The Transformative Power of Cold Water Immersion: A Path to Resilience and Longevity

Dr. Mark Harper trained his nervous system in cold water the same way surgery shaped his career — by repeated, deliberate exposure. The science behind cold adaptation, and what it means for resilience, inflammation, and mental health.

Dr. Mark Harper — anaesthesiologist, open-water swimmer, and author of Chill — on how deliberate cold exposure trains the body's stress response and why the benefits reach far beyond a morning buzz.

A Doctor's Path to Cold Water

Dr. Mark Harper built his medical career around a sobering observation: patients who grew cold during surgery suffered more complications. As an anaesthesiologist, he understood that the body's stress response — protective by design — can be pushed past its useful range by the thermal shock of an operation, tipping from resilience into harm. His doctoral research focused on preventing perioperative hypothermia, on keeping the body warm enough that its own defenses stayed calibrated and beneficial.

Cold water arrived in his life by accident. One summer, his local pool closed for the season, and a friend suggested the sea swimming section of their Brighton club — a group that swam year-round, regardless of weather. Harper joined for the two weeks until the pool reopened.

His first swim was around 20 degrees Celsius, mild by any serious cold-water standard. He walked up the beach and noticed something immediate: a quiet, visceral sense of wellbeing that was difficult to explain and impossible to dismiss. That sensation would become the compass point for everything that followed.

The professional connection formed almost immediately. Cold water immersion generates the same category of physiological stress as major surgery — the same activation of the sympathetic nervous system, the same hormonal cascade that produces alertness and redirects blood flow to core organs. Surgery imposes that stress without consent; cold water delivers it deliberately, at a chosen dose, on a schedule you control. The swimmer arrives at the same physiological territory as the surgical patient, and then chooses to return.

In the work of Professor Mike Tipton, Harper found the evidence that tied everything together. Tipton's cold-adaptation research demonstrated that regular swimmers develop an attenuated stress response — their nervous systems, having met the cold many times, no longer overreact to it. Adrenaline and noradrenaline still surge on immersion, producing that characteristic sense of clarity and presence, but the response stays bounded, inside what Harper calls the good physiological zone.

This is the same logic as progressive exercise. Expose a muscle to controlled load and it rebuilds stronger; expose the nervous system to controlled cold and it adapts, becoming less reactive and more resilient. You are not simply swimming. You are training your cold tolerance exactly as you would train any other capacity — with patient repetition, accumulated stimulus, and time.

For Harper, the two threads of his working life finally converged into a single insight. The stress response that causes harm when unchecked in the operating theatre can, when encountered deliberately and repeatedly in cold water, be trained toward equilibrium. Cold adaptation does not eliminate the response; it refines it, keeping it available and protective, preventing it from running unchecked. That movement toward balance is, at its core, what recovery means.

View transcript

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Hey everybody, what's up? It's Chase. Welcome to  another episode of the The Chase Jarvis Live Show   here on CreativeLive, you know that show where  I sit down with amazing humans, I unpack their   brain with the goal of helping you live your  dreams. Today's guest is Dr. Mark Harper. Now,   Dr. Harper, like many people that have been on  this show and you've heard out there in popular   culture are advocates for cold water immersion. Now, before you skip onto the next video, say,   I don't want anything to do with cold water, if  you knew that cold water could alleviate not just   chronic pain and arthritis, but anxiety,  depression, PTSD, migraines, and more,   would you stick around? Not the least of which,  the top performers in the world, most of them have   some experience with cold water immersion. Dr. Mark Harper does a fantastic job of   introducing you, if it's new to you, this  concept, and if you're a practitioner already,   will add some context to why it's actually  helpful and share some amazing stories. So   I'm going to get out of the way. Yours truly,  Dr. Mark Harper, all about cold water.

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Dr. Mark Harper, thank you  very much for being on the   show today. Really appreciate you joining us. That's a real pleasure. I look forward to it. Well, the reason that you're on the  show is because as this audience knows,   I am very obsessed with the benefits of  cold water. I first became a accustomed to   it probably a decade ago with some polar plunges  on New Year's Day with friends and it has become   a big part of my life. And we are excited to  have you on the show of, for lots of reasons,   not the least of which is your new book  called, Chill: The Cold Water Swim Cure,   but more importantly, the idea of cold  water as medically, scientifically  

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proven to be beneficial to our health. So without further ado, and if you would,   please tell us a little bit about your  backstory aside from just the cold water bit,   just orient us and the audience here listening  today around who you are, where you spend your   time and energy, what you care about, and  then we'll get into some of the specifics. Yeah, well, I guess I came to cold water swimming  through two routes really. The first was skiing,   in fact, and that was because I decided as part  of my medical career, part of my medical training,   instead of going straight through the whole  process, I decided to take six months off, go   and work in a French ski resort. Nothing medical,  just as a holiday rep, do loads of skiing. And just before I left, the director of  the training program rang me and said,   "We're advertising for the next level  of jobs, I think you should apply." I  

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said, "Ernie, I'm really flattered, but I'm going  to take six months off and go skiing." He said,   "It's not going to advance your career very  much." Ironically, nothing's had a greater   effect on my whole career than taking those  six months off. He's a really nice guy- There's another lesson in there that I definitely  want to talk about, but sorry for interrupting. I   think this is fascinating. So you said I'm out  of here, I'm going to France to ski obviously   in cold weather, and sorry, keep going. Yeah. So anyway. So he's a really nice guy.   He did it in a nicest possible way. And the  night before we went, it was the days when   drug companies sponsored you for an evening out.  And he came up to me, we both had our fair share   and he came up to me at the end of the evening and  said, "I think you should organize an anesthetic   meeting in a ski resort." So I said, "Okay." I don't think he really thought I would,  

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but the next year we started running an annual  conference in the ski resort and it's still   running. Given two years of COVID, it hasn't,  but it's still going 20 odd years later. But the reason why that had the effect  was the first year I thought I had to   give a talk and I thought, well, what do  I talk about? And I thought, hypothermia,   that seems like a reasonable thing to think  about. It's appropriate and altitude and   things like that. And so I just gave a talk. I picked up some of the literature on hypothermia,   because this is it, when you have an operation,  you tend to get cold. Your body thermo regulation   closes down and becoming hypothermic is always  bad for you. If you go in the water and become   hyperthermic, and this I think is a really  important point, that's actually bad for you.   Exposing yourself to the cold is good, but we'll  come onto that. Anyway, after that, I started   doing research into it eventually and that's where  my PhD comes from is stopping people getting cold  

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during their operation because that reduces  the number of complications they suffer. But as part of this, as I was  doing my research into this,   I kept coming across articles from someone I'm  sure you've heard of, Professor Mike Tipton from   Portsmouth. He's done all the cold adaptation  Stuff. He's a great guy, a great researcher.   And it was all about cold adaptation. So I'll come back to that because in the   meantime I've always swum. I've always been a  pool swimmer, trained competitively. I still   still swim in the pool with the club 3,  4,000 meters, two or three times a week,   but one summer, as usual, the pool shut down. I  was complaining to a really old friend of mine,   there's no swimming in the  pool and it's a bit boring. He said, "Go and swim in the sea. The club's got a  sea swimming section." I didn't even realize they  

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did have. I said, "Well, when do they swim?"  "Seven o'clock." "Well yeah, when, but what   days?" "Well, all year." So I was as shocked  as everyone else at this point. And anyway,   I intended to just swim for those two weeks in  Brighton, a bit in the ocean and then nearly   20 years later, here I am still doing it. But then as part of that, that first swim I had,   the day after I'd chatted to Jasper, I remember  I had my swim, I walked up the beach, I thought,   this feels good. And it wasn't cold, I mean,  it was probably 20 degrees centigrade. What's   that? 68 fahrenheit? So not really cold. And so I start and then, to come back to the   perioperative hypothermia thing, I came back  and said, well, what I'm reading about here is  

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that getting into cold water is a stress and that  stress is having the same effect on the body as   operations have, because although you get  an anesthetic and hopefully I give you an   anesthetic so you don't feel anything and  you don't have any pain during the operation,   your body still reacts as if it's a massive  stress, a really big stress on the body. And what I also found from Mike's work  was that, if you got used to swimming in   cold water, it actually reduced this stress  response. Now we need this stress response,   but we don't want too much of it. We want  to keep it in the good physiological zone,   not the bad pathological zone and that's what  happens when you're having an operation. And so I thought, well, if you reduce that by  cold water swimming, perhaps you can reduce the  

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stress of surgery by cold water swimming and  thereby reduce the number of complications.   So, sadly, I haven't actually done the  study, but I wrote a paper and published   a paper outlining my theory and that's where  it came together. That's the backstory. Well, it seems to me, I'm just going to  summarize, you're a doctor interested in   the effects and preventing the negative effects  of the body losing temperature, losing temperature   regulation during surgery, it gets very cold,  there's harmful stuff. And yet when you personally   swam and you realized this is a stressor, it's a  low weight stressor, but that low weight stressor,   not dissimilar maybe to doing bicep curls  every day, can over time make you stronger   and more resilient. Is that a fair summary? Completely. It's exactly the same as doing   exercise. You're exercising your  cold tolerance. Yeah, whatever.

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Okay. What I find fascinating is now all  of the downstream benefits that is becoming   known based on your research, the research  of your colleague in Portsmouth, other folks   like Wim Hof who've also been on the show and  have popularized this extreme cold water. Let's go now to your own experience. Let's  go back to swimming in the sea. You got out,   it's mild by cold water concepts maybe.  What did you say? It's about 68 degrees   fahrenheit or something, 70, but that's still  very cold relative to a body that's 98.6. So you get out, you feel a buzz. You say, "Gosh,  there's something to this." Take us then from,   hey, maybe there's something to this, to your own  experience and what does the research start to say   about this cold exposure over time, sustained  low level stress. How does it help us?

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Well, I think the the next stage in the  process of the development of my thought was,   well, it came a few years later when I was sitting  in the pub actually. Again, this is another thing,   you go skiing, something comes out of it. You go  sit in the pub, read the paper and that was it.   I was reading the newspaper, nothing scientific  and I read this article, it said depression is   perhaps an allergic reaction and a lot of  depression was related to inflammation. Now, the main way in which the cold adaptation  works or has these positive effects, certainly I   was thinking about with surgery, was in reducing  the levels of inflammation. Again, like stress,   it's something we need. It's our body's first  line of defense against injury and infection,  

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but we don't want too much of it. And we want  it when it's needed, not the whole time when   we have it. The whole time, it's bad for you. So I thought, well, first of all, we've got cold   water swimming or cold water adaptation  and we know that reduces inflammation.   Then I know how good I feel after I've had a swim  and I'm not even depressed. So maybe we could use   cold water swimming to treat depression. And then that is where Mike comes in again.   So I hadn't met him at this point, but by a  series of events, I ended up meeting him a   couple of months later and I put this theory  to him and he said, "Do you know what? I   think it's a really good theory." And a couple of months after that,   he was contacted by the one of our British TV  doctors, Chris van Tulleken who said, "Look,  

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I'm doing this program called the doctor  who gave up drugs. Is there anything we   can use cold water swimming to treat?" And  he said, "Well, funny you should say that   because I've just met this guy who has a theory  that it could be used to treat depression." And so from that, we did this BBC television  program and we found this rather amazing young   woman, Sarah, 24 years old, been on antidepressant  since she was 16, her father had committed   suicide, brother died of a drug overdose, she  was a single mom, but she really didn't want   to see her daughter grow up seeing her  mom take pills to sort herself out. So we took her to Mike's lab, adapted  her to the cold, took her for a swim the   next day and then Chris followed her up and  within a few months, she was off the pills,   and when I last had contact with her, which  was just before Christmas, several years later,  

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she's still off the pills and still swimming. All right. So I'd like to separate the swimming   part from the cold water exposure because  theoretically exercise is also good for   relieving depression. It releases some chemicals  that we like. There's some endorphins when we   exercise. I want to focus if we can specifically  on cold. I think that story is incredible. I'm going to share just for 30 seconds here, my  personal experience with it. And I'm wondering if   you can connect the dots, what Sarah, someone  who was clinically depressed at the time,   and my experience. And I think there's some fabric  there, but I'm going to ask you to do that work.   And maybe even I still am hanging onto that bit  you said earlier in the broadcast with you got out   of the cold water and you're like, "Wow, I feel  great. I'm not depressed, but I feel great." So again, my early experiences were on New Year's  Day after a night of partying with friends.  

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We have a tradition in my family and with a  bunch of friends to go to some islands off   the coast of Washington, Seattle here, it's very  cold, cold water. It's the middle of the winter.   Everyone's kind of hung over from staying up  late the night before. You get in, you get out,   you're instantly wide awake. There's all kinds  of good chemistry flowing through your body. And I did that a couple of times over the course  of a number of years and then I started doing it,   not on New Year's. And these are times where then  I wasn't hungover, or for example, I hadn't stayed   up all night and I felt the same or better. And  there is this electric feeling, a feeling that's   equivalent to better than caffeine, all natural,  and my body actually felt warm after getting out.   There's this flush feeling after getting out. And I then started experimenting and saying,  

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if this is something that's reproducible,  just in my little beach town here,   started looking into the research, realized that  it was actually a thing and then made it a daily   practice and incorporated cold showers, when I  wasn't there up at the shore, up at the beach. And lo and behold, while the shower couldn't  get quite as cold as the sea up in that part   of the world, which is less than 50 degrees  fahrenheit almost year round, so it's quite cold,   I wouldn't say became addicted, but it  was very clear to me that the chemistry   that my own body was producing as a result  of this, I noticed after some time that I   stopped getting sick. I went multiple years  without catching a cold. I overall felt,   it was at a very difficult work time, there was  a ton of work, working 60, 70, 80 hours a week,   that the pressure and the stressors from  that seemed to moderate or dissipate. Now, this is my personal experience. The early  chapters of your book, one is called my cold  

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water epiphanies, and the second is the felt  experience of cold water. So I'm clearly in this   camp. You just told this beautiful story about  cold water being an antiseptic, if you will, to   Sarah's depression. Tell everybody who's  listening what I was experiencing. What's   the neurochemistry that's going on? Why did I feel  better? And how could perhaps they adopt a similar   practice that would yield similar benefits? Well, it's a big question. I'll do it and I'll   try and stay focused and see what  I can. So at the very basic level,   or the basic physiological level, we'll start  with that. So what you do when you put your body   into cold water, you are exposing yourself  to stress. You're setting off this massive   sympathetic reaction. The fight flight response  is totally engaged as you go into the water.

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Water is very cold, if see what I mean? And I'll  talk a bit about the physics. I mean, the physics   of water is fascinating. It's got a really high  what we call specific heat capacity. So it's got   this ability to just draw cold out of you, and  this is why you get into ... Well, I suppose if   you think of it the other way, if you put your  hand into 100 degree water it's, oh my God,   boiling point, that's dreadful. You put your hand  in an oven, which is at 200 degrees fahrenheit,   it's no bother at all. So it's a big thermal  stress is what you're getting from the water and   that sets off this big sympathetic reaction. And what you get with that is you get things   like ... Do you know what? We're not really  sure. There's a lot of speculation about   what is released and what isn't released,  but I think that the big headline ones for   me are the adrenaline and the noradrenaline  that are set off and that you get big doses  

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of this. And this is essentially, it's what  you get from cocaine. You get a bit dopamine,   bit of all kinds of stuff, but cocaine sets  off your adrenaline and noradrenaline. It's interesting, when we started the swimming  with Chris, the TV swimming, he hadn't done   it before and he joined in and he said to me  after the first time, "God, if this was a drug,   they'd make it illegal." And that sums it up,  doesn't it? And I think that's the big thing   about it, you just get the high. And I think you  touched upon it, it's a natural high as well. Your body has control over this. It's  not going to overdo it. And what it   has is these feedback mechanisms, which mean  that it brings it back to a workable level.   So I think that's the really basic physiology and  why you feel so good. Also, I think there's stuff  

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that we can't really explain. And certainly for  me, you talk about working the long hours and I   totally get where you're coming from with that. So there's a fantastic story, you're probably   aware of it, Jill Bolte Taylor, who is a  neuroscientist, who had a stroke. And she's   done a 25 million plus TED talk about this and a  book called My Stroke of Insight, I think it is.   And what she describes, so she had this stroke  and she woke up one day and said, she realized   she was having a stroke, but she didn't care. She  said, I'm having this and she just didn't care. And this was actually interesting is with the area  she was researching, what it was is the stroke,   she had a big bleed on the left hand side of  her brain. Now the left hand side of your brain  

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is the one that is our sense of self, it's our  worries, it's our fear, it's all that chatter.   And it was pushing on that, so that  side of her brain wasn't working.   The right hand side of her brain still was  and that's our sense of empathy, our sense   of being one with the world and just general  love of stuff. And so that's what she had. And since then, she's gone on to ... Six years  of recovery after that, her motivation was I   want to help people take a step to the right.  And you don't just need to use cold water,   you can use meditation, there are all kinds  of other things, breathing techniques. But certainly what I find is I cycle 10  miles to work and just before I get to work,   there's a lake and I get there, my head's full  of chatter, I'm hot, I'm sweaty, I'm all that.  

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I get into the lake and then I come out minutes  later, it's not a long swim, and I am at one with   the world. I can feel this, this is empathy. It's  like, oh, this feels so good. And apart from the   buzz, that's this taking a step to the right. And recently I was just reflecting on this and I   think what has happened over time is that  has shifted me completely because I find,   I thought ... I was reflecting and thinking,  actually, I've never been a particularly highly   stressed person, but I'm even less stressed these  days and I can put up with whatever and it doesn't   really phase me out. Obviously I have emotions  and I have good days and bad days and all that,   but life is just a bit calmer maybe having  done it for years. I'm speculating, but,  

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I'd be interested to know what you thought,  it just describes for me what happens. Yeah. Well, part of when I got your book, again,  for those who are interested, it's called A   Transformative Guide to Renew Your Body and Mind,  Chill: The Cold Water Swim Cure, and when I first   picked it up, I'm looking and some of the stories  in there are, they mirror ... I haven't had,   knock on wood, serious health concerns prior  to my exposure, but a lot of ... You go through   there are treatments, for example, for chronic  pain. And I think this is worth listening   to now very closely. If you find yourself  suffering from any of these maladies, then   Mark's book is going to help be helpful to you. Chronic pain in any way, migraines, fibromyalgia,  

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which is just overall body pain that is very  difficult to diagnose where it comes from and why,   any autoimmune diseases, trauma, or post  traumatic stress disorder, depression, mental   health challenges. So if any of those things  fall in your camp, your own human experience. I have had some of those. I have had a PTSD  experience. It was, I think too premature and   too long ago rather for me to ascertain whether  or not the cold water helped treat it. But   when I'm looking at this book and I'm reading,  there are phrases that I've got captured here,   these are reports from individuals, I  feel happy, I feel strong, I feel whole,   this helps me feel grounded and strong,  I'm alert, alive and have a sense of   euphoria and achievement [inaudible]- Now you see [inaudible] that one because   what gets me about that one, that's from  Martin who's the guy with fibromyalgia.

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Yeah. Yeah. And what strikes me   every time I read that is you don't get that from  a pill. If you take a pill, you say I've got this   real sense of achievement, I've taken a pill, but  you get it from swimming in the cold water. Yeah. One more, it just feels like heaven,  I'm recovering myself in the sea. So I think   the connection between these maladies and the  reports that people have, that they share after   experiencing cold water, this is why I'm so maybe  freakishly passionate about it. And not dissimilar   to you, the reason I started cold water therapy  was not because I was suffering, it was because I   completely stumbled into it. And yet the benefits,  I can undoubtedly say that my life is better. Now I got a text, a friend of mine I've been  trying to talk into cold water and he said,  

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"Took my first cold water shower today and wow,  I feel incredible." And I love receiving those   messages. There's something that I want  to shift our attention to now real quick,   which is this idea of achievement that  you mentioned from, was it Martin? Yeah, Martin. Yeah. Who was the sufferer of fibromyalgia?   I have recognized that there's not one time  where I am, prior to getting in 48 or 50 degree   water ... And now I have an actual cold plunge  at my house here that is and just operates,   its sole purpose in life is to make me  cold and it sits right next to a hot tub   whose sole purpose is to make me warm, and I  contrast those, which increases the effect. But there's not one time where I'm just about  to get in that icy called water where I say,   oh, I can't wait, this is going to be so good.  I'm usually like, okay, here we go again. And   what I recognize, and this is probably similar to  Martin's feelings of achievement is that it's not  

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a negotiation. I am just doing this because I have  done it enough to know that there are benefits,   it's like going to the gym. And when I get  out, I, 100% of the time feel something,   feel a euphoria, feel a connection, feel that  I've done something and I haven't negotiated. This is where self-confidence comes from. If you  make promises to yourself and you repeatedly keep   those promises, this is an example. So now, I  can't think of not doing it. And what I believe,   and I'd like to hear your comment on this,  this is the punchline to my rambling here is   I have become comfortable being uncomfortable.  And now I find that a vector that's more   easily reconciled in other areas of my life. If I'm going into an uncomfortable conversation   at work or an experience where I know it's going  to be slightly unpleasant, whether that's medical  

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or surgical, or I am better at those moments in  life, which as you indicated earlier, you have an   overall more, pun intended, you're more chill. So sharing my own story and I'm wondering,   is there any mechanism to what I'm asking about  or is it all anecdotal and just experiential,   this connection, these feelings of feeling  like heaven, euphoria and achievement,   of putting yourself in an uncomfortable  situation to get more comfortable overall? Well, again, there's a lot to unpack here. Yeah, that's on purpose, Mark. Well, basic biological mechanisms,  I don't think we can go down there,   but what we can say is there's  lots of stuff. As you said earlier,  

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exercise is good for you. We know  getting out in nature is good for   you. Getting all these things, you've just  got a polypill, a package of benefits. And it's stressful, so post traumatic stress. And  people talk about post traumatic stress and yes,   it's a real thing, but people don't  focus so much on post traumatic growth   and that's kind of what you are getting I  think by going in the sea. That's quite a   good analogy to the effect. Every time you go  in, you come out and you've achieved it. And a lot of these people who've come to our  courses, another repeated thing that comes back   is, in fact Sarah said it, oh, this is probably  the hardest thing I've ever done in my life.   It is, it's a challenge, it is a brutal  challenge. And the fact that when you still go in,   and I'm absolutely the same, I go in, it's a real  challenge to get in when it's middle of winter,  

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the rain's coming down and it's cold, dark.  But I know that when I come out the other side,   I'm going to feel so good and that's what  gets me in. And then every day I have had,   I've achieved that at the beginning and then  I get those great effects coming out. Your book mostly focuses on the sea and swimming,  understandably. I am assuming, I have experienced   this personally, but I am hoping to hear  from you, the doctor that while you don't   get all of the benefits from taking a cold shower,  because A, not everybody lives on the sea and B,   not everybody has 20 minutes to go for a  swim or whatever, but can you confirm that   after taking a normal shower and standing  under the coldest water that you can create  

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in your own house environment for say three  minutes on the back of your neck, your head,   your face, chest, that there is at least  a similar, analogous, maybe slightly less,   but there's a benefit there as well? Yes, I can confirm that. The stress response   that you get is down to two things. It's one,  the absolute temperature of the water and two,   it's the rate of cooling. So the thing about a  shower is it's not quite as cold as the water,   but it is colder than you. So the water's not  quite as cold. It might be as cold depending on   where your shower is coming from, but that's one  thing, but it's still enough to have an effect. And the other is the rate of cooling, because  if you get into a bath of the same temperature,   for example, that will have a more rapid  cooling effect, because you're exposing your   whole body rather than just intermittently.  So it doesn't cool you as rapidly, but yes,  

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it does have an effect. And there's one  interesting study, which showed that   people who took cold showers took less days off  work sick than those colleagues who didn't. Yeah. There's a page, my reference here,  I'm asking you to confirm this is on page   80 of your book, again called Chill, is the  getting started, you cite an experiment or an   experience where you took a group of high school  students to Norway to do ... And the beginning   of their cold water immersion activity, as a  preparation, you invited them to dunk their faces   and hands I think, into ice water. And I think if you were curious about   this as someone who has not done this  before, this is an interesting experiment.   This is not new in pop culture, right? You splash  some cold water on your face, you feel more awake.  

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But doing that same action, splashing cold  water, or putting your face in an ice bath,   or your head in an ice bath that you just make in  the sink with some cubes of ice and cold water,   you can experience it at a small, lightweight  level, and then you can extrapolate in your mind,   okay, what if I did that? What's  the next level up from that? And even these basic activities you cite here  in the study on page 80 of putting your hands   in cold water, putting your face into an ice  bath that those interventions by themselves   kickstarted the participants' parasympathetic  and sympathetic nervous systems. Yeah, that's the theory. It's a bit difficult  to tell. It's not that scientific, but it it   does have an effect. And I think you bring up  another important point here because you've got,  

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when you put your hand in the water, that is  sympathetic, that is the stress response and   that's the response you get all over your body  except for your face. Now you put your face in. So we've talked a lot about the sympathetic  response and how you attenuate that by regular   cold water swimming, but what you also get by  putting your face in, is it stimulates the diving   reflex, and this is a parasympathetic response, so  the rest and digest. So it boosts your levels of   happy, relaxing hormones and reduces  inflammation directly by ... It all goes   through via the vagus nerve into the body. And it's interesting also, you mentioned three   minutes is your thing and that's what I recommend,  the reason being that if you say I'm going to be   in for three minutes chances are it's not going to  be dangerous and it will get you past that initial  

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phase. You first get into the water and it's  that ah, and we're still getting that years into   the practice, but once you've got past that and  you sort of, yeah, now I can concentrate a bit,   and you get past the hyperventilation and  things like this. So that three minutes   works quite well. So you just got to stay in long  enough that you get past that really bad bit. And then I also say put your face  in the water three times. And again,   don't just put it in and take it out, put  it in, wait for the worst to go past, it's   a few seconds and then bring your face out. Yeah. I'm obsessed also with minimum effective   dose, like where do you get the 80-20 results? And  sure, I might get, what would that be, incremental   benefits beyond three minutes, but I get 80% of  the benefit with three minutes that I would with   20 minutes. So that's good enough for me mostly  because I want to do this every day and, or have  

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made it a part of my lifestyle in the shower  and I don't want to take a 20 minute shower. I   want to take a four minute shower, one minute  where I clean myself and then the next three   minutes where I'm standing under cold water. And I think there's another piece of your work   here you talked a little bit about in the Sarah  stuff, you've talked about doing it with your son,   the idea of planning for this. And I'm speaking  now to people who are still with us, and they're   whatever, we're 40 minutes in, 30 something  minutes into our conversation here and like,   okay, I'm still intrigued that  we've tried to provide some ... The first phase is splashing water. Do you feel  any more alive or better? Second is maybe a cold   shower. Clean yourself for a minute and standing  there for as long as you can, breathe through,   the things that you talked about. Third is getting  into either a cold bath or the sea, which is cold.  

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I think the kicker is a commitment  to doing it more than once. Yeah, without a doubt. Yeah. I'm wondering if you can talk about   how people ought to think about, at least when you  decide that you're going to do this, I'm going to   do this every day for a week and see if  I feel the same, worse, or better. Yeah. Would you tell me what you found   in the research and what you recommend? Well, what you can do, so it takes about   six immersions to get yourself to full adaptation.  So remember you've got two things here, you've   got the adaptation, which is a long term effect,  and you've got the parasympathetic stimulation,   sticking your face in the water, which is  every time you go in, you'll get the benefit,   and of course, every time you go in, you'll  come out feeling great. So there we go. But the studies where they're using adaptation,  this is before we've been looking into it for  

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its health benefits, they used about six  immersions to adapt someone to cold water.   You can actually do that over the course of a  day. As long as you warm up in between times.   Typically they did them over a week or six  weeks. I think, as you say, it's really   important to commit to it and I would say on  that basis, six times, commit to six times. You don't need to do it every day for a  week. Once a week, I have found works really   well. And that's why our studies, the studies  where we've been using it as an intervention,   they were eight weeks, but they were every  week. In fact, we had one group which was   twice a week and the rest of the groups were  once a week. We didn't see any difference. And so that commitment is really important because  the first time you go in is going to be really   hard and you might probably come out feeling  good, but it's going to be bad. The second time,   that's the worst. You're kind of, well, I've  done it the first time, you were psyched up,  

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and this time it's just bad. It's just painful. Yeah, it's just awful. And yeah, that's what  I found with my son there. The second time he   did it he was like, "I'm never doing it again."  But the lure of extra screen time on a Sunday   was too much for him, or any screen time on  a Sunday. And then the third time, then you   start getting into it, then you really get it. And so if you commit to six times and you commit   to do it with someone else. Again, the feedback  we had from the studies was that people didn't   want to let other people down and that sense  of community was really important in getting   them to come back every time. And this is another  benefit of the cold. You can do it in the shower,   you can do it in your bath, absolutely, but if  you start becoming part of a community as well,  

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I mean, that's another benefit. We know reducing  social isolation is a massive health benefit. This idea of doing it with a  couple other folks, it is also,   there's an accountability effect, right? You don't  want to let anybody else down and you want to show   up. And even just sharing the stories, whether  this is with a peer or a partner or spouse or   whatever, that's benefit enough, but you cite the  benefits of community. And you also, you are clear   in your work that if you can get into a cold body  of water, that is in nature, that there are added   benefits. You cited some of them earlier, just  the feeling of one and connecting with nature   and there's a little bit more of a natural feel.  Not required, but we're looking for the things to   share for people who want to go the extra mile. Yeah, and it helps. If you've got that prospect,  

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that helps, going out. You see, we know it  has further benefits, but like with anything,   it's like the diet that's good for you is the diet  you can stick to, and the exercise you can do is   the one you can stick to. And if you've got an  exercise where you're out in nature, and you're   doing it with friends, and when you come out, you  can have a real laugh, everyone's laughing and   sharing a hot drink and stuff like that, that  is the exercise you're going to stick with. Great. And I think it's fair to inject in here  now, there is a difference between what we're   talking about and inducing hypothermia, staying  in cold water for 30 minutes swimming. These are   not activities ... I can say that I'm not a  doctor, you can't say that. But what we're   coaching here is, and what your book is about is  this repeated exposure to cold water as a benefit  

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and we want to distinguish this from again, making  yourself hypothermic over a long period of time,   uncontrollable shivering, doing so without others.  Fortunately there's not too many experiences of   people giving themselves that in their own shower  or their own bathtub, and it's much safer, but I   just put that out there. We're not talking about  hardcore hypothermia. That would be way beyond the   minimum effective dose. That would be essentially  an overdose of what we're talking about. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, totally. It's  like you go to the gym, you work out,   you have micro damage to your muscles. That's  how your muscles grow, but if you pull a muscle,   you've damaged it. It's the same, hypothermia is  the body's equivalent of damaging a muscle. It's really interesting, one of the  studies we did, we looked at people having   colds over a winter, and we compared  cold swimmers and their partners and  

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pool swimmers and their partners and there  was a difference between cold swimmers and   their partners. The cold swimmers had less  upper respiratory tract infections. But what was really interesting was that if you  looked at the graph of incidents and severity,   there were a few of the cold swimmers, the cold  swimmers who were in that little bit longer,   I think the time was 15 minutes, I mean, of course  it's totally variable on what the temperature is,   there were two or three of them who actually  were worse. And if you'd taken them out and   just did the ones who were less than 15 minutes,  that effect would have been more pronounced. Of   course there were two or three who were very hardy  souls who could stand more than 15 minutes. But I can't emphasize enough how important  it is not to stay in too long. That dose,   that 80% you get after three minutes you're right.  You probably stay in much more than four or five  

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minutes when it's sub 30, well sub 40 or whatever,  you start doing yourself damage. It's about   dipping. It's not about a lot of exercise.

Transcript auto-generated by YouTube. Verbatim — duplicates intentionally preserved.

The Body's Response

Water is a more intense thermal stressor than air at the same temperature — and the physics explains exactly why. Water's specific heat capacity allows it to draw warmth from the body with a speed and efficiency that air cannot approach. You can stand comfortably in a room at 15 degrees Celsius; step into water at the same temperature and the sympathetic nervous system engages within seconds. Adrenaline sharpens the senses, noradrenaline amplifies focus, and the body arrives at complete, unambiguous presence.

The neurochemical response is substantial and immediate. Immersion triggers a release of adrenaline and noradrenaline at levels that would otherwise require extreme physical effort to produce. These are the hormones of heightened alertness, accelerated circulation, and sharpened perception. The result is what experienced practitioners consistently describe as a natural high — a clean, whole-body sense of aliveness that arrives within minutes and persists well after leaving the water.

What distinguishes this from pharmacological stimulation is the body's own regulatory architecture. The same systems that trigger the hormonal surge also moderate it — feedback mechanisms that bring the response back to a sustainable level once the cold stimulus passes. The high is real and measurable, but it is bounded by the body's intelligence. You cannot override those limits the way a synthetic stimulant can, because the body is always self-correcting toward equilibrium.

The neuroscientist Jill Bolte Taylor described her left-hemisphere stroke with remarkable clarity: with the hemisphere responsible for self-criticism, rumination, and relentless internal chatter temporarily silenced, she found herself inhabiting an expansive state of calm, empathy, and connection. Cold water produces something meaningfully analogous. Immersion quiets the left brain's noise and amplifies the right brain's sense of stillness and presence — not through damage, but through the focused, singular intensity of the cold itself.

Most open-water swimmers recognise the transition without needing neuroscience to explain it. You enter the water carrying the accumulated weight of the morning — the unread messages, the unresolved decisions, the ambient pressure of a full schedule. Minutes later, you emerge and that weight has receded. What remains is something closer to clarity: the body, the breath, the cold, and a quality of attention that is difficult to manufacture any other way.

Long-term practitioners report something more durable than the post-swim buzz. After months and years of regular immersion, they describe a baseline shift — less reactivity to daily stressors, greater equanimity under pressure, a settled quality that persists through the days between sessions. The cold trains more than cold tolerance. It trains the capacity for calm, and that capacity does not remain at the water's edge.

This is the adaptation Harper describes in his own daily practice. He cycles to work, arrives hot and preoccupied, stops at the lake near his office, and swims briefly. He emerges minutes later — less cluttered, more available, the morning's noise stilled. That shift, accumulated across years of regular immersion, is not dramatic. It is the nervous system, trained to return to stillness.

I get into the lake and then I come out minutes later, it's not a long swim, and I am at one with the world.

Cold Water and Healing

The insight that expanded Harper's work from adaptation to healing arrived in a newspaper. An article described depression as functioning, in part, as an allergic reaction — not a purely psychological phenomenon, but one driven by chronic systemic inflammation. Harper recognized the connection immediately: cold adaptation measurably reduces inflammation. Depression, reframed this way, is also a crisis of the body. Address the inflammation and you begin to address the root.

That chain of reasoning led to a BBC television programme and a 24-year-old woman named Sarah. She had been on antidepressants since she was 16. She had lost her father to suicide and her brother to addiction. She was raising a daughter alone, and she did not want that daughter to grow up watching her mother manage herself with medication.

Working with Professor Tipton's team, Sarah was adapted to cold water over a structured protocol, then taken for a sea swim. Within months, she had tapered off her medication entirely. Years later — still swimming, still well, still off antidepressants — her case stood as one of the clearest demonstrations that cold adaptation could reach into territory where pharmacology alone had not resolved the underlying condition.

The conditions where cold immersion has shown meaningful effect share a common signature: chronic inflammation and a dysregulated stress response. Fibromyalgia, persistent pain, migraines, PTSD, autoimmune disorders — each involves the body's defenses running at the wrong level, in the wrong direction, for too long. Cold adaptation recalibrates both inflammation and the stress response simultaneously. The specificity of those benefits is not coincidental; it reflects the mechanism precisely.

There is another dimension to the therapeutic effect that pharmacology cannot replicate. Martin, a man living with fibromyalgia, described his experience after cold immersion: he felt happy, strong, whole — and he reported a sense of achievement. You do not get that from a pill. No medication produces the particular quality of a genuine challenge met, the triumph that is intrinsic to the act itself. That quality of experience is therapeutically meaningful in ways that reach beyond neurochemistry.

The frame of post-traumatic growth clarifies what is happening. Trauma changes the relationship people have with difficulty — in the direction of avoidance, hypervigilance, and reduced capacity. Deliberate challenge — the kind you choose, enter fully, and survive — produces the same depth of change, in the opposite direction. Each cold immersion is a genuine difficulty, willingly met. The accumulation of those small conquests reshapes how you carry difficulty in every other area of your life.

This is what separates cold practice from passive intervention. You are not receiving treatment; you are doing something genuinely hard. The cold is demanding and real, and you go in anyway. That gap — between the discomfort of entry and the equanimity of exit — is not merely pleasant. It is evidence of your own resilience, demonstrated to yourself, repeated and compounded.

Every time you go in, you come out and you've achieved it.

Building the Ritual

Cold water immersion has an entry ladder, and any step on it is a valid protocol. Begin with what is accessible: submerge your face and hands in ice water — a bowl from the kitchen tap, a few cubes of ice. This is not a diminished version of the practice; it is the beginning of it. The nervous system does not require a sea or a plunge pool to register cold as a genuine stressor.

The next step is a cold shower. Three minutes, with the water as cold as your tap will run, directed at the face, the back of the neck, and the chest. This engages the full sympathetic response — the adrenaline surge that produces alertness and focus — and triggers the diving reflex when the face enters the stream. From there, when you are ready: a cold bath, a plunge, or open water.

The face matters specifically because of what it triggers. Submerging the face in cold water activates the diving reflex — a direct parasympathetic response mediated through the vagus nerve. Where the rest of the body's immersion produces sympathetic activation, raising heart rate and sharpening alertness, the face submerged activates a vagal response that reduces inflammation and anchors a state of calm. Harper recommends submerging the face three times per session, holding each time past the first impulse to surface.

Six immersions are sufficient to reach full cold adaptation. You can accumulate them over a week or over six weeks; the body does not require a strict schedule. What the research consistently shows is that once a week produces the same adaptive benefit as twice. Consistency is the variable that matters, not frequency. The practice you can sustain is more valuable than the practice you cannot.

The second session deserves particular attention. The first immersion carries the novelty of the unknown — the nervous system encounters something genuinely new, mobilizes additional resources, and discovery energizes the entire experience. By the second session, the novelty is gone and the discomfort is not. This is the session most practitioners name as the hardest. Committing past it is where adaptation begins.

Community transforms the practice in ways that go beyond accountability. In Harper's group studies, participants consistently reported returning each week to avoid letting fellow swimmers down. That social bond proved clinically relevant: social connection is itself a measurable health benefit, and the cold-water cohort received both simultaneously. You are not simply building cold tolerance when you practice with others. You are building the kind of connection that, across decades of research, proves as protective for longevity as almost anything else.

I know that when I come out the other side, I'm going to feel so good and that's what gets me in.

Begin where you are. A three-minute cold shower — water as cold as the tap will run — is a complete and sufficient starting point. Commit to six sessions and observe what shifts: the quality of the first hour that follows, the baseline of your daily reactivity, the sense of having done something genuinely difficult. The ritual is simple. What accumulates, over time, is not.