THE SAMAHITA BLOG
Breathing Exercise 3 – Breathwork Level – Advanced – QUAD-Ratio Breath
Thu 07 May 2020
Dr. Paul Dallaghan

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:

Quad-Ratio Breath build-up

Note: we are not taking full deep breaths. Rather at a level a bit beyond a normal inhale. If you start with taking big inhales you can trigger an anxiety effect and exacerbate your stress. We will, however, elongate the exhale which has both a calming effect with improved nervous stability. Follow on:

  1. Begin with the BI-Ratio Breath whereby the exhale is double the inhale for a few rounds
  2. Follow immediately with a TRI-Ratio for at least 3 rounds
  3. To complete our QUAD-Ratio Breath we extend the exhale pause, similar to the inhale pause of 3 seconds. This gives us a ratio of breathwork at 1-1-2-1 (four elements to the ratio). When in an exhale pause (breath held out) it is ideal to see if you can relax the abdomen, especially the upper part.
inhale 1-2-3
 pause 1-2-3
 exhale 1-2-3-4-5-6
 pause 1-2-3
 continue this for at least 12 rounds (just over 3 minutes) or continue up to 30 rounds

QUAD-Ratio:

1 (inhale) to 1 (inhale pause) to 2 (exhale) to 1 (exhale pause), 1:1:2:1

Breath length: most important is the ratio is kept intact. The length above is a standard recommendation that most people can follow. However you may need a shorter inhale (but keep the ratio) or perhaps 3 seconds is too short and instead go for 4 or 5 seconds, within ratio

Conclude:

After your last exhale of 6 seconds drop any effort to consciously breathe. Allow your breath to be free. Watch it. This is easy to keep at or under 10-minutes so you could be here for 2 minutes, a very nice two minutes. Or just be here without any clock watching or time-keeping let the experience flow its course. When the urge to be done arises either get up smoothly and get on with the next activity or give yourself a nice laying down relaxation (savasana or nidra form).

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