Have you ever been told, or maybe you have advised someone else, to take a breath to help calm down? It is a common, if acute, piece of advice. It may give a momentary relief but this effect is typically short-lived as a few deep inhales aren’t going to transform your physiology. In fact, only focusing on big inhales can exacerbate your anxiety. Instead of focusing on how deep your inhale is tune into the length and completion of your exhale. Aim to do this when not upset and you will find it becomes part of your normal breath functioning. This takes the same time and energy investment as the above acute advice but turns it into “breath resilience”, something you can cultivate over time by regularly practicing controlled yet simple breathwork activities. Subsequently, your capacity to adapt in different stressful situations without succumbing to negative mood and affect, known as “emotional resilience”, can be a possible outcome.
"Supine and prone relaxation intervals are an excellent way to harness the calming effect of simply breathing without the challenge of holding the body in place."
What a gift, to be able to live your life staying on top of the mood swings that come with emotional and physiological burdens. That’s resilience. It is something that is totally possible to develop. To take it for granted would, ironically, undermine it. What is needed is an investment in its cultivation through the two arms of mental appraisal and breath. But will you do it? It’s easy to say “I know this”, very different to claim “I do this, regularly”. However, as we show below, it can be as easy as laying down and tuning in.
Although the practice of breathing can be simple, sitting comfortably can provide a challenge for so many of us. Supine and prone relaxation intervals are an excellent way to harness the calming effect of simply breathing without the challenge of holding the body in place. Breathing in either of these laying down positions mildly trains the inhalation more while allowing a free, unimpinged exhale to occur. A mild, as opposed to an overly big and full, inhale aids the anxiety response through its ventilatory effect whereas when large typically the sympathetic nervous system is triggered more adding to the anxiety. Simply, laying regulates smooth inhales and allows for free exhales. When you sit up to practice breathing then a greater emphasis on the exhale is possible.
This prone resting state can be applied at any time during the day especially as and when you feel anxiety or shortness of breath.
Prone Relaxation Practice:
Lay on your belly, breathe and relax, has been a staple yogic breathing preparation practice, as an acute yogic therapy, recommended in cases of anxiety or panic attack. By lying on the belly with arms folded and head straight, a slight elevation to the ribs is caused. This allows for deeper diaphragmatic work that makes more complete use of lung capacity, thereby increasing ventilation and thus providing greater oxygen delivery.
Method:
In our current global climate the benefits of a prone breathing practice have been noticed. A recent research report by NY hospital-based clinicians Caputo et al. showed early self-proning in awake COVID-19 positive patients demonstrated improved oxygen saturation (1). In acute COVID-19 cases it helps relieve reliance on electronic ventilators needed by more severe patients.
From a comprehensive yoga approach done regularly prone breathing is a preventive, calming and supportive measure over the long term on both respiratory quality and emotional support that is easy to do and continue. Done regularly you develop “breath resilience” to influence “emotional resilience”.
A prone breathing practice is described in this article Breathwork for Anxiety and Other Difficulties
Link to Main Article:
Yogic Behavioral Support via Body, Breath and Mind
References