“For
breath is life, and if you breathe well you will live long on earth.” Sanskrit proverb.
With the opening
of the Olympics in Brazil this week, focusing on the breath is timely. Without proper use and training their respirations,
athletes wouldn’t be able to accomplish their amazing physical feats. On a
perhaps less ambitious but no less vital scale, we can become a kind of athlete
by paying attention to our everyday breathing.
By the end of
reading this blog, you will understand why literally everything depends on the
breath. Of course without it, we don’t have life. But we rarely think of the
extent to which proper breathing affects our health.
First, a bit
about the anatomy of the respiratory system: It consists of the nose (nasal
passages), trachea, diaphragm, bronchi and bronchioles all the way down to the
tiny air sacs at the base of the lungs. Good-enough breathing depends on using
muscles that include the diaphragm, intercostal muscles (between the ribs) and
the abdominal muscles. When
we don’t breathe fully we don’t circulate the air down to the alveoli or tiny
air sacs.
The two main
types of breathing are superficial or chest breathing, which involves the
expansion of the chest, and deep or abdominal breathing., which engages the
abdomen.
For the most
part, breathing is automatic. If it weren’t, the attention we’d have to pay to
it would detract from our daily activities. But if breathing is automatic, how
can we forget? Yet when the coach asks, “Are you breathing?” we realize that we
haven’t been breathing. Instead, we had focused on the exercise and held our
breath, a counterproductive, but not uncommon, behavior.
Not
infrequently, we hear in the course of an exercise class, the instructor remind
us to breathe, “ Breathe to the
bottom of the lobes; she might advise. “That’s where the calmness is.”
Obviously good breathing doesn’t come naturally.
Ignoring the mechanics
of breathing handicaps us. Disorders of breathing cause physical symptoms. and
we rarely realize how simple it is to correct these symptoms. Under stress we
tend to hold our breath, which may compromise our body’s ability to stave off
disease, helping to explain our tendency to become ill under stressful
circumstances. Common sense suggests
that deep breathing enhances the flow of air that prevents bacteria, viruses
and fungi from settling in our lungs.
Failure to use
our abdominal muscles can cause health problems like poor posture, which leads
to problems with balance and the potential to fall.
Abdominal
breathing helps us to become aware of the muscles that support our frame. In addition, we burn more calories when
we put our muscles to use. Abdominal breathing involves the large muscles that
support the abdominal cavity and utilizes more calories than the shallow
breathing that involves the smaller intercostal muscles located between the
ribs. One fitness instructor, Jill Johnson, even invented a weight-loss regimen
called Oxycise based on breathing from the stomach.
The added benefit
for using the breath as exercise is that we don’t need a gym, i a change of
clothes or even additional time. We can perform deep breathing while remaining
in our seats in a classroom or an office by focusing on our respirations.
We can wake
ourselves up by increasing our oxygen level by breathing deeply. Or conversely, we can put ourselves to
sleep with a kind of meditation of shallow breathing, and repeating silently
the words to the rhythmic “in” and “out” like a mantra.
When we feel out
of control, remembering that we can modulate the breathing has the power to
give us an immediate sense of control. Mr. G. treated his flying phobia by
focusing on his inhales and exhales. Ms. K. treated her panic attacks, exacerbated
by light-headedness resulting from breathing too quickly and over-oxygenating
the blood, by breathing in and out of a paper bag.
We may not be
aware of our anxious state, but experience chest pain or pressure caused by
holding our breath. If so,
inhaling deeply will give relief. (Of course, if the cause is more serious, the
discomfort won’t disappear.)
Conclusion: A
focus on the breath grants everyone the power to become an athlete and a
self-healer.
Dear Reader, I
look forward to your comments. jsimon145@gmail.com
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGot your BREATHE BLOG. SAW ALL THE WAY THROUGH.TERRIFIC!
ReplyDelete