Tuesday 26 February 2013

Hollywood Actress Naomie Harris loves floatation tanks

28 Days Later, Pirates of the Caribbean and Sky Fall actress Naomie Harris loves to get away from it all in a floatation tank. 

"I’m obsessed with floating because it’s a bit like being back in the womb and is also a good way of getting over jet lag".

Tuesday 12 February 2013

Huffington Posts My Daily Reviews float tanks



How do you switch off, kick back and really relax?’ a question that I, as a busy technology-addicted Londoner, had been struggling with for a while. I’d found myself when I wasn’t in the office, or on a train, or squeezing a spot of socialising into my jam-packed schedule, constantly on my phone or my laptop (I’d have been on my iPad too if I had one). I could never just sit down and do, well, nothing. This had to stop.


I’d heard about floatation therapy from a friend, who more or less said, “It’s like a coffin filled with water. You lie in it and like float and you like totally forget about everything and it’s, like, really amazing.” After that, I had to find out for myself what this off-the-wall relaxation method was all about.

When I arrived at Floatworks Wellness Centre for my one-hour float session I was a little anxious at the prospect of being detached from my iPhone (and my Blackberry – yup, I’m one of those people) and left alone in a watery coffin-like tank with just my thoughts for company, but I put on a brave face. I’d prepared for the occasion, no caffeine, no alcohol, I’d been to the loo, I’d eaten but I wasn’t too full, I was ready.

I was shown to my private room by Floatworks manager Peter, and upon seeing the Fiat Punto-sized tank with its soft glowing neon lights I couldn’t help but excitedly exclaim, “Oh my days. That is SO cool,” to which Peter laughed and I cringed inside. All my preconceptions had vanished in a flash and I couldn’t wait to climb in and shut the lid.




After a quick shower and inserting a pair of earplugs I took a dip in the Epsom salts. Peter had warned me that I might end up with super-salty water in my eye during my first float… He was right. Upon discovering that I could actually float in this silky water without any effort, I sat up in shock and splashed myself in the face (schoolboy error), fortunately for me the tanks are kitted out with a fresh water spray bottle for mishaps such as these.

I spent the first few minutes playing about in the water, pushing myself off the sides and giggling, but soon turned off the lights and tried to relax. Now, I’m a real sceptic and was utterly convinced I wouldn’t ‘switch off’, but lying there completely still in water tempered to match the human body I felt like I was drifting through space. I forgot it was a Monday, forgot I had to go back to the office, forgot I even owned a mobile phone – it was brilliant.

I felt the real effects of the treatment once I was back to reality at the tube station wearing a massive grin on my face feeling like I didn’t have a care in the world. The shoulder and neck pain a lot of office workers suffer with was alleviated and in sum I was a new woman. I floated home (sorry) without a care in the world.

A single one-hour float session at Floatworks is £45. 




©Huffington Post, My Daily, Ellen Stewart Celebrity Writer
10 Feb 2013.

See original article  http://www.mydaily.co.uk/2013/02/10/float-therapy-floatworks-review_n_2637920.html?utm_hp_ref=tw