Wednesday 18 August 2021

Hot tub float machine

This is the story of how I managed not to follow the instructions ‘just lie there’, got sea-sick without leaving land, and yet still managed to get somewhere else.

____

Over the years I’ve had a few friends tell me about their experience of ‘floating’ in tank. I was intrigued, and there’s a lot of very interesting research surrounding it, including some interesting reported benefits for mental health.

My wife had bought me a session for my birthday a couple of years ago, but owing to various lock downs, I was only finally able to give it a go at the start of 2021. With a baby on the way, our lives were about to change and it seemed like a perfect time, as spending an hour floating in a tub might be a bit unrealistic for the first few months of having a new-born.

My first surprise was the detailed information given me in advance to read. This wasn’t like a massage – a kinda ‘just lie there and enjoy it’ experience. This was something you had to come to, prepared in many senses of the word. For example, being told “don’t eat a heavy meal beforehand”. They also said it might ‘take a few floats’ before you really started to notice the difference in yourself. My first thought was ‘what a money-making scam’, as each session costs roughly what you’d pay for a massage. I was wrong. I also got a few other things wrong on my first float.

Before

Beforehand, we’d met a friend for lunch and I’d sat down to a lovely big meal, had a thick chocolate milkshake and also helped finish our friend's chips, because no one likes food to go to waste.

When it was time to walk to the float centre, I was quite full, and was running slightly late, so I adopted a brisk walking pace, using my phone to navigate there. On the way, I met a blind person who needed some assistance navigating a complex pedestrian crossing. For those unfamiliar with Australian pedestrian crossings, at a meeting some time ago, it was agreed that giving a green light to both pedestrians AND traffic turning left at the same time could have absolutely no issues whatsoever. It is with some alarm as both a driver and a pedestrian when you learn this the hard way for the first time. So after helping the person cross, I found myself on the wrong side of a complex intersection and managed to get myself thoroughly lost, and running even later.

I broke into a jog and managed to arrive at the floatation place out of breath, sweating and with mild indigestion from my big lunch, and a little stressed.

They calmed me down, gave me some water and I sat next to a worldly early-20 something guy who exchanged a smile with me and asked ‘was it my first float?’. He informed me that he floats at least once a week, and finds it essential to his wellbeing. Suddenly the ‘you might need a few floats’ claim was starting to sink in.

I was taken into the float room (see photo) and shown a $30,000 machine that looked like a futuristic cross between spaceship and a cryogenic time machine. I was given a quick safety brief where they explained the light controls, and showed me where there was a water spray and small flannel, should you get the water in your eyes. If that didn’t work, he showed me the panic button. I thought he was joking, but no, there is a panic button, which I suppose makes sense as you voluntarily entomb yourself in a pitch black water filled plastic coffin. I quietly thought to myself ‘You’d have to be in a bit of a pickle to consider even using that!’.



What you might not know about floatation tanks is that the buoyancy is achieved by loading the water to almost maximum saturation of magnesium salt. Think the Dead Sea times ten. The water literally can’t get much saltier.

Float

So I settled into my float, with some music piped in and the lights fading down after 10 minutes or so. It was very pleasant – but – as the whole point of these things is to help bring you into awareness of your body, all I could notice was my stomach moving in quite an agitated way reminding me it was very very full. Now I understood the ‘don’t eat’ instruction. Normally such digestion wouldn’t draw much attention, but in a body temperature pool of water where you can’t feel the end of your body and the start of the water, and you are effectively experiencing zero gravity, your breathing (and digestion!) suddenly come into sharp focus.

Sadly, the digestion process was only just getting started and I started to feel quite warm and airless. It’s usually considered indelicate to discuss flatulence, but it must be said here that while I didn’t know much about the ventilation systems in these machines, I could instinctively tell it wasn’t keeping pace with the rate that heinous gasses were being expelled by my gut bacteria, and subsequently, me.

I popped open to lid to let in some fresh air and in doing so accidentally dripped some of the water into my eye. Remember how I said it was salty? Stinging doesn’t start to describe it. I reached for the spray and flannel and in doing so, made some small waves in the tub. After I was all cleaned up I lay back down to try and relax again, yet the small waves I’d created were still bouncing around in the dark, and with zero visual references, I somehow managed to make myself seasick. With a frankly huge lunch barely down my oesphogus, and me not having a great track record of not being sick, I thought it prudent to not vomit in the floatation tank, as this might somewhat kill the vibe for me, and everyone else planning on using it ever again.

So I got out, sat on the edge, took some deep breaths and felt better. I recovered and felt ready to get back in, closed the lid – and instantly felt seasick again. I had to call it, I was done.

After

Somehow, I managed to make the quite simple activity of ‘get in a tub and lie there’ into an ordeal of my own making. But on the plus side, I didn’t hit the panic button, or make the tub into a multi-coloured stink pond.

All that said, the parts of the experience where my eyes weren’t suffering mild chemical burns and my inner ear wasn’t simulating a bad landing in a Soyuz spacecraft, I really did enjoy it all very much and can’t wait to do it again. You truly do lose all sense of your body, and I can completely see how, with some breath control and some basic meditation skills, it could be a profound and rewarding experience for the non-claustrophobic.

That said, we now have a lovely little three-month old daughter and Melbourne is settling into a seemingly never-ending lock down while the Federal Government of Australia quietly oversees a shambles of a COVID vaccine roll out. So I have to wait for my second float, and for now, feel grateful for my monthly bath, which doesn’t even need a panic button.