Dry Sauna

Tags

sauna

skin

dry skin

detox

steam bath

hot baths

[2006]

[Aajonus]

It burns your skin, so if you're gonna do a sauna, it means getting out every three minutes to rinse off, to make sure it doesn't burn into the skin.

[Attendee]

Rinse and wipe with the cloth or something?

[Aajonus]

Or just get in there and rinse with a cloth while you're under the shower, but then you're not be cooling your body every three minutes.

[Attendee #2]

Well, these saunas don't have a shower in them, just a room was a lot of dry heat.

[Aajonus]

That's what I mean. Some are still 168° at the end.

[Attendee #2]

Yeah. And she's been there for I think 20, 30 minutes or something.

That's not helping her to detox anything.

[Aajonus]

Yeah, it is, but it's damaging her skin. She keeps destroying skin cells, she's gonna have very old skin. She may be cleaner inside, but she's not gonna be cleaner on the surface. Especially women, vanity.

[Attendee #2]

So, overall, she's not much better by doing?

[Aajonus]

Oh yeah, she's better internally, the lymph glands, everything will be better, but her skin won't.

[Attendee]

What will it look like?

[Aajonus]

Well, it will age and be dead, it will turn into elephants skin.

[Attendee #2]

Wet sauna at the end?

[Aajonus]

No. Cause then you've got the high steam burning the sinuses and that'll damage mucus production and the lungs too.

[Attendee #2]

She's better off in the bathtub?

[Aajonus]

Bathtub or a jacuzzi.

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