Though you breathe all day and night you have no idea if the quality and integrity of your functional breathing is helping or hindering you. I found this so fascinating it has become my primary interest in terms of practice and study for the past 25 years.
In order to breathe a vast respiratory apparatus and neuronal programming is required (1). It is deeply wired. However, based on changes to our lifestyle as we grow and eventually age both this respiratory set of muscles and organs, as well as the integrity of nervous impulses that direct it, typically reduce in efficiency. This affects our physical health as well as our response to that state of health and other stimuli impacting us each day. Though the breath is by and large an involuntary process, it has the unique capacity for conscious intervention whereby we can manipulate the motion of breathing. Done well, with understanding, it can change our entire physiology and how we feel mentally. That is powerful.
On a positive note, it is never too late to implement lifestyle changes to improve both your physical and mental well-being. This includes practice with the breath. A study published last week on middle-aged women who sustained lifestyle changes, especially in terms of diet and exercise, reduced stroke risk by 25% and ischemic stroke by 36% (2). Statistics or not, those are huge benefits. So use this article and video to trigger a simple but life benefitting daily breathwork routine practice.
“Breathwork”, in want of an official definition that I now offer here, then becomes “the regulated activities, consciously engaged in, to exercise and optimize the organs of respiration and brainstem nervous impulses that control breathing, with an outcome of improved respiration across a 24-hour period” (Dallaghan).
Breathwork can then be further broken down to:
Regular training should help one to manage ongoing stress and handle anxiety when it arises. The breathwork practice can then grow into more advanced techniques that the field of pranayama covers. Too often amateur recommendations are made to do a “nostril breath” or a “box breath”, and so on. Though sounding good they are minimally effective in and of themselves. It is the decrease in efficiency of one’s respiratory function over time that leads most people into trouble with stress and anxiety and later being more susceptible to respiratory illness. The system is just not robust enough. No superficial “nostril breathing” is going to sort that. Rather dedicated, regular breathwork practice, ideally daily, can transform your respiration efficiency and the physiological effects that trigger from that.
If you are approaching the area of breathwork now for the first time and feel stressed, or even anxious, then the regular training path is not yet the mode to go. Rather, engaging in certain simple exercises that are known to aid the stress burden is a more beneficial immediate strategy (3), and thus why I offer this now. This “Quadrangular Breath”, a simple and highly effective practice, can be done in 10 minutes.
Follow the Practice
As an analogy to help understand that, the stress burden experienced psychologically and affecting all bodily processes, is like carrying heavy luggage for a long time without knowing how to take a break and put them down. Breathwork for stress, now, is akin to getting relief from your luggage carrying load now. Breathwork training, over the longer term enhances your respiratory fitness and upregulates your stress resilience. Breathwork for times of anxiety is similar to having a crisis with your luggage and being able to catch it and not lose it. Pranayama training takes breathwork into a different realm, similar to knowing how to continue to travel and have your luggage carried along with you – we’re all on the same train, but I have learned how to sit down, relax and store my luggage while I see others struggling with their bags. You can change this now!
To get the most out of this article follow the guidance in the related video. It gives you a simple strategy of an opening set-up, 4 levels of building a regulated breath, followed by a concluding moment. The detail and explanation behind the breath and these techniques are more technical and dealt with in a separate article. The emphasis now is to follow and practice. Make it regular and you will understand through direct experience.
Opening set-up:
Quadrangular Breath build-up
Level
If you have followed the suggested number of rounds then it will have taken approximately 7.5 minutes plus your settling in time. You can either limit the Level 4 Quadrangular Breath to 12 rounds or continue and do more. If you feel nice and calm in your chest, around your heart, then you will know it is sufficient. However, doing more can only benefit you. Your free choice. Either way allow the process to smoothly conclude and enjoy an inner calm and pleasant meditative experience:
Conclude:
TIP
To be most effective read and aim to understand the above directions. Then follow the video for additional guidance. You can use a metronome app to help keep the pace of the breath. I also count it on the video. The aim is to get it to a point where you don’t need any external input and can sit and manage it mentally yourself.
May you have much respiratory success. Remember – the key is in doing it regularly !!!
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