Why Sensory Deprivation is Necessary When Mercury is Retrograde
/Sensory deprivation, known as floating, float therapy, or restricted environmental stimulus therapy (“REST”) is the perfect antidote when Mercury is in retrograde.
Read MoreFloating is a great modern day lifestyle hack. Great for body and mind, helps with so many conditions and intentions, works well in tandem with other therapies.
The Float Blog highlights many of the reasons why people float especially to address medical conditions, chronic pain, or other physical conditions. This comes usually after other interventions and therapies have been used or did not provide long-term improvement or success.
Sensory deprivation, known as floating, float therapy, or restricted environmental stimulus therapy (“REST”) is the perfect antidote when Mercury is in retrograde.
Read MoreUsing float therapy, floatation or floating, along with tapping on specific acupressure points, can relieve symptoms of jetlag, time zone changes, daylight savings, and disruptions in circadian rhythm.
Read MoreFloat therapy mitigates the pain, inflammation and lack of mobility associated with arthritis. From anti-inflammatory action, to stress reduction, to improvements in sleep, immunity and mood, floatation is safe, effective and accessible.
Read MoreFloatation therapy is proving to be a viable alternative and adjunct to managing chronic pain. Opioid managed chronic pain may respond well to floatation therapy. A new case study on chronic pain, opiate usage and floatation provides a window into the benefits of this mind and body therapy.
Read MorePain. It can be consuming, frustrating, debilitating, distracting, yet always subjective to the individual experiencing it. Chronic pain is of epidemic proportions and is a major cause of disability. Until recently, pain was treated like a fifth vital sign. Blood pressure, pulse, respiration, temperature, and…pain?
Floatation therapy is emerging as a valid, effective and adjunctive means for managing chronic pain.
Read MoreFloatation therapy helps Multiple Sclerosis. Here are 5 ways how floating helps MS.
Read MoreThis traumatic brain injury and floatation therapy study features an individual who has not found any treatment or combinations of treatment that have been remarkably helpful. The case study examines the effect of floatation therapy upon various physical, emotional, neurological and psychological aspects. The results of this case study contains encouraging examples that floating both by itself or in combination with other therapies and lifestyle modifications, can improve the quality of life and functional capability for those with TBI and concussions.
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