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* Breath_ The New Science of a Lost Art - James Nestor
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_DOCUMENT: ../../../library/books/James Nestor/Breath_ The New Science of a Lost Art (11274)/Breath_ The New Science of a Lost Art - James Nestor.epub
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:END:
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** Learn the Five Tibetan Rites. Get the book
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (14 . 1613)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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The path to everlasting life involves a lot of stretching: back bends, neck bends, and twirling, each
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one a holy and ancient practice that had been passed down in secrecy from one Buddhist monk to
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another for 2,500 years. Olsson and I need this stretching; even if we breathe through the nose
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twenty-four hours a day, it won’t help much unless we’ve got the lung capacity to hold in that air.
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Just a few minutes of daily bending and breathing can expand lung capacity. With that extra
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capacity we can expand our lives.
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The stretches, called the Five Tibetan Rites, came to the Western world, and to me, by way of
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writer Peter Kelder, who was known as a lover of “books and libraries, words and poetry.”
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In the 1930s, Kelder was sitting on a park bench in southern California when an elderly stranger
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struck up a conversation. The man, whom he called Colonel Bradford, had spent decades in India
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with the British Army. The Colonel was old—all sloping shoulders, gray hair, and wobbly
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legs—but he believed there was a cure for aging and that it was locked up in a monastery in the
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Himalayas. The usual mystical stuff occurred up there: the sick became healthy, poor became rich,
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old became young. Kelder and the Colonel stayed in touch and shared many conversations. Then,
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one day, the old man hobbled away, desperate to find this Shangri-La before he drew his last
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breath.
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Four years passed until Kelder received a call from his building’s doorman. The Colonel was
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waiting downstairs. He looked 20 years younger. He was standing straight, his face vibrant and
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alive, and his once-balding head was covered in thick, dark hair. He’d found the monastery,
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studied the ancient manuscripts, and learned restorative practices from the monks. He’d reversed
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aging through nothing more than stretching and breathing.
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Kelder described these techniques in a slim booklet titled The Eye of Revelation, published in
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1939. Few people bothered to read it; fewer believed it. Kelder’s yarn was likely fabricated, or at
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minimum grossly exaggerated. However, the lung-expanding stretches he described are rooted in
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actual exercises that date back to 500 BCE. Tibetans had used these methods for millennia to
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improve physical fitness, mental health, cardiovascular function, and, of course, extend life.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Lungs capacity are the greatests indicator of life span
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (14 . 2844)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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More recently, science has begun measuring what the ancient Tibetans understood intuitively. In
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the 1980s, researchers with the Framingham Study, a 70-year longitudinal research program
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focused on heart disease, attempted to find out if lung size really did correlate to longevity. They
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gathered two decades of data from 5,200 subjects, crunched the numbers, and discovered that the
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greatest indicator of life span wasn’t genetics, diet, or the amount of daily exercise, as many had
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suspected. It was lung capacity.
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The smaller and less efficient lungs became, the quicker subjects got sick and died. The cause of
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deterioration didn’t matter. Smaller meant shorter. But larger lungs equaled longer lives.
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Our ability to breathe full breaths was, according to the researchers, “literally a measure of living
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capacity.” In 2000, University of Buffalo researchers ran a similar study, comparing lung capacity
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in a group of more than a thousand subjects over three decades. The results were the same.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Most of the weight is lost through breathing as CO2
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (15 . 10607)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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For every ten pounds of fat lost in our bodies, eight and a half pounds of it comes out through the
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lungs; most of it is carbon dioxide mixed with a bit of water vapor. The rest is sweated or urinated
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out. This is a fact that most doctors, nutritionists, and other medical professionals have historically
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gotten wrong. The lungs are the weight-regulating system of the body.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Prayer is regulated breathing. Again how tradition is distilled knowledge
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (15 . 29082)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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A last word on slow breathing. It goes by another name: prayer.
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When Buddhist monks chant their most popular mantra, Om Mani Padme Hum, each spoken
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phrase lasts six seconds, with six seconds to inhale before the chant starts again. The traditional
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chant of Om, the “sacred sound of the universe” used in Jainism and other traditions, takes six
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seconds to sing, with a pause of about six seconds to inhale.
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The sa ta na ma chant, one of the best-known techniques in Kundalini yoga, also takes six seconds
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to vocalize, followed by six seconds to inhale. Then there were the ancient Hindu hand and tongue
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poses called mudras. A technique called khechari, intended to help boost physical and spiritual
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health and overcome disease, involves placing the tongue above the soft palate so that it’s pointed
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toward the nasal cavity. The deep, slow breaths taken during this khechari each take six seconds.
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Japanese, African, Hawaiian, Native American, Buddhist, Taoist, Christian—these cultures and
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religions all had somehow developed the same prayer techniques, requiring the same breathing
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patterns. And they all likely benefited from the same calming effect.
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In 2001, researchers at the University of Pavia in Italy gathered two dozen subjects, covered them
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with sensors to measure blood flow, heart rate, and nervous system feedback, then had them recite
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a Buddhist mantra as well as the original Latin version of the rosary, the Catholic prayer cycle of
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the Ave Maria, which is repeated half by a priest and half by the congregation. They were stunned
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to find that the average number of breaths for each cycle was “almost exactly” identical, just a bit
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quicker than the pace of the Hindu, Taoist, and Native American prayers: 5.5 breaths a minute.
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But what was even more stunning was what breathing like this did to the subjects. Whenever they
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followed this slow breathing pattern, blood flow to the brain increased and the systems in the body
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entered a state of coherence, when the functions of heart, circulation, and nervous system are
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coordinated to peak efficiency. The moment the subjects returned to spontaneous breathing or
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talking, their hearts would beat a little more erratically, and the integration of these systems would
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slowly fall apart. A few more slow and relaxed breaths, and it would return again.
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A decade after the Pavia tests, two renowned professors and doctors in New York, Patricia
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Gerbarg and Richard Brown, used the same breathing pattern on patients with anxiety and
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depression, minus the praying. Some of these patients had trouble breathing slowly, so Gerbarg
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and Brown recommended they start with an easier rhythm of three-second inhales with at least
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the same length exhale. As the patients got more comfortable, they breathed in and breathed out
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longer.
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It turned out that the most efficient breathing rhythm occurred when both the length of
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respirations and total breaths per minute were locked in to a spooky symmetry: 5.5-second inhales
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followed by 5.5-second exhales, which works out almost exactly to 5.5 breaths a minute. This was
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the same pattern of the rosary.
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The results were profound, even when practiced for just five to ten minutes a day. “I have seen
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patients transformed by adopting regular breathing practices,” said Brown. He and Gerbarg even
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used this slow breathing technique to restore the lungs of 9/11 survivors who suffered from a
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chronic and painful cough caused by the debris, a horrendous condition called ground-glass
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lungs. There was no known cure for this ailment, and yet after just two months, patients achieved
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a significant improvement by simply learning to practice a few rounds of slow breathing a day.
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Gerbarg and Brown would write books and publish several scientific articles about the restorative
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power of the slow breathing, which would become known as “resonant breathing” or Coherent
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Breathing. The technique required no real effort, time, or thoughtfulness. And we could do it
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anywhere, at any time. “It’s totally private,” wrote Gerbarg. “ Nobody knows you’re doing it.”
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In many ways, this resonant breathing offered the same benefits as meditation for people who
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didn’t want to meditate. Or yoga for people who didn’t like to get off the couch. It offered the
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healing touch of prayer for people who weren’t religious.
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Did it matter if we breathed at a rate of six or five seconds, or were a half second off? It did not, as
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long as the breaths were in the range of 5.5.
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“We believe that the rosary may have partly evolved because it synchronized with the inherent
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cardiovascular (Mayer) rhythms, and thus gave a feeling of wellbeing, and perhaps an increased
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responsiveness to the religious message,” the Pavia researchers wrote. In other words, the
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meditations, Ave Marias, and dozens of other prayers that had been developed over the past
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several thousand years weren’t all baseless.
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Prayer heals, especially when it’s practiced at 5.5 breaths a minute.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Over-breathing leads to kidney buffering, which tries to balance blood pH by release bicarbonate into the bloodstream, taking with it minerals needed in cells
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (16 . 35363)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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Packman explained that overbreathing can have other, deeper effects on the body beyond just lung
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function and constricted airways. When we breathe too much, we expel too much carbon dioxide,
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and our blood pH rises to become more alkaline; when we breathe slower and hold in more carbon
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dioxide, pH lowers and blood becomes more acidic. Almost all cellular functions in the body take
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place at a blood pH of 7.4, our sweet spot between alkaline and acid.
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When we stray from that, the body will do whatever it can to get us back there. The kidneys, for
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instance, will respond to overbreathing by “buffering,”* a process in which an alkaline compound
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called bicarbonate is released into the urine. With less bicarbonate in the blood, the pH lowers back
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to normal, even if we continue to huff and puff. It’s as if nothing ever happened.
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The problem with buffering is that it’s meant as a temporary fix, not a permanent solution. Weeks,
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months, or years of overbreathing, and this constant kidney (renal) buffering will deplete the body
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of essential minerals. This occurs because as bicarbonate leaves the body, it takes magnesium,
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phosphorus, potassium, and more with it. Without healthy stores of these minerals, nothing works
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right: nerves malfunction, smooth muscles spasm, and cells can’t efficiently create energy.
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Breathing becomes even more difficult. This is one reason why asthmatics and other people with
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chronic respiratory problems are prescribed supplements like magnesium to stave off further
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attacks.
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Constant buffering also weakens the bones, which try to compensate by dissolving their mineral
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stores back into the bloodstream. (Yes, it’s possible to overbreathe yourself into osteoporosis and
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increased risk of bone fractures.) This unending grind of imbalances and compensations, of
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deficiencies and strain, will eventually break the body down.
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Packman was quick to point out that not all respiratory illness sufferers and other sick people have
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a carbon dioxide deficiency problem. Those with emphysema, for instance, may have dangerously
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high levels of carbon dioxide because they’ve got too much stale air trapped inside. Others may
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test with completely normal blood gas and pH levels. But such nitpicking, he said, missed the
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larger point.
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All these people have a breathing problem. They’re stressed, they’re inflamed, they’re congested,
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and they struggle to get air in and out of their lungs. And it’s these breathing problems that slow,
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paced, less techniques are so effective at fixing.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Notes for page (19 . 21670)
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (19 . 21670)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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That shove is still perplexing to the few scientists paying close attention to such phenomena. They
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ask: How exactly can conscious extreme breathing hack into the autonomic nervous system?
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Dr. Stephen Porges, a scientist and professor of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina, has
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studied the nervous system and its response to stress for the past 30 years. His primary focus is the
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vagus nerve, a meandering network within the system that connects to all the major internal
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organs. The vagus nerve is the power lever; it’s what turns organs on and off in response to stress.
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When perceived stress level is very high, the vagus nerve slows heart rate, circulation, and organ
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functions. This is how our reptilian and mammalian ancestors evolved the ability to “play dead”
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hundreds of millions of years ago, to conserve energy and deflect aggression when under attack by
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predators. Reptiles still access this ability, as do many mammals. (Imagine the limp body of a
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mouse in the jaws of a house cat.)
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People “play dead,” too, because we share the same mechanisms in the primitive part of our brain
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stem. We call it fainting. Our tendency to faint is controlled by the vagal system, specifically how
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sensitive we are to perceived danger. Some people are so anxious and oversensitive that their
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vagus nerves will cause them to faint at the smallest things, like seeing a spider, hearing bad news,
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or looking at blood.
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Most of us aren’t that sensitive. It’s much more common, especially in the modern world, to never
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experience full-blown, life-threatening stress, but to never fully relax either. We’ll spend our days
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half-asleep and nights half-awake, lolling in a gray zone of half-anxiety. When we do, the vagus
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nerve stays half-stimulated.
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During these times, the organs throughout the body won’t be “shut down,” but will instead be
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half supported in a state of suspended animation: blood flow will decrease and communication
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between the organs and the brain will become choppy, like a conversation through a staticky
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phone line. Our bodies can persist like this for a while; they can keep us alive, but they can’t keep
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us healthy.
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Porges found that patients who suffer Da Costa–like maladies such as tingling in their fingers,
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chronic diarrhea, rapid heart rate, diabetes, and erectile dysfunction are often treated for each of
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these symptoms with a focus on individual organs. But there’s nothing wrong with their
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stomachs, hearts, or genitals. What they often suffer from are communication problems along the
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vagal and autonomic network, brought on by chronic stress. To some researchers, it’s no
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coincidence that eight of the top ten most common cancers affect organs cut off from normal blood
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flow during extended states of stress.
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Fixing the autonomic nervous system can effectively cure or lessen these symptoms. In the past
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decade, surgeons have implanted electrical nodes in patients that work as an artificial vagal nerve
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to restart blood flow and communication between organs. The procedure is called vagus nerve
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stimulation, and it’s highly effective for patients suffering from anxiety, depression, and
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autoimmune diseases.
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But there is another, less invasive way Porges found to stimulate the vagus nerve: breathing.
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Breathing is an autonomic function we can consciously control. While we can’t simply decide
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when to slow or speed up our heart or digestion, or to move blood from one organ to another, we
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can choose how and when to breathe. Willing ourselves to breathe slowly will open up
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communication along the vagal network and relax us into a parasympathetic state.
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Breathing really fast and heavy on purpose flips the vagal response the other way, shoving us into
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a stressed state. It teaches us to consciously access the autonomic nervous system and control it, to
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turn on heavy stress specifically so that we can turn it off and spend the rest of our days and
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nights relaxing and restoring, feeding and breeding.
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“You are not the passenger,” McGee keeps yelling at me. “You are the pilot!”
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Notes for page (20 . 12780)
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (20 . 12780)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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As far back as the first century BCE, inhabitants of what is now India described a system of
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conscious apnea, which they claimed restored health and ensured long life. The Bhagavad Gita, a
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Hindu spiritual text written around 2,000 years ago, translated the breathing practice of
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pranayama to mean “trance induced by stopping all breathing.” A few centuries after that,
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Chinese scholars wrote several volumes detailing the art of breathholding. One text, A Book on
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Breath by the Master Great Nothing of Sung-Shan, offered this advice:
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Lie down every day, pacify your mind, cut off thoughts and block the breath. Close your fists,
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inhale through your nose, and exhale through your mouth. Do not let the breathing be audible.
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Let it be most subtle and fine. When the breath is full, block it. The blocking (of the breath) will
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make the soles of your feet perspire. Count one hundred times “one and two.” After blocking
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the breath to the extreme, exhale it subtly. Inhale a little more and block (the breath) again. If
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(you feel) hot, exhale with “Ho.” If (you feel) cold, blow the breath out and exhale it with (the
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sound) “Ch’ui.” If you can breathe (like this) and count to one thousand (when blocking), then
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you will need neither grains nor medicine.
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Today, breathholding is associated almost entirely with disease. “Don’t hold your breath,” the
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adage goes. Denying our bodies a consistent flow of oxygen, we’ve been told, is bad. For the most
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part, this is sound advice.
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#+END_QUOTE
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** Notes for page (22 . 18579)
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:PROPERTIES:
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:NOTER_PAGE: (22 . 18579)
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:END:
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#+BEGIN_QUOTE
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In a nutshell, this is what we’ve learned.
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SHUT YOUR MOUTH
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Two months after the Stanford experiment ended, Dr. Jayakar Nayak’s lab emailed Anders Olsson
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and me the results of our 20-day study. The major takeaway we already knew: mouthbreathing is
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terrible.
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After just 240 hours of breathing only through our mouths, catecholamine and stress-related
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hormones spiked, suggesting that our bodies were under physical and mental duress. A
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diphtheroid Corynebacterium bug had also infested my nose. If I’d continued breathing only
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through my mouth for a few more days, it might have developed into a full-fledged sinus
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infection. All the while, my blood pressure was through the roof and my heart rate variability
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plummeted. Olsson’s data mirrored mine.
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By night, the constant flow of unpressurized, unfiltered air flowing in and out of our gaping
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mouths collapsed the soft tissue in our throats to such an extent that we both began to experience
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persistent nocturnal suffocation. We snored. A few days later, we started choking on ourselves,
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suffering from bouts of sleep apnea. Had we continued breathing through our mouths, there’s a
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decent chance we both would have developed chronic snoring and obstructive sleep apnea, along
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with the hypertension and metabolic and cognitive problems that come with it.
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Not all of our measurements changed. Blood sugar levels weren’t affected. Cell counts in the blood
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and ionized calcium remained the same, as did most other blood markers.
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There were a few surprises. My lactate levels, a measure of anaerobic respiration, actually
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decreased with mouthbreathing, which suggested I was using more oxygen-burning aerobic
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energy. This was the opposite of what most fitness experts would have predicted. (Olsson’s lactate
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slightly increased.) I lost about two pounds, due most likely to exhaled water loss. But trust me on
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this: a post-holiday mouthbreathing diet is not recommended.
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The nagging fatigue, irritation, testiness, and anxiety. The horrid breath and constant bathroom
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breaks. The spaciness, stares, and stomachaches. It was awful.
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The human body has evolved to be able to breathe through two channels for a reason. It increases
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our chances of survival. Should the nose get obstructed, the mouth becomes a backup ventilation
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system. The few gasping breaths Stephen Curry takes before dunking a basketball, or a sick kid
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huffs when he has a fever, or you take in when you’re laughing with your friends—this temporary
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mouthbreathing will have no long-term effects on health.
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Chronic mouthbreathing is different. The body is not designed to process raw air for hours at a
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time, day or night. There is nothing normal about it.
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BREATHE THROUGH YOUR NOSE
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The day Olsson and I removed the plugs and tape, our blood pressure dropped, carbon dioxide
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levels rose, and heart rates normalized. Snoring decreased 30-fold from the mouthbreathing
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phase, from several hours a night to a few minutes. Within two days, neither of us was snoring at
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all. The bacterial infection in my nose quickly cleared up without treatment. Olsson and I had
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cured ourselves by breathing through our noses.
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Ann Kearney, the doctor of speech-language pathology at the Stanford Voice and Swallowing
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Center, was so impressed by our data and her own transformation overcoming congestion and
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mouthbreathing that, at this writing, she is putting together a two-year study with 500 subjects to
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research the effects of sleep tape on snoring and sleep apnea.
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The benefits of nasal breathing extended beyond the bedroom. I increased my performance on the
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stationary bike by about 10 percent. (Olsson had more modest gains, about 5 percent.) These
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results paled in comparison to the gains reported by sports training expert John Douillard, but I
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couldn’t imagine any athlete who wouldn’t want a 10 percent—or even a 1 percent—advantage
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over a competitor.
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On a more personal note, those first few nasal breaths after ten days of obstruction were so
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shimmering and rousing that I got a little teary-eyed. I thought about my interviews with all the
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empty nose syndrome sufferers who’d been told they were crazy, that they should just quit
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complaining and breathe through their mouths. I thought about kids who’d been told that chronic
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allergies and congestion were a part of childhood, and the adults who’d convinced themselves
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that choking every night was a natural part of growing old.
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I had felt their pain, and was lucky enough to breathe life on the other side. It’s something I’ll
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never forget, and will never, ever repeat.
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EXHALE
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Carl Stough spent a half century reminding his students of how to get all the air out of our bodies
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so that we could take more in. He trained his clients to exhale longer and, in the process, do what
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had long been considered biologically impossible. Emphysemics reported almost total recovery from
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their incurable conditions, opera singers gained more resonance and tone in their voices,
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asthmatics no longer suffered from attacks, and Olympic sprinters went on to win gold medals.
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As basic as this sounds, full exhalations are seldom practiced. Most of us engage only a small
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fraction of our total lung capacity with each breath, requiring us to do more and get less. One of
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the first steps in healthy breathing is to extend these breaths, to move the diaphragm up and down
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a bit more, and to get air out of us before taking a new one in.
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“ The difference in breathing in the coordinated pattern and in an altered pattern is the difference
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between operating at peak efficiency and just getting along,” Stough wrote in the 1960s. “An
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engine does not have to be in tip-top condition to work, but it gives a better performance if it is.”
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CHEW
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The millions of ancient skeletons in the Paris quarries and hundreds of pre–Industrial Age skulls at
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the Morton Collection had three things in common: huge sinus cavities, strong jaws, and straight
|
||
teeth. Almost all humans born before 300 years ago shared these traits because they chewed a lot.
|
||
|
||
The bones in the human face don’t stop growing in our 20s, unlike other bones in the body. They
|
||
can expand and remodel into our 70s, and likely beyond. Which means we can influence the size
|
||
and shape of our mouths and improve our ability to breathe at virtually any age.
|
||
|
||
To do this, don’t follow the diet advice of eating what our great-grandmothers ate. Too much of
|
||
that stuff was already soft and overly processed. Your diet should consist of the rougher, rawer,
|
||
and heartier foods our great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmothers ate. The kinds of foods
|
||
that required an hour or two a day of hard chewing. And in the meantime, lips together, teeth
|
||
slightly touching, and tongue on the roof of the mouth.
|
||
|
||
BREATHE MORE, ON OCCASION
|
||
|
||
Since meeting Chuck McGee at that roadside park in the Sierras, I’ve been practicing Tummo with
|
||
dozens of others from around the world on Monday nights. That’s when McGee hosts a free online
|
||
session open to anyone who wants to “become the eye of the storm.”
|
||
|
||
Overbreathing has gotten a bad rap in the past few decades, and rightfully so. Feeding the body
|
||
more air than it needs is damaging for the lungs right down to the cellular level. Today, the
|
||
majority of us breathe more than we should, without realizing it.
|
||
|
||
Willing yourself to breathe heavily for a short, intense time, however, can be profoundly
|
||
therapeutic. “It’s only through disruption that we can be normal again,” McGee told me. That’s
|
||
what techniques like Tummo, Sudarshan Kriya, and vigorous pranayamas do. They stress the
|
||
body on purpose, snapping it out of its funk so that it can properly function during the other 23½
|
||
hours a day. Conscious heavy breathing teaches us to be the pilots of our autonomic nervous
|
||
systems and our bodies, not the passengers.
|
||
|
||
HOLD YOUR BREATH
|
||
|
||
Several months after experimenting with carbon dioxide therapy, I was at home reading the
|
||
Sunday paper, flipping through the obituaries, and saw that Dr. Donald Klein had died. Klein
|
||
was the psychiatrist who spent years studying the links between chemoreceptor flexibility, carbon
|
||
dioxide, and anxieties. He was 90. It was Klein’s research that inspired Justin Feinstein to pursue
|
||
the NIH-funded experiments in Tulsa.
|
||
|
||
I wrote Feinstein with the news. He was crushed. He told me he’d been planning on reaching out
|
||
to Klein in the coming weeks regarding what could be a “game-changing discovery.”
|
||
|
||
It turns out that the amygdalae, those gooey nodes on the sides of our head that help govern
|
||
perceptions of fear and emotions, also control aspects of our breathing. Patients with epilepsy who
|
||
have had these brain areas stimulated with electrodes immediately cease breathing. The patients
|
||
were totally unaware of it and didn’t seem to feel their carbon dioxide levels rising long after their
|
||
breathing ceased.
|
||
|
||
Communication between the chemoreceptors and amygdalae works both ways: these structures
|
||
are constantly exchanging information and adjusting breathing every second of every minute of
|
||
the day. If communication breaks down, havoc ensues.
|
||
|
||
Feinstein believes that people with anxiety likely suffer from connection problems between these
|
||
areas and could unwittingly be holding their breath throughout the day. Only when the body
|
||
becomes overwhelmed by carbon dioxide would their chemoreceptors kick in and trigger an
|
||
emergency signal to the brain to immediately get another breath. The patients would reflexively
|
||
start fighting to breathe. They’d panic.
|
||
|
||
Eventually their bodies adapt to avoid such unexpected attacks by staying in a state of alert, by
|
||
constantly overbreathing in an effort to keep their carbon dioxide as low as possible.
|
||
|
||
“What anxious patients could be experiencing is a completely natural reaction—they’re reacting to
|
||
an emergency in their bodies,” said Feinstein. “It could be that anxiety, at its root, isn’t a
|
||
psychological problem at all.”
|
||
|
||
This approach is all very theoretical, Feinstein warned, and needs to be rigorously tested, which is
|
||
what he will do in the coming years. But if it’s true, it could explain why so many drugs don’t
|
||
work for panic, anxiety, and other fear-based conditions, and how slow and steady breathing
|
||
therapy does.
|
||
|
||
HOW WE BREATHE MATTERS
|
||
|
||
I’ve chatted with Anders Olsson every few weeks since we paid through the nose in the Stanford
|
||
experiment. Our talks are never dull. “I have more energy and focus than ever in my life!” he told
|
||
me, right after celebrating his 50th birthday. Olsson is a pulmonaut in the purest sense: self-taught
|
||
and driven by a sense that we are missing something right in front of us, a truth basic and
|
||
essential.
|
||
|
||
Through all my travels and travails, there is one lesson, one equation, that I believe is at the root of
|
||
so much health, happiness, and longevity. I’m a bit embarrassed to say it has taken me a decade to
|
||
figure this out, and I realize how insignificant it might look on this page. But lest we forget, nature
|
||
is simple but subtle.
|
||
|
||
The perfect breath is this: Breathe in for about 5.5 seconds, then exhale for 5.5 seconds. That’s 5.5
|
||
breaths a minute for a total of about 5.5 liters of air.
|
||
|
||
You can practice this perfect breathing for a few minutes, or a few hours. There is no such thing as
|
||
having too much peak efficiency in your body.
|
||
|
||
Olsson told me he’s working on several more devices to help us breathe at this rate—slowly and
|
||
less. He’s finishing production on his BreathIQ, a portable device that measures nitric oxide, carbon
|
||
dioxide, ammonia, and other chemicals in exhaled breath. Then there are other skunkworks to
|
||
mimic the effects of perfect breathing: a carbon dioxide suit, a hat, and . . .
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, Google just released an app that pops up automatically when the words “breathing
|
||
exercise” are searched. It trains visitors to inhale and exhale every 5.5 seconds. Down the street
|
||
from my house is a startup called Spire, which created a device that tracks breath rate and alerts
|
||
users every time respiration becomes too fast or disjointed. In the fitness industry, resistance masks
|
||
and mouthpieces with names like Expand-a-Lung are all the rage.
|
||
|
||
Before we know it, breathing slow, less, and through the nose with a big exhale will be big
|
||
business, like so much else. But be aware that the stripped-down approach is as good as any. It
|
||
requires no batteries, Wi-Fi, headgear, or smartphones. It costs nothing, takes little time and effort,
|
||
and you can do it wherever you are, whenever you need. It’s a function our distant ancestors
|
||
practiced since they crawled out of the sludge two and a half billion years ago, a technology our
|
||
own species has been perfecting with only our lips, noses, and lungs for hundreds of thousands of
|
||
years.
|
||
|
||
Most days, I treat it like a stretch, something I do after a long time sitting or stressing to bring
|
||
myself back to normal. When I need an extra boost, I come here, to this old Victorian house in the
|
||
Haight-Ashbury, and sit beside this rattling window with the other Sudarshan Kriya breathers I
|
||
first met ten years ago.
|
||
#+END_QUOTE
|