Bill Starr Saunas / Stress Recovery / Adaptation
One of the many brilliances of Starting Strength is its focus on basics and irreducible, indisputable phenomenologies. It amazes me that so many column inches and cyberspace in the strength and fitness industry is devoted to tertiary micro-details.
I’d love to hear you talk even more about recovery in terms of what works, what doesn’t, what myths / silly bullshit currently pervade and why they are thus etc. I came across this in a Marty Gallagher article in 2019:
“I read a Bill Starr column where he explained the sauna strategy: open the pores with dry heat and scalding steam, squeeze the toxins out of the pores with an ice-cold shower that snaps the pores shut. Repeat three times. I always felt this procedure helped tremendously.”
I really enjoy Marty’s writings, they have a real feelgood factor about them as well as a solid grounding in time-honoured basics, tried and trusted. He is one of the greats in my opinion. As an advanced lifter, I’m very consistent with my training, eating and general lifestyle. Last year I devoted six months to trying saunas. Given that saunas are essentially a stressor (as are hot and cold therapies in general), they got me “net negative” on recovery in terms of training performance despite them feeling mentally great. This trade off was unacceptable. As soon as I stopped the saunas, weight on the bar went back up after the first week. It seems to me that Hans Selye yet again wins. The current mainstream obsession with saunas as a “must” in terms of recovery for strength athletes focus on their micro-effects (eg. “Heat shock proteins” - what the fuck does that even really mean anyway? - testosterone increase etc) rather observing their systemic effect ie. training performance i.e. weight on the bar. Not saying Marty is wrong because he is a strength mastodon and I’m a nobody, I just find my experience of something touted to aid recovery is in direct contrast.
One of my good friends is an elite international rugby player Ignacio Mieres who is struggling with the current trend in international rugby coaching making players do hot and cold therapy. He swears that this causes a degradation in his gym performances and is always very annoyed that he can’t sandbag a sauna or cryotherapy session because the coaches are observing with stop watches. They all site the scientific studies to him despite his very alpha, South American arm-waving protests that his personal experiences are that they fuck up his performance in the gym. His club and international strength coaches cling to the science papers rather than the phenomenological experiences of one of their elite players - the sports science literature appear to know better than the athlete and his own body about his own experiences. Even if the other players report benefiting from this practice, why the hell won’t they allow him to sit out the sauna and cryotherapy sessions? Pathetic.
Question: in your personal experience and in training your clients, have you found sauna to be a generally useful aid in accruing strength or not?
Great Texan Cafe episode by the way, another testament to simple high-performing basics without fluff or ceremony. So much more gratifying watching delicious simple food being prepared in an old school no-nonsense manner than some Michelin starred chef verbally masturbating into his foie gras in a cravat.
Best,
Robin