observations and attempted to make sense of the common threads that give spark to creativity. In an anecdote from Henri Poincaré about inspiration, Ghiselin was struck with the process that led to one of his most important discoveries in mathematics: “he lay unable to sleep and became a spectator of some ordinarily hidden aspects of his own spontaneous creative activity.” Ghiselin saw this as a fundamental part of unlocking creative potential, “though Poincaré was conscious, he did not assume direction of his creative activity at the stage described, and as it seems to have been a sort of activity not susceptible of conscious control, apparently he could not have done so.” In short, he’s making the same observation as the I Ching: when we seek out stillness, our minds work out the rest of the hard stuff.
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           But philosophy and essays are not research, and at the time, scientists didn’t really know how to study something ] as abstract as creativity. Psychology was still a very young and developing field, and it would be a few decades before anyone would publish peer-reviewed research on how floating impacts creativity and problem solving.
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           In 1987, that’s exactly what happened at the University of British Columbia. The researchers there found that 
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           psychology professors came up with more ideas after floating, and that those ideas were generally more creative
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           , with every participant except for one finding their floats to have an extremely positive impact on their ability to create. These results were later 
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    &lt;a href="https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4613-9701-4_13" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           verified by the same researchers
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            and replicated by 
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    &lt;a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0272494405800817" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           other scientists at the University of Vermont
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           . The Vermont study also found that people who floated were less likely to feel fatigued or frustrated by complicated problems.
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           Sweden’s Karlstadt University, one of the leading float research institutes in the world, saw this research and began attempting to replicate the results. Between 1998 and 2003, they published four separate articles on the benefits of floating on creativity, in addition to the other research they were doing. They found that 
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/232605968_Effects_of_Flotation_REST_on_Creative_Problem_Solving_and_Originality" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           despite taking longer to to solve problems, the subjects who floated all found more creative solutions
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           , that it could help with 
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    &lt;a href="https://www.researchgate.net/publication/266672341_Effects_of_stress_versus_flotation-REST_relaxation_on_creativity_and_literacy_skills_in_advanced_English_as_a_second_language_ESL_composition" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           creativity and literacy skills for those who use english as a second language
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           , that floating 
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    &lt;a href="https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.2190/0LAE-M7WP-R6UQ-CR3P" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           increased originality, but lowered deductive reasoning
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           , and finally that floating could potentially be 
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    &lt;a href="https://gupea.ub.gu.se/handle/2077/16040" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           a safe way to access altered states of consciousness, which could lead to increased optimism and creativity.
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           What makes this research so interesting is that so many of these studies took place before smartphones existed. More so now than ever, we live in a distracted, interconnected world, and the issue of “screentime” dominating our daily lives is an issue at the forefront of our society.
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           It doesn’t take a team of dedicated researchers with decades of studies to understand why floating stimulates creativity, though. It intuitively makes sense. Unplugging and centering yourself in quiet solitude is naturally going to help your mental faculties. Removing all distractions, even gravity, is a great way to rewire your mind and channel your creative energy into the places it needs to go, not just where the world takes it.
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          The post
          &#xD;
    &lt;a href="/2020/11/07/floating-and-creativity-finding-inspiration-in-the-darkness1ccdf549/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Floating and Creativity: Finding Inspiration in the Darkness
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    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
    
          appeared first on
          &#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.com"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Float North County
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          .
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&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Sat, 07 Nov 2020 18:31:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2020/11/07/floating-and-creativity-finding-inspiration-in-the-darkness1ccdf549</guid>
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      <title>Why do Stephen Curry and Michael Phelps Float?</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2020/10/14/why-do-stephen-curry-and-michael-phelps-float2ebabff4</link>
      <description> 
Here’s a sports trivia question for all our athletically-inclined readers:
What do the Dallas Cowboys, the Golden State Warriors, the Chicago Cubs, The Manchester …
The post Why do Stephen Curry and Michael Phelps Float? appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
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           Here’s a sports trivia question for all our athletically-inclined readers:
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           What do the Dallas Cowboys, the Golden State Warriors, the Chicago Cubs, The Manchester United Football Club, and Michael Phelps all have in common?
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           You might see this lineup and think “well, the ‘92 Dallas Cowboys won the Superbowl that year, the Golden State Warriors won the NBA Finals in ‘14, the Cubs made history when they won the 2016 World Series, Manchester United is one of the most hono(u)red Football Clubs in the world, and Michael Phelps has won more gold medals than any other Olympian in history! They’re all winners!”
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           But that’s not all they have in common: 
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           they also all used float tanks.
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           They weren’t alone, either: the New England Patriots, UFC Hall of Famer Royce Gracie, the Chicago Bulls, Olympic Gymnast Aly Raisman, the Philadelphia Eagles, Olympic Gold Medalist Carl Lewis, The Detroit Pistons, as well as literally hundreds of other professional athletes have incorporated floating into their training and recovery programs throughout the years.
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           Floating is one of the best kept secrets in high-performing athletes and there’s some interesting research that helps explain why.
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           Raising the Performance Ceiling
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           If someone told you that laying in the dark on a bed of saltwater could give you superhuman strength or speed, would you believe them? It may not be as far-fetched as it sounds.
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           One study found that high-level athletes who have plateaued – those who don’t see any additional benefits from more training – 
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           would see an improvement in performance after floating in conjunction with visualization techniques, even without additional training
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           .
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           Put another way, athletes were able to increase their peak performance just by floating before competition. A follow up study not only confirmed this result but 
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           also showed that floating multiple times between games led to significant improvements over a single float!
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           This demonstrates something that most floaters already know: 
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           the more you float, the better it is for you.
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           Improved Precision
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           Beyond general athletic performance, a few studies looked at more specific benefits of floating in athletes.
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           Several studies tested how floating affects marksmanship. All 3 studies had a float group and a control group, with participants from all skill levels.
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           In the rifle marksmanship study 
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           75% had a statistically significant increase in accuracy pre- to post-float with no such increase was found in the control group (relaxation without floating)
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           .
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            A similar effect was found in the darts study, 
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           with 80% of participants seeing an improvement.
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            It’s worth noting that in both studies, these improvements were seen regardless of skill level.
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           While the archery study didn’t see any significant increase in accuracy, 
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           it did show that the float-group had more consistent scores than the non-float group
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           ,
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            something that the other two studies found as well.
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           Reduced Recovery Time
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           While the benefits described above could be explained as a side effect of stress reduction, there’s more to the story of the impact on floating in physical performance, certainly not enough to explain why floating has been so popular among high-level athletes.
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    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           Building off of earlier research, scientists in recent years have started using biometrics to see what’s happening to athletes who float on a physiological level. A 2013 study looked at the effect floating has on lactic acid build-up.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           Lactic acid is associated with that post-workout feeling of tightness in your muscles that causes your body to stiffen and get sore. Professional athletes are always looking for new ways to reduce the amount it builds up during a workout to maximize performance.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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           What they found was that floating after exercise showed a 
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23478477/" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           62% reduction in lactic acid buildup on average compared to the control group.
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            Participants also reported feeling less pain and were back at peak performance sooner.
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           A follow up study in 2016 was able to replicate this effect with a larger sample size over 9 different sports. Not only were they able to 
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2211266916300147" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           replicate the lactic acid reduction, they also found a significant reduction in muscle soreness and improved mood and reduced fatigue in those that floated.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
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           Looking at the Whole Picture
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  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           When you take all of these effects together, you can start to see why floating has been one of the best kept secrets of successful athletes. When you take into consideration the stress reduction benefits as well, you can see how floating might help them be at the top of their mental game in addition to their professional one.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
        
            ﻿
           &#xD;
      &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           The best part about all of this? Floating is helpful for athletes at every level. You don’t need to be an Olympian to see the benefits of floating in your exercise. It can be a nice way to cool down after a jog or help you recover after playing in a local league game on the weekends.
           &#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    
          The post
          &#xD;
    &lt;a href="/2020/10/14/why-do-stephen-curry-and-michael-phelps-float2ebabff4/"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Why do Stephen Curry and Michael Phelps Float?
          &#xD;
    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
    
          appeared first on
          &#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.com"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Float North County
          &#xD;
    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
    
          .
         &#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 2020 18:53:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2020/10/14/why-do-stephen-curry-and-michael-phelps-float2ebabff4</guid>
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>What is the best time to float?</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2019/03/29/what-is-the-best-time-to-float</link>
      <description>That depends on what you want from your float. We have many clients who like to start their day or their week with a morning …
The post What is the best time to float? appeared first on Float North County.</description>
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;img src="https://irp.cdn-website.com/5b550e6a/dms3rep/multi/sea-dawn-sunset-person-1080x675.jpg" alt=""/&gt;&#xD;
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&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           That depends on what you want from your float. We have many clients who like to start their day or their week with a morning float. Others find the afternoon a great time to float to destress or use the tank to help solve some issue or problem or deepen their meditation practice. We also have people who like to fully decompress before going to bed for a very restful sleep. This may help you to decide:
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      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           Morning Floats: 10am
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    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           If you are a morning person and looking to increase your energy and boost your mood for the week then mornings may be the best time for you.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           There are some real physical benefits to floating (pain relief, spine decompression, decrease in blood pressure and heart rate) that will happen no matter the time of day you float, but we find that clients who frequent the morning float time experience a real boost in energy, and an elevation in mood (science shows that floating increases endorphins and dopamine) both of which help to make a person more open to ideas and therefore more productive.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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           Afternoon Floats: 12pm // 2:00pm // 4:00pm
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           Afternoons can be one of the more popular times to float. One of our clients came out a float and told me he has renamed the float tank to the “Solution Chamber”; which is a very appropriate name. Floating has been shown to synchronize the right and left hemispheres of the brain. The right hemisphere, known for creativity and those “aha” ideas, becomes more dominant while floating and often the “best solution” to a problem can appear. This is a good time to float to de-stress from the day and rejuvenate the mind and body.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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           Evening Floats: 6:00pm // 8:00pm
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           One of the great benefits of floating is the decompression of the central nervous system. Clients float in the evening to help unwind at the end of the day. A decompressed central nervous system also prepares the body and mind for deep levels of rest.
          &#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
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    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
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  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://static1.squarespace.com/static/560ea2e2e4b07240bdc6011c/t/5b7ef8be03ce64cbcbc2a0c7/1535047870685/Abstract+UR+Sleep+Study.pdf" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Case study on floating and restful sleep
          &#xD;
    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;span&gt;&#xD;
      
           : The combination of experiencing deep relaxation in the zero gravity environment and the fact there is over 1,000 lbs of Epsom salt and the absorption of magnesium makes for a restful night’s sleep. In addition, regular evening floats can actually regulate sleep patterns so that you can experience ongoing restful sleep.
           &#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;/span&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;a href="https://floatnorthcounty.floathelm.com/booking" target="_blank"&gt;&#xD;
      
           Book a Float
          &#xD;
    &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 2019 18:03:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/2019/03/29/what-is-the-best-time-to-float</guid>
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    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/6-reasons-why-you-need-a-digital-media-strategy</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;img src="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_1-1920x1280.jpg"/&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  
         Everyone needs a digital media strategy, and not for the reasons you may expect. In fact, if you think digital strategies are just promotional, think again.
        &#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <enclosure url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_1-1920x1280.jpg" length="201677" type="image/jpeg" />
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:51:40 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/6-reasons-why-you-need-a-digital-media-strategy</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
      <media:content medium="image" url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_1-1920x1280.jpg">
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    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/1-most-important-part-of-your-campaign</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;img src="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_4-1920x1280.jpg"/&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  
         If you think money is the only thing that matters in your campaign, think again. There are many more things to think about.
        &#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <enclosure url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_4-1920x1280.jpg" length="430098" type="image/jpeg" />
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:50:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/1-most-important-part-of-your-campaign</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
      <media:content medium="image" url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_4-1920x1280.jpg">
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      </media:content>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/notes-from-the-other-side</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;img src="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_2-890x593.jpg"/&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  
         Always wondered what happens on the other side of your campaign. Well, now you’re going to find out.
        &#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <enclosure url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_2-890x593.jpg" length="71853" type="image/jpeg" />
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:49:26 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/notes-from-the-other-side</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
      <media:content medium="image" url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_2-890x593.jpg">
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      </media:content>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/why-technology-isn-t-enough-for-your-digital-campaign</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;img src="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_5-890x594.jpg"/&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  
         Just because you have a snazzy Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat campaign doesn’t mean you’re covered.
        &#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <enclosure url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_5-890x594.jpg" length="56473" type="image/jpeg" />
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:48:21 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/why-technology-isn-t-enough-for-your-digital-campaign</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
      <media:content medium="image" url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_5-890x594.jpg">
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    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/top-4-questions-about-instagram</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;a&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;img src="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_3-1920x1280.jpg" alt="" title=""/&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;/a&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    
          Wondering who’s following whom, who you should follow, and what follows what’s being followed? We’re here to explain.
         &#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
      <enclosure url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_3-1920x1280.jpg" length="177338" type="image/jpeg" />
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:43:18 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/top-4-questions-about-instagram</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
      <media:content medium="image" url="https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/4e922067/dms3rep/multi/BLOGPOST_3-1920x1280.jpg">
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    <item>
      <title>Lorem Ipsum</title>
      <link>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/10-reasons-you-should-love-blogging</link>
      <description />
      <content:encoded>&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;h3&gt;&#xD;
    
          Blog posts are a great way to get recognized within your community and share your voice. Here are the top 10 reasons you should love writing blog posts.
         &#xD;
  &lt;/h3&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;a&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;img src="//dd-cdn.multiscreensite.com/blog/blog_post_image_2.jpeg" alt="" title=""/&gt;&#xD;
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&lt;/div&gt;&#xD;
&lt;div data-rss-type="text"&gt;&#xD;
  &lt;p&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           Anyone can make one:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          For better or worse, anyone can write a blog post about anything they want. Everyone has a voice and thet voices will rise to the top.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           The writer can show their personality:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          In blog posts, the writer has more leeway to add in their voice and personality than other types of writing.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           Blogs are a great form of mass communication:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          You can help people, learn new things, entertain your audience-the possibilities are endless and amazing. Blogging opens up all of these to a very wide audience.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           You can make money:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          Get the right blog going and you can make a lot of money through advertising and sponsored posts.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           It allows people to craft better thoughts:
          &#xD;
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    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          Instead of reading haphazard, uneducated Facebook statuses, it's much better to see people's thought process in a well-written blog post.
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    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           You can establish a community:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          Blogging allows you to connect with other individuals who share the same interests. Sharing ideas and opinions within your community helps establish yourself as a thought leader.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           Good for SEO:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          Keeping content on your site fresh and relevant, you can use your blog to boost the search engine ranking (SEO) of your site and your business.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           It brings people back to your site:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          If your blog is strong enough and updated regularly, people will come back looking for more and bring traffic back to your site as well.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      
           It's free:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          It costs you a grand total of zero dollars to post to the blog, so if you have something to say, there's nothing to stop you.
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;b&gt;&#xD;
      &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
      
           You can establish yourself as a thought leader:
          &#xD;
    &lt;/b&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          A blog is a great place for your original thoughts, and it can be a wonderful way to show off your individuality. If people like your ideas, you can become a thought leader in your industry!
          &#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    &lt;br/&gt;&#xD;
    
          What else do you love about blogs? Let me know!
         &#xD;
  &lt;/p&gt;&#xD;
&lt;/div&gt;</content:encoded>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2019 14:43:18 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>ik@ippei.com (Tori Klein)</author>
      <guid>https://www.floatnorthcounty.com/10-reasons-you-should-love-blogging</guid>
      <g-custom:tags type="string" />
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