β All habits
Cold & Heat
Cold Shower / Contrast Therapy
Brief cold exposure is a deliberate hormetic stressor β the controlled kind that makes biology more resilient.
What it is
Cold shower or contrast therapy (alternating hot and cold water) involves brief, deliberate exposure to cold water β typically ending a shower with 30β90 seconds of cold water, or alternating 2β3 minutes hot with 30β60 seconds cold for 2β3 cycles.
Why it matters
Cold exposure triggers a sympathetic nervous system response β adrenaline and noradrenaline spike sharply β followed by a rebound in mood-lifting neurotransmitters (particularly dopamine, which increases by up to 250% post-cold exposure per some estimates). It reduces systemic inflammation (via noradrenaline-mediated suppression of NF-kB), improves mood, and builds tolerance to discomfort β a psychological skill that transfers directly to tolerating treatment side effects. In contrast, the alternating hot-cold pattern enhances lymphatic and venous return, reducing post-treatment oedema.
The evidence
A 2022 randomised trial from Radboud University Medical Center found that cold shower training reduced sick leave by 29%. The noradrenaline research from Wim Hof method studies has been replicated across cold exposure contexts. Multiple studies confirm cold-induced increases in adiponectin, which improves insulin sensitivity and has anti-inflammatory properties. The contrast therapy data in post-surgical recovery and lymphoedema management is well established.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Always discuss lifestyle changes with your care team, particularly if you are undergoing active cancer treatment.
How to practice
Start gently: end each shower with 30 seconds of cold water. Build over 2β4 weeks to 60β90 seconds. The key moment is the transition β commit and do not turn it back up. For contrast therapy: 2β3 minutes hot, 30β60 seconds cold, repeat 3 cycles, always ending cold. Morning is ideal β the noradrenaline spike improves focus and mood for hours. The discomfort does not diminish much, but your relationship to it changes.
Frequency
Daily, morning
Notes
Do not do cold exposure if you are neutropenic, have open wounds, active infections, or significant cardiovascular risk without medical clearance. In treatment weeks with severe fatigue or nausea, skip it β this should be a mildly effortful practice, not a punishing one. People with Raynaud's disease should be cautious.
Tags
inflammation
dopamine
noradrenaline
lymphatic
resilience
mood