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#1 |
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Over my many years of swimming, every pool has been next to a sauna room and
a steam room. I have noticed countless really fat people going into the steam room. One guy in particular (that is between 350-450 pounds) does nothing at the gym BUT the steam room. A few years ago, I tried it myself. I couldn't find anything redeeming in it and only managed to stay about 5 minutes. So, in nearly 10 years, this particular guy hasn't lost a pound and yet he faithfully sits in the steam room every time I go to swim. Another guy of about 400 pounds went in on Tuesday and sat for 5 minutes and came out. He "rested" and then went back for another 5 minutes. He did this about 6 times. I was swimming laps at the time. Once, a guy told me that the steam room "melted away the fat" and he believed it! I wanted to "invite" him to come in the pool and at least walk up and down, but when I stopped to say it, he ducked inside the steam room to "melt" more fat.... Pat in TX |
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#2 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5phar4Fr012dU1@mid.individual.net... > Over my many years of swimming, every pool has been next to a sauna > room and a steam room. I have noticed countless really fat people > going into the steam room. One guy in particular (that is between > 350-450 pounds) does nothing at the gym BUT the steam room. A few > years ago, I tried it myself. I couldn't find anything redeeming in it > and only managed to stay about 5 minutes. > > So, in nearly 10 years, this particular guy hasn't lost a pound and > yet he faithfully sits in the steam room every time I go to swim. > Another guy of about 400 pounds went in on Tuesday and sat for 5 > minutes and came out. He "rested" and then went back for another 5 > minutes. He did this about 6 times. I was swimming laps at the time. > > Once, a guy told me that the steam room "melted away the fat" and he > believed it! I wanted to "invite" him to come in the pool and at least > walk up and down, but when I stopped to say it, he ducked inside the > steam room to "melt" more fat.... > > Pat in TX There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. -S- |
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#3 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5phar4Fr012dU1@mid.individual.net... > Over my many years of swimming, every pool has been next to a sauna > room and a steam room. I have noticed countless really fat people > going into the steam room. One guy in particular (that is between > 350-450 pounds) does nothing at the gym BUT the steam room. A few > years ago, I tried it myself. I couldn't find anything redeeming in it > and only managed to stay about 5 minutes. > > So, in nearly 10 years, this particular guy hasn't lost a pound and > yet he faithfully sits in the steam room every time I go to swim. > Another guy of about 400 pounds went in on Tuesday and sat for 5 > minutes and came out. He "rested" and then went back for another 5 > minutes. He did this about 6 times. I was swimming laps at the time. > > Once, a guy told me that the steam room "melted away the fat" and he > believed it! I wanted to "invite" him to come in the pool and at least > walk up and down, but when I stopped to say it, he ducked inside the > steam room to "melt" more fat.... > > Pat in TX There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. -S- |
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#4 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5phar4Fr012dU1@mid.individual.net... > Over my many years of swimming, every pool has been next to a sauna > room and a steam room. I have noticed countless really fat people > going into the steam room. One guy in particular (that is between > 350-450 pounds) does nothing at the gym BUT the steam room. A few > years ago, I tried it myself. I couldn't find anything redeeming in it > and only managed to stay about 5 minutes. > > So, in nearly 10 years, this particular guy hasn't lost a pound and > yet he faithfully sits in the steam room every time I go to swim. > Another guy of about 400 pounds went in on Tuesday and sat for 5 > minutes and came out. He "rested" and then went back for another 5 > minutes. He did this about 6 times. I was swimming laps at the time. > > Once, a guy told me that the steam room "melted away the fat" and he > believed it! I wanted to "invite" him to come in the pool and at least > walk up and down, but when I stopped to say it, he ducked inside the > steam room to "melt" more fat.... > > Pat in TX There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. -S- |
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#5 |
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> > There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time > in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the > body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to > support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. > > -S- Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough oxygen in the steam room. Pat in TX > |
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#6 |
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> > There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time > in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the > body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to > support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. > > -S- Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough oxygen in the steam room. Pat in TX > |
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#7 |
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> > There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending time > in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning of the > body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is science to > support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does feel cleansing. > > -S- Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough oxygen in the steam room. Pat in TX > |
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#8 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5pn2o3Fs5r7bU1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending >> time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning >> of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is >> science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does >> feel cleansing. >> >> -S- > Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to > breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough > oxygen in the steam room. There are apparently benefits to both. I know we have them both at my Y, and people who use them (not me) seem to like to use them both, often one after the other. -S- > > Pat in TX >> > > |
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#9 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5pn2o3Fs5r7bU1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending >> time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning >> of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is >> science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does >> feel cleansing. >> >> -S- > Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to > breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough > oxygen in the steam room. There are apparently benefits to both. I know we have them both at my Y, and people who use them (not me) seem to like to use them both, often one after the other. -S- > > Pat in TX >> > > |
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#10 |
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"Pat" <Orion@starrynight.com> wrote in message
news:5pn2o3Fs5r7bU1@mid.individual.net... > >> >> There are, according to many, health benefits to be had from spending >> time in the steam room, but not weight loss, just a sort of cleaning >> of the body by sweating things out. I have no idea if there is >> science to support this but it seems right to me - a good sweat does >> feel cleansing. >> >> -S- > Couldn't the sweating be done in the sauna? Why is it important to > breathe super saturated wet air? I felt as if I wasn't getting enough > oxygen in the steam room. There are apparently benefits to both. I know we have them both at my Y, and people who use them (not me) seem to like to use them both, often one after the other. -S- > > Pat in TX >> > > |
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#11 |
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On Nov 8, 9:43 pm, "Pat" <Or...@starrynight.com> wrote:
> Over my many years of swimming, every pool has been next to a sauna room and > a steam room. I have noticed countless really fat people going into the > steam room. One guy in particular (that is between 350-450 pounds) does > nothing at the gym BUT the steam room. A few years ago, I tried it myself. > I couldn't find anything redeeming in it and only managed to stay about 5 > minutes. > > So, in nearly 10 years, this particular guy hasn't lost a pound and yet he > faithfully sits in the steam room every time I go to swim. Another guy of > about 400 pounds went in on Tuesday and sat for 5 minutes and came out. He > "rested" and then went back for another 5 minutes. He did this about 6 > times. I was swimming laps at the time. > > Once, a guy told me that the steam room "melted away the fat" and he > believed it! I wanted to "invite" him to come in the pool and at least walk > up and down, but when I stopped to say it, he ducked inside the steam room > to "melt" more fat.... > > Pat in TX A very expensive club I used go to had a lovely 25m ozone treated pool, which they claimed was kept at a constant 28 C. Sadly, the (air) temperature was quite a bit on the chilly side. Whilst doing, say, the crawl, each time a body part emerged from under the protective water temeratures , the chill in the air was quite annoying. Luckily, there was a steam room, sauna and two jacuzzies to escape to on those days when the draughtiness took the wind out of the will to swim. Or at least, helped to build up an imagined increased internal temperature to inspire enough courage to get on and enjoy a dip in the pool. However, at one point, the steam room wasn't what you might call working right. I'd pop in and notice no great heat had hit me, but assumed that maybe, having just come out of a long swim, I was too cold to notice it quickly. So I'd sit and wait and wait and wait and wonder why the steam room was so full. Then someone would do something to the thermostat and the steam would start going and then the complaints would start. "Too hot", they'd whine, whilst fumbling with their broadsheet newspapers in a manner to highlight their protest. When one can reads a newspaper in a steam room... it aint't really working. The sauna was often just as good. Only when it was working properly was it possible to find a place to sit. Overall, the main benetits to these facilities were, I'd suspect, social in nature. People would chatter there more comfortably then they were able to manage in the pool. That was London prior to the restrictions extention on the smoking in public spaces, so for many people it was a social valve. Your fat guy might like it because there's no food involved. But if he can stay in there throughout your entire workout, either the steam room is not up to steam, or there's something wrong with him. |