I’ve been surprised by the number of people who find this site searching for information on the Wim Hof Method for cancer. It’s not as crazy as it sounds. I, also, researched these breathing techniques after I was diagnosed. While there is no hard evidence supporting this method specifically for cancer, I decided to take some breathing classes from a Hof-trained instructor.
What is the Wim Hof Method?
Wim Hof, known to some as “the Iceman,” is a Dutch athlete best known for his ability to withstand extreme cold. While he initially gained fame through extreme feats of cold endurance, he now seems more focused on research and science to document his abilities, understand the mechanisms behind them, and teach them to others.
The Wim Hof Method, as it’s taught, includes breathing techniques, cold endurance, and meditation.
The breathing technique was what intrigued me most. As someone with lung cancer who realized within months of diagnosis that I’d been breathing wrong my whole life, I was eager to learn everything I could about breathing.
Today, I know my breath is the most powerful tool I have for modulating my autonomic nervous system, balancing between the sympathetic (fight-flight-freeze) and parasympathetic (rest-digest-heal) response.
How might it help cancer?
I was originally interested in the Wim Hof Method after coming across a 2014 controlled study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, demonstrating that people trained in the Wim Hof Method were able to control their immune systems, a feat not previously believed possible. In the study, 24 healthy people were injected with e. coli. The twelve who had trained in the Hof method had a significantly more mild reaction than the other volunteers.
I had also heard an anecdotal report that I can’t verify in any way that, during one of his feats, Hof’s right kidney began to fail from the cold but that he was able to direct additional blood flow to that kidney and endure for another hour. Again, even after searching the internet I can’t find any substantiation for that story. I did find a 2018 case study published in NeuroImage attesting to Hof’s ability to control his autonomic nervous system based on fMRI and PET-CT imaging.
The ability to gain better control over my body — especially my immune system — was intriguing to me.
At the same time, I had been reading the growing research on the benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) combined with ketosis for treating cancer. I didn’t have access to HBOT in Hong Kong but I knew that the Wim Hof Method of breathing helps achieve similar cellular oxygenation as HBOT.
I was less excited by the cold showers and icebath plunges that are part of the Wim Hof Method. I constantly hear that cold exposure can strengthen the immune system but all the published research I read shows that extended cold actually suppresses immunity and reduces the number of cancer-killing NK immune cells. The best research I can find in support of cold showers for good health from the Netherlands is fairly inconclusive. Alternating heat and cold, however — a shock of cold sandwiched between heating — can stimulate immunity.
Finally, I was already convinced of the healing benefits of meditation, the third pillar of the Method, so I could see the potential for Wim Hof Method to improve cancer outcomes with that technique.
My experience with the Wim Hof Method for cancer
I’ve never taken the actual Wim Hof course although my breathing instructor did offer them. During our time in Hong Kong those courses always managed to coincide with times we were out of town and then, when we finally had a date on the calendar, coronavirus was threatening Hong Kong and the course was cancelled.
I’m all the more grateful that I was able to take advantage of the small group instruction that included Wim Hof breathing.
A usual class was 4-5 people, including me, seated before our instructor. We’d begin with calming breath exercises to help activate the parasympathetic nervous system. This is the part of the autonomic nervous system that needs to be engaged to focus the body’s resources on tasks like digestion and body repair. This is where I wanted my body to be in order to heal from cancer.
I personally believe that the main driver of my cancer was chronic stress. The inflamed, oxygen-starved environment created by stress is exactly the environment in which cancer thrives. While there were many other contributors: heavy drinking, other toxin exposure, and repressed emotions, my inability to deal with stress was at the root of them all. Chronic stress means that the sympathetic nervous system is always engaged. Deep breathing and box breathing sends signals the body that it’s okay to relax and begin recovery.
During the last half of class, the instructor would lead us in Wim Hof breathing. While we laid on our backs, he’d coach us to breath more deeply and constantly without pause. It wouldn’t take long before my head began to buzz and body tingle from hyperventilation. Two revelations I had:
- The physical sensations were very much like a concentrated form of those that I experience through meditation: the buzz and tingle that I half-jokingly call my qi. I have a similar feeling when I get HBOT.
- This breathing absolutely activated my sympathetic, or stressed-out fight-or-flight response. On the last two occasions I experienced muscle spasms of my right shoulder. This shoulder has been in spasm on other occasions as it slowly releases decades of stress, but the Wim Hof spasms were most intense and a little scary.
After about 3 minutes of hyperventilating in this way, we would hold our breath as long as we could. Towards later classes I was able to hold my breath over three minutes which is something I never would have believed possible.
Take-Aways
As I mentioned, my goal during healing was to spend as much time as possible enjoying the healing benefits of the parasympathetic nervous system. Since it was so obvious to me that Wim Hof breathing activated the fight-flight-freeze sympathetic nervous system, I decided it wasn’t right for my immediate healing. This attitude seems supported by the e. coli study referenced above where those trained in the Wim Hof Method had a less pronounced immune response to e. coli bacteria. That was great that their immune systems didn’t overreact but, at the time, I actually needed my immune system at full force.
I also never fully warmed to daily cold showers but absolutely loved alternating icy showers with trips to the sauna. I would sit in the sauna until I couldn’t take it anymore, turn on the cold water for 10 deep breaths or so, then run back to the sauna. I found this made me feel great and the research seems to support it’s ability to build immune function. I really miss having a sauna.
The final pillar of the Wim Hof Method, meditation, is of course something I value deeply for healing. It was while taking these breathing classes that I deepened my practice and embarked on the 10-day Vipassana course.
Overall, even though the breathing and cold weren’t right for me during my acute healing, I see the value for building up a stronger immune system and mind-body connection over time. Now that my goal is to prevent recurrence, I can see a place for these techniques in my routine.
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