Sadhguru: Not about washing the dirt on your skin
but a certain purification on a deeper level happens. In line with your ears, here, at that point you put little cold water. Once your cellular structure is charged with energy,
it will remain youthful for a very, very long time. In most Indian languages, in common usage,
the word hatha means being adamant. This is a quality that you will need. Your body says, "Enough, I had it." But you are adamant. This is Hatha Yoga. Your mind says, "I give up, I can"t do this anymore." But you are adamant, you simply do it. So Hatha Yoga is about creating a body
which will not be a hurdle in one's life. It will become a stepping stone but not a hurdle, not a roadblock in one's progress of
blossoming into his ultimate possibility. So simple tips – I am not known for giving tips, bad reputation I have – but simple tips. In the yogic culture, a shower, there was no shower. Bath always meant dip in the river. They always went to the river, dip, come out and do it. If you do this, your muscles will be good. So an alternate way of doing it is… Usually in our homes, the pail that
we use to pour water is this big , at least it has four liters of water, if you
do this, the whole body, that's it, always… I mean, I'm not going to insist on this for
the ladies, your hairstyles and everything – but always a bath means the first
pail of water is on your head, always. Putting cold water on your body will shift the heat
into your brain, very rapidly, it should not happen. So this is why those who don't want to wet their hair, at least should take a little bit of cold water
and put it... you know there's a point here… in line with your ears here, at that point you put little cold water, immediately you will see a certain
cooling happens in the head region; after that you can have bath with just the body. But otherwise, you always... the first pail of
water is over your head, not on your body. So what you do is, you fill the bucket and… (Gesture) That's the best way to do it in the morning. The body should be immersed in water, that you're
trying to create a simulated dip in the river, ok? At the same time, the whole body should be… at least the skin should be covered in water at the same time. Not like this, this, this, like this, this, this, you know. If you pour water, the whole body… the body
should think you're taking it for a dip. So if you pour like this, there is a certain coolness in the system
and muscles become very flexible. Shower can do it to you. If the shower is forceful enough or at least if the volume of water is
good enough, shower can easily do that. It's always best that we use water which
is little cooler than the room temperature. Just a certain volume of water to flow over you or to be immersed in a water which
is cooler than room temperature, because if this happens, one thing that happens on the surface is the cells, the epithelial cells will contract. When they contract they open up all the pores. The pores between the cells will open up. The cells themselves have pores. We don't want that to open. That will open if you put it in warm water. If you put... dip your body in a hot water tub,
the cells will open up and take in water. That is not always a good thing to do. You put the body in cold water, the cells will contract, the in-between spaces will open and
that's important for practicing yoga because we want the cellular structure of the body
to be charged with a different dimension of energy. If the cells contracts and allow space
and then you practice your yoga, then the cellular structure in the body is charged. Why one person seems to be far more alive
than the other, is essentially because of this, and once your cellular structure is charged with energy, it will remain youthful for a very, very long time. When people are thinking why the old bugger is still not dead, you're still feeling like you are twenty-five. Hatha Yoga is a way to frustrate the world also. So water which is cooler than the room temperature. In India, it is... in South India at least,
it's not so much of a problem. The water is always in that temperature – ideal place. But if you are in a colder country, if you are in a
temperate climate, the water may be too cold. That is not good. The water must be, let's say within five to eight degree centigrade
lower than the room temperature, not more than that. So, if you have a tendency to catch
cold, initially first couple of weeks you put a spoon of eucalyptus oil in the
water, cold water, and pour it over you. You will see your cold will go away, not because of the eucalyptus oil,
just because of the cold water. If you have an infection and something else
where excess mucus is being generated, that needs to be treated differently. But as I said, the water should be just somewhere five to eight degrees below room
temperature, not an excessively cold water, no. If there's any kind of interaction, any kind
of mingling and mixing of whatever kind – if you're in a crowd for too long,
when you go home, first thing is shower. You must do this. If it takes three, four, five showers in a day, it doesn't matter. For a sadhaka, it's good to shower many times a day. You shouldn't overdo it, but there were times when I used to
shower minimum five to seven times a day. Now it's come down to maybe… two definitely, sometimes three. Two is a must for you, more is good. Any kind of physical contact happens with somebody, a period of more than let's say six minutes,
if you're even holding somebody's hand, before you do yoga it's best that you have a shower. This is not a cleansing thing. We are not trying to clean the body, that's not the point. It's not because somebody is impure
– you're trying to clean your body. Yoga is a way of organizing your energies into an individual. So if any kind of transaction happen too much – if I come and sit in a program,
I'm not even physically touching anybody – if I sit in a program for two-three hours, first thing is shower because just the
interaction creates a certain amount of… the integrity of your energy becomes little loose. So at any time, first thing when you go home, shower. Shower need not mean soap, shampoo,
this, that, a bucket full of water "bubum," just water flowing over, it purifies. How does water purify without washing and scrubbing? Not like that. You know in nuclear reactors, they're using certain metals, particularly metals like titanium and
even platinum and few other things. If they want to purify these metals,
they want metals in the purest form, in the normal laboratory process they
can only purify it to a certain point; beyond that, they're not able to purify. So what they do is, you make a rod
of this metal and make another ring; just move it up and down without touching, just
do this, you will see the metals will get purified. So seventy-two percent of your body is water. You just throw water over this, there is a certain purification. Not about washing the dirt on your skin,
that is anyway there, that's a different thing. But a certain purification on a deeper level
happens just allowing water to flow over you. Have you seen… Suppose you are very tense on a particular day, when you go and stand under the shower, you don't want to come out, you want
to just stay there for some time; those three minutes or five minutes in the
shower hasn't solved any problem in your life – but when you come out, it looks like it's gone. You're like born fresh. Have you noticed this? You feel it's all gone because all that's happening
is this is… largely two-thirds of it is water. If just water flows on this, certain things will change.