Thursday, April 25, 2013

Medical & Other Benefits of Floatation Therapy


Medical & Other Benefits of Floatation Therapy

"The use of flotation therapy has a number of medical benefits. In the gravity free floating environment the body balances and heals internally as all the senses are rested. Research shows that floating and flotation therapy measurably reduce bloody pressure and heart rate whilst lowering the levels of stress related chemicals in the body. Old injuries and aches, (especially backache) experience relief as floating helps blood circulation.

This is one more medical reason that explains a sense of balance and well being in the floating patient's everyday life when using floatation tanks. Recent medical flotation research has shown more and more the importance of having a good balance of activity between the two cerebral hemispheres to guarantee a better state of physical, mental, and emotional health."
http://www.sensense.com/sense/benefits-of-doing-float.php
 

Floatation therapy is a medical treatment using sensory deprivation within a floatation tank or float room. Years of well documented tests show that floatation tank therapy not only has an immediate effect on pain relief and elimination of stress, it also promotes ‘whole-brain’ thinking. Many athletes, writers and artists have experienced enormous benefits from floatation therapy utilizing floatation tanks.

Floatation therapy applications for sports people and athletes

• Deep muscular relaxation
• Accelerates healing of injuries
• Enhances Performance using visualization

Floatation therapy benefits for business people

• Complete physical & mental de-stressing
• Deep muscular relaxation
• Rejuvenates energy levels
• Enhances Creativity

Floatation therapy for students

• Stimulates creativity
• Promotes clarity of thought process
• Aids accelerated learning

Sensory deprivation floatation tank therapy

Sensory deprivation therapy utilizes floating as a method of attaining the deepest relaxation one can experience, this type of sensory therapy can help to ease a number of medical conditions and symptoms. Floatation therapy is used widely in the treatment of stress, anxiety, jet lag and to improve concentration and creativity. Flotation taps into the senses of the brain and is widely used by sports persons to improve performance. Wind down is also enhanced during sensory deprivation floating therapy. Did you know that one hour of floating in a float tank has the restorative effects of 4 hours of sleep. This is mainly due to the effects of sensory deprivation caused inside the flotation tank.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Open Float Pools - Floataway

 Floataway - Offers Open Float Pools

From Floataway - For large luxury float pools, typically concrete with tiled surfaces, we have developed a special system which heats and disinfects the salt water and includes separate storage so that the pools can be cleaned and maintained.  The heating can be solar or by air to water heat pump and various levels of automation can be added.  Each of these is specially designed and built to suit the exact requirements of the customer while drawing on our extensive experience of the technologies needed to cope with Epsom salt solutions and commercial floating.  We often work with architects in planning large pools because the pool environment is more extreme than most swimming pools and special expertise is required.  We have that expertise and offer a unique design and supply service.

Examples of Open Float Pools





Floataway can supply fully equipped pools which can be let into false/raised floors if desired.
Floataway currently sells four standard open float pools. Our rectangular pools are based on a slightly modified versions of our Cabin ForOne and ForTwo float room, our circular pools uses our Floataround base and you can buy an open Tranquility.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Time Out: The Rise of Sensory Deprivation Tanks

Time Out: The Rise of Sensory Deprivation Tanks


As it gets harder to live in the moment, without distraction, some swear by a forced shutdown.
flotation tank jm3 615.jpg
jm3 / Flickr
It's an environment entirely stripped of stimuli. Even gravity feels nonexistent, inside a tank filled with nearly a foot of water and just about 800 pounds of Epsom salt. Like the Dead Sea. You climb inside and lie floating in the darkness.
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To experience complete sensory deprivation is, ideally, to delve into one's psyche. It forces contemplation of facets of life, that -- similar to less "heavy" types of meditation -- is meant to leave us healthier and happier. The theory is that removing yourself from all external stimulation allows your mind to suddenly dial down the RPMs, resulting in heightened in-the-moment awareness, creativity, and clarity.
Comedian and Fear Factor host Joe Rogan has been effusive in his praise of the tank. "I think it's one of the most incredible pieces of equipment for self-help and introspective thought that you could ever find," he told me. "It's been one of the most important tools for me in personal growth for understanding myself, how I am, and what effect I do have on other people."
Rogan got into sensory deprivation in hopes of achieving psychedelic experiences without taking actual drugs. He's attained that, and, in the process, gained innumerable reasons to keep floating. "People don't realize how much everything is a distraction," he says.
The experience in the tank, though, can be "brutal and unflinching in its portrayal of you and your reality," said Rogan. "That's a terrifying thing to a lot of people -- the fact that you're alone with your unconscious thoughts, with everything that's truly troubling you. It's the only time that you are untethered from your body."
He's not alone in describing that untethered feeling as a potentially intense emotional experience. Your mind begins to run rampant. With nowhere else for thoughts to go, whatever problems, worries, or guilt sits in the back of your brain has to be confronted. As it's been put before, inside that tank, you have to face yourself.
"It can be uncomfortable in the sense that you really can't run away from any of the things that are subconsciously troubling you, but I love that," Rogan said. "I'm not a big fan of running away from reality. I like handling all of the issues that bother me in order to go through life truly happy. There's a lot of people out there with ghosts, a lot of demons haunting their mind. In my opinion, this is your chance to face it head on and try to come up with a better path."
But a fear of facing oneself shouldn't be a deterrent to any type of therapy. Sensory deprivation has become a popular exercise throughout the world, with validated positive results that extend into everyday life. Namely stress and anxiety reduction, but also as an adjunct for chronic physical pain.
Dr. Darren Weissman, a holistic physician who has floated weekly since 1986, explains, "I really feel that it's a result of floating and getting myself out of the way that I saw how all these multiple disciplines that activate the healing potentials of the body actually work together."
Floating isn't just about facing the negative aspects of life. It's also about being more aware of, and appreciating the good. Letting the little, good moments simmer -- instead of just moving to the next thing -- helps them feel (and actually become) more real.
As Dr. Weissman says, it "allows us to recognize our body's potentials. It opens us to a whole different level of awareness and of who we are. We start to notice things. It awakens consciousness."
Matt Frederickson, an avid user of floatation tanks, says, "Since I started doing it, I've become more calm, especially in my work life." A long-time sufferer of chronic neck, head, and back pain, Frederickson took his first float after hearing Joe Rogan's praise of the physical benefits of the isolation tank on Marc Maron's WTF podcast. "I thought it sounded interesting because I personally suffer from a lot of chronic pain, so that's what initially drew me to it."
Frederickson tried therapies for his chronic pain, a lot of which worked a little, but he's found that no other practice produces results as consistently effective as the isolation tank. But, like Rogan, he gets more out of it than he initially sought. "I still use it mainly for the pain," he says. "It really helps lessen that, but I think the secondary benefit, for me, would be the anxiety that's tied to the pain."
"I think people are very mentally attached to certain things and certain ways of living," Frederickson told me. "I work in the music industry, so I attend a lot of shows. I'm constantly seeing people on their phones or giving into different distractions at these concerts. They don't see there's a way out of that, to be in that present moment."
While generally praised by users, sensory deprivation is met with some mainstream hesitation. Whether that stems from the germ theory -- which Dr. Weissman assured me shouldn't be a worry -- claustrophobia, or even a fear of experiencing thoughts that might make us question ourselves, the floatation tank is a tool that waits patiently for those willing to give it a shot.
Most who've experienced isolation tanks admit that the idea of "letting go" and allowing your mind to relax takes time. Even Rogan admits that floating took some getting used to. "I remember thinking, this is something I'll have to get comfortable with." But with practice comes success. 
Ultimately the tank can create an optimal environment, but once inside the onus remains on the person as to where they go.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Future of Floatation Therapy

Posted by on in Floatation
 

Thoughts on the Future of Floatation Therapy

Floatation is a wonderful tool that allows a person of any age to feel as though the did when they were a kid. If it were a pill to be swallowed, there'd be commercials plastered and prescriptions filled. Yet, despite it's consistent affect, floatation remains on the fringe of cultural awareness. Floatation has been around nearly 50 years and has been providing much needed relief for countless people for all that time and yet still hasn't crossed that tipping point. So what is different with this latest surge in interest? Has anything changed that will usher in a new age of floatation?

Floatation can be a scary thing to the uninitiated. It is a dark, moist, and often musty environment. There is nothing to do but lay back and witness the unwinding. This is quite a shift from the cultural norm that blasts stimulus at us with ever increasing intensity. A shift from the context of most human experience.
It is very difficult to look back with historical context and project into what life would have been like at other times in human history. I am only alive now and experiencing this moment. With that said, however, I think it is easy to state with confidence that we are, at this point, experiencing demands on our attention that are far surpassing any other time in history, save the few short periods of cataclysmic events. The demands are immediate such as dealing with automobiles, cell phones, flashing lights, and the countless other stimuli vying for our mind's attention, but also complex and structural such as the movement of culture away from natural environments into fabricated environments.

In this past 50 years the human species, especially in advanced industrialized nations, has undergone an evolutionary revolution. Technology has restructured the food we eat, the environment we live in, even the makeup of our family units and the relations we foster with each other. Needless to say, our bodies' are under tremendous chronic stress while we learn how to integrate this new way of living. For me, this is the change that will lift floatation into the daily activities of even the most ardent resistor.

From the most generic point of view, one can see stress as simply more incoming stimulus than available resources to process. A little stress is necessary for any system to remain healthy, but too much stress deteriorates and eventually breaks a system. R.E.S.T. Floatation is a very unique technique that provides the mind/body system an environment unlike any other environment in which they estimate up to 90% of the incoming stimulus is removed. This, almost total release of stimulus, has a very amazing effect on the body. It allows the body to direct the now freed resources to integrate at accelerated rates. It is this very integration that allows for the plethora of benefits that is commonplace with floatation. An integrated person thinks clearer, moves faster and with greater efficiency, and is overall, happier.
 
So what is different now? Honestly, we have no more room to wiggle. Our current lifestyles are unsustainable without some technique that allow for more rapid integration. The chronic stress that most of us face today will eventually break us unless we have a way to metabolize it more rapidly and floatation does just that. Our world is now ready for floatation and with its acceptance in our culture, will we see a new phase of humanity emerging just as it did with agriculture, television, and the computer 

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Floatation Spas - a Niche Business

Floating, float spas and floatation therapy is currently a niche market, but a growing market in the US, offering numerous benefits for a lucrative business opportunity.  Being the first to offer floating in your city or area will give you an edge over your competitors.


A floatation or float tank spa is pivoted to be a perfect match for the health minded, the alternative health conscious and the tourist environment of any city or town around the globe. Floatation therapy and the use of float tanks is expected to see ongoing growth for those looking for new ways to ease their emotional burdens; however, it is likely that the largest growth will come from those with diagnosed chronic stress related illnesses as well as from physical stresses to the body brought on by years of regular bodily wear and tear, and over-exertion and injuries from sports and exercise. The physical rehabilitation sector is another area of key interest for this type of business. http://www.floating4business.com


A common question among new entrepreneurs interested in starting a floatation center is, “Do I really need a business plan? The answer is, “Yes” especially If you plan to approach a financial institution for a loan, pitch your business idea to investors, apply for a grant, or enlist the support of a business partner.


What many people do not realize is that business plans can often take a long time to write; they require a lot of custom research (demographics, local businesses, marketing, type of floatation tank, manufacturers, health regulations, and so forth), depend somewhat on projections, and need to be centered on a realistic vision. Business plans can be one of the most effective tools for the small business owner who is starting, growing and even managing a business.

If you need a business plan for a float center, contact.