Are you sad because of SAD? Here are several SteamTherapy tips to help you combat seasonal affective disorder, also known as SAD.
Up to 3% of the American population may suffer from winter depression, which doctors term seasonal affective disorder, or SAD. Experts believe that SAD stems from a body clock that's out of sync combined with a lack of natural sunlight.
You might be suffering from SAD if you have to report to work before light and only leave when it’s dark. After all, we’re conditioned to continual exposure to sunlight from the dawn of man – having worked under the rays of the sun as hunters and gatherers. The artificial environment we live in now is counter-intuitive to our bodies’ needs.
So if you groan as fall turns into winter, and moan as winter drags on seemingly forever, you might be suffering from winter’s short days and long nights.
There are many ways to combat SAD. Among these, the experts suggest:
In some cases, SAD can be severe enough to warrant a discussion with a doctor. A doctor might prescribe a low dose of the hormone melatonin, which can help reset the body clock to normal. Melatonin dosage and timing should always be calculated by a doctor.
Another common treatment for SAD is to sit in front of a light box for a prescribed period of time. Often, this is a half-hour session in the morning, though studies have shown that some patients do better with bright light in the evening.
And here is where MrSteam’s ChromaSteam system may help.
Recent students indicate that the best light to combat SAD is blue light rather than the yellow light most of our household fixtures shed. A CNN report speaks of preliminary studies that suggest spending more time under blue-enriched light – rather than the white or yellow light most bulbs give off – might help us deal with those SAD blues.
Why? It seems clear to researchers that blue light improves alertness and mental performance, but they are still trying to understand why it is different from red, green, or white light. In a study where individuals were exposed to blue light, that color seemed to stimulate and strengthen connections between areas of the brain involved in processing emotion and language.
While this is not yet a definitive answer to SAD’s melancholy, researchers suspect that the brain’s response to blue light may help people adapt to emotional challenges more easily, regulating mood long term.
By integrating light with steam, ChromaTherapy environments become rich with color, mood and warmth.
After all, color and light have captured the imagination of some of the greatest thinkers in history, most notably, Hippocrates, the Father of Western Medicine. Hippocrates was known to have incorporated ChromaTherapy into his practice by painting treatment rooms in healing hues and using colored salves as remedies.
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MrSteam’s ChromaSteam color selection can be set for a single color or to cycle from one to another.
If you think you might suffer from SAD, maybe consider a morning or evening steambath while using ChromaSteam. Try bathing yourself in blue light to see if it helps you combat the lethargic symptoms of SAD.
The other colors – red for vitality, yellow for awakening, green for harmony, indigo for its mystic powers, and the nirvana aspect of violet – can be added to the cycle before or after a session with the blue light and may improve your overall physical and mental state.
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Take advantage of a steambath coupled with the rich hues of ChromaSteam to lift your spirits and make you feel more energetic and alive!