What are the benefits of
Darkness?
Darkness retreats affect the nervous system, brain, and body in ways that ordinary rest cannot produce. The scientific framework is Chamber REST - Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy - a field built on decades of research into what happens when the human brain is finally released from the continuous pressure of sensory input.
What darkness does to the body and mind
In normal waking life, the brain runs a continuous background scan for threat. It's subtle, mostly unconscious, and it costs something. When sensory input drops, that scan has nothing to work with. Measured in real time: blood pressure decreases, breathing slows, and heart rate variability shifts toward what researchers call parasympathetic dominance. 1
Light blocks the pineal gland from doing its job. 2 In sustained darkness, that block is lifted. The brain's master clock triggers a natural melatonin cascade. 2 Melatonin is not only a sleep hormoneit is a potent antioxidant and cell repair signal 3 that draws the body's internal clock toward a deeper, more restorative rhythm. The sleep that follows has measurably longer slow-wave cycles. 2,3
Two systems work together: reduced sympathetic output lowers blood pressure 1 and eases vascular strain. Simultaneously, melatonin directly neutralizes reactive oxygen species (ROS) - the cellular byproducts of chronic stress that, over time, damage tissue. 4 5
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is the system that replays the past and rehearses the future. Brain imaging research directly links its overactivation to anxiety and depression. 6 It runs on stimulation. Sensory reduction removes that fuel. 7 What remains is quieter - and, for many people, unfamiliar.
Interoception is the brain's capacity to sense heartbeat, breath, gut feeling, and muscular tension. It is the biological foundation of emotional self-awareness - and external noise drowns it out. When that noise drops, the internal channel becomes clearer 8 Poor interoception is strongly associated with depression and anxiety 9 and REST directly trains the capacity to hear it again. 8
With the DMN quiet and distraction removed, attention becomes spacious and less reactive - the quality that contemplative traditions have called witnessing awareness. The environment produces it directly, without years of practice. 11 Without social comparison or digital feedback as reference points, a more stable and intrinsic sense of self has room to emerge. 10
Divergent thinking is suppressed by the brain's threat-monitoring systems. When the nervous system settles and the brain shifts away from rumination, associative networks become less constrained. REST studies document improvements in original thinking, divergent problem-solving, and musical improvisation - the same cognitive window that experienced meditators describe as characteristic of deep practice 6 4
When retinal input falls to zero, the visual cortex lowers its activation threshold within hours. 12 Over several days, it begins processing sound and touch, the same cross-modal neuroplasticity observed in long-term blind Braille readers, occurring in fully sighted people within a single retreat. 12 Higher-order visual networks fire spontaneously, producing light phenomena, geometric patterns, and complex imagery that arises from the brain itself. 13
-
1
Exploring the acute cardiovascular effects of Floatation-REST. Flux, M. C., Fine, T. H., Schoenhals, W. A., Refai, H. H., Lowry, C. A., Levine, J. C., Khalsa, S. S., & Feinstein, J. S. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 16, 2022.
doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.995594 -
2
Melatonin as a naturally occurring co-substrate of quinone reductase-2. Tan, D.-X., Hardeland, R., Manchester, L. C. et al. Journal of Pineal Research, 52(1), 28–38, 2015.
doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-079X.2011.00995.x -
3
Melatonin, human aging, and age-related diseases. Karasek, M. Experimental Gerontology, 39(11–12), 1723–1729, 2004.
doi.org/10.1016/j.exger.2004.04.012 -
4
A systematic review of flotation-restricted environmental stimulation therapy (REST). Jonsson, K., Kjellgren, A., & colleagues. BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies, 2025.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12224670 -
5
Melatonin as an antioxidant: under promises but over delivers. Reiter, R. J., Mayo, J. C., Tan, D.-X. et al. Journal of Pineal Research, 61(3), 253–278, 2016.
doi.org/10.1111/jpi.12360 -
6
Depressive rumination, the default-mode network, and the dark matter of clinical neuroscience. Hamilton, J. P., Farmer, M., Fogelman, P., & Gotlib, I. H. Biological Psychiatry, 78(4), 224–230, 2015.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4524294 -
7
Taking the body off the mind: Decreased functional connectivity between somatomotor and default-mode networks following Floatation-REST. Al Zoubi, O., Misaki, M., Bodurka, J. et al. Human Brain Mapping, 42(10), 3216–3227, 2021.
doi.org/10.1002/hbm.25429 -
8
The elicitation of relaxation and interoceptive awareness using floatation therapy in individuals with high anxiety sensitivity. Feinstein, J. S., Khalsa, S. S., Yeh, H. et al. Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, 3(6), 555–562, 2018.
doi.org/10.1016/j.bpsc.2018.02.005 -
9
Interoception in anxiety and depression. Paulus, M. P., & Stein, M. B. Brain Structure and Function, 214(5–6), 451–463, 2010.
doi.org/10.1007/s00429-010-0258-9 -
10
Existential meaning in life, mindfulness and self-esteem in the context of restricted environmental stimulation. Malus, M., Kupka, M., & Dostal, D. Psychologie a její kontexty, 7(2), 59–72, 2016.
-
11
Effects of flotation-REST on muscle tension pain. Kjellgren, A., Sundequist, U., Norlander, T., & Archer, T. Pain Research & Management, 6(4), 181–189, 2001.
doi.org/10.1155/2001/768501 -
12
Enhanced excitability of the human visual cortex induced by short-term light deprivation. Boroojerdi, B., Bushara, K. O., Corwell, B. et al. Cerebral Cortex, 10(5), 529–534, 2000.
doi.org/10.1093/cercor/10.5.529 -
13
Perceptual and physiological consequences of dark adaptation: A TMS-EEG study. Zazio, A., Bortoletto, M., Ruzzoli, M., Miniussi, C., & Veniero, D. Brain Topography, 32(5), 773–782, 2019.
doi.org/10.1007/s10548-019-00717-3