あらすじ
A cold shower is, on the surface, a minor discomfort. But for many people who have made it a consistent practice, something shifts—not just physically, but in the way they relate to resistance, discomfort, and the gap between intention and action. Cold Showers Changed Me explores what actually happens when a person chooses, repeatedly and deliberately, to do something uncomfortable before the day has even begun. It examines the internal experience of cold exposure: the moment of hesitation at the tap, the mental negotiation, and what it quietly builds over weeks and months of showing up anyway. This book offers insight into why such a simple practice carries disproportionate psychological weight. It reframes cold exposure not as a performance of toughness or a biohacking trend, but as a daily encounter with the part of the mind that prefers comfort over commitment—and what gradually changes when that encounter becomes routine. For anyone curious about cold exposure but unconvinced by the hype—this book explores the honest, unglamorous, and genuinely surprising interior experience of a practice that costs nothing and asks only for consistency.