Breath!

May 13th, 2011

copied and pasted – from http://www.amsa.org/healingthehealer/breathing.cfm - good stuff!

Health Hint: Breathing Exercises

Breathing as a bridge

It is thought by many cultures that the process of breathing is the essence of being. A rhythmic process of expansion and contraction, breathing is one example of the consistent polarity we see in nature such as night and day, wake and sleep, seasonal growth and decay and ultimately life and death. In yoga, the breath is known as prana or a universal energy that can be used to find a balance between the body-mind, the conscoius-unconscoius, and the sympathetic-parasympathetic nervous system. Unlike other bodily functions, the breath is easily used to communicate between these systems, which gives us an excellent tool to help facilitate positive change. It is the only bodily function that we do both voluntarily and involuntarily. We can consciously use breathing to influence the involuntary (sympathetic nervous system) that regulates blood pressure, heart rate, circulation, digestion and many other bodily functions. Pranayama is a yoga practice that literally means the control of life or energy. It uses breathing techniques to change subtle energies within the body for health and well being. Breathing exercises can act as a bridge into those functions of the body of which we generally do not have conscious control.

An example of how life effects physiology

During times of emotional stress our sympathetic nervous system is stimulated and effects a number of physical responses. Our heart rate rises, we perspire, our muscles tense and our breathing becomes rapid and shallow. If this process happens over a long period of time, the sympathic nervous system becomes over stimulated leading to an imbalance that can effect our physical health resulting in inflammation, high blood pressure and muscle pain to name a few. Consciously slowing our heart rate, decreasing perspiration and relaxing muscles is more difficult than simply slowing and deepening breathing. The breath can be used to directly influence these stressful changes causing a direct stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system resulting in relaxation and a reversal of the changes seen with the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. We can see how our bodies know to do this naturally when we take a deep breath or sigh when a stress is relieved.

The breathing process can be trained

Breathing can be trained for both positive and negative influences on health. Chronic stress can lead to a restriction of the connective and muscular tissue in the chest resulting in a decrease range of motion of the chest wall. Due to rapid more shallow breathing, the chest does not expand as much as it would with slower deeper breaths and much of the air exchange occurs at the top of the lung tissue towards the head. This results in “chest” breathing. You can see if you are a chest breather by placing your right hand on your chest and your left hand on your abdomen. As you breathe, see which hand rises more. If your right hand rises more, you are a chest breather. If your left hand rises more, you are an abdomen breather.

Chest breathing is inefficient because the greatest amount of blood flow occurs in the lower lobes of the lungs, areas that have limited air expansion in chest breathers. Rapid, shallow, chest breathing results in less oxygen transfer to the blood and subsequent poor delivery of nutrients to the tissues. The good news is that similar to learning to play an instrument or riding a bike, you can train the body to improve its breathing technique. With regular practice you will breathe from the abdomen most of the time, even while asleep.

Note: Using and learning proper breathing techniques is one of the most beneficial things that can be done for both short and long term physical and emotional health.

The benefits of abdominal breathing

Abdominal breathing is also known as diaphragmatic breathing. The diaphragm is a large muscle located between the chest and the abdomen. When it contracts it is forced downward causing the abdomen to expand. This causes a negative pressure within the chest forcing air into the lungs. The negative pressure also pulls blood into the chest improving the venous return to the heart. This leads to improved stamina in both disease and athletic activity. Like blood, the flow of lymph, which is rich in immune cells, is also improved. By expanding the lung’s air pockets and improving the flow of blood and lymph, abdominal breathing also helps prevent infection of the lung and other tissues. But most of all it is an excellent tool to stimulate the relaxation response that results in less tension and an overall sense of well being.

Abdominal Breathing Technique

Breathing exercises such as this one should be done twice a day or whenever you find your mind dwelling on upsetting thoughts or when you are experiencing pain.

  • Place one hand on your chest and the other on your abdomen. When you take a deep breath in, the hand on the abdomen should rise higher than the one on the chest. This insures that the diaphragm is pulling air into the bases of the lungs.
  • After exhaling through the mouth, take a slow deep breath in through your nose imagining that you are sucking in all the air in the room and hold it for a count of 7 (or as long as you are able, not exceeding 7)
  • Slowly exhale through your mouth for a count of 8. As all the air is released with relaxation, gently contract your abdominal muscles to completely evacuate the remaining air from the lungs. It is important to remember that we deepen respirations not by inhaling more air but through completely exhaling it.
  • Repeat the cycle four more times for a total of 5 deep breaths and try to breathe at a rate of one breath every 10 seconds (or 6 breaths per minute). At this rate our heart rate variability increases which has a positive effect on cardiac health.

Once you feel comfortable with the above technique, you may want to incorporate words that can enhance the exercise. Examples would be to say to yourself the word, relaxation (with inhalation) and stress or anger (with exhalation). The idea being to bring in the feeling/emotion you want with inhalation and release those you don’t want with exhalation.

In general, exhalation should be twice as long as inhalation. The use of the hands on the chest and abdomen are only needed to help you train your breathing. Once you feel comfortable with your ability to breathe into the abdomen, they are no longer needed.

Abdominal breathing is just one of many breathing exercises. But it is the most important one to learn before exploring other techniques. The more it is practiced, the more natural it will become improving the body’s internal rhythm.

Using breathing exercises to increase energy

If practiced over time, the abdominal breathing exercise can result in improved energy throughout the day, but sometimes we are in need of a quick “pick-up.” The Bellows breathing exercise (also called, the stimulating breath) can be used during times of fatigue that may result from driving over distances or when you need to be revitalized at work. It should not be used in place of abdominal breathing but in addition as a tool to increase energy when needed. This breathing exercise is opposite that of abdominal breathing. Short, fast rhythmic breaths are used to increase energy, which are similar to the “chest” breathing we do when under stress. The bellows breath recreates the adrenal stimulation that occurs with stress and results in the release of energizing chemicals such as epinephrine. Like most bodily functions this serves an active purpose, but overuse results in adverse effects as discussed above.

The Bellows Breathing Technique (The Stimulating Breath)

This yogic technique can be used to help stimulate energy when needed. It is a good thing to use before reaching for a cup of coffee.

  • Sit in a comfortable up-right position with your spine straight.
  • With your mouth gently closed, breath in and out of your nose as fast as possible. To give an idea of how this is done, think of someone using a bicycle pump (a bellows) to quickly pump up a tire. The upstroke is inspiration and the downstroke is exhalation and both are equal in length.
  • The rate of breathing is rapid with as many as 2-3 cycles of inspiration/expiration per second.
  • While doing the exercise, you should feel effort at the base of the neck, chest and abdomen. The muscles in these areas will increase in strength the more this technique is practiced. This is truly an exercise.
  • Do this for no longer than 15 seconds when first starting. With practice, slowly increase the length of the exercise by 5 seconds each time. Do it as long as you are comfortably able, not exceeding one full minute.
  • There is a risk for hyperventilation that can result in loss of consciousness if this exercise is done too much in the beginning. For this reason, it should be practiced in a safe place such as a bed or chair.

This exercise can be used each morning upon awakening or when needed for an energy boost.


Further Resources

  • An excellent book to help explore more advanced breathing techniques is Conscious Breathing by Gay Hendricks. (Bantam, 1995. ISBN#: 0553374435)
  • An excellent audio called, Breathing: The Master Key to Self Healing by Andrew Weil discusses the health benefits of breathing and directs the listener through 8 breathing exercises. (Sounds True, 1999. ISBN#: 156455726X)
  • We encouraged enrollment in a yoga class through a local community or fitness center. Most well trained instructors will educate how the breath is used to enhance well-being with yoga practice.

Adapted from Integrative Medicine, D. Rakel, WB. Saunders, Philadelphia, PA. 2003.

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The Third Eye…our physical connection to our soul

April 5th, 2011
There’s a reason yoga instructors ask you to focus on your third eye…and it’s based on science.  The pineal gland lives there, about the size of a grain of rice, it control melatonin levels in our body.  Combine that with the pituitary gland that lives a little further back at the base of our brain and the hypothalamus that sits in there as well – and well – you have the control center to our endocrine system and the workings of all our organs and bodily functions.That says quite a lot, friends.  If you can focus  and bring your attention to these control centers, you will find that you are better able to regulate these functions, balancing them and bringing them to optimal efficiency. A happy working body friends – ask someone whose body isn’t working optimally and you may realize the value of that instantly. Think paper cut – we feel so ludicrously disabled by such a simple thing  – so you can imagine now how a thyroid that doesn’t function can affect your daily life.
So when you are practicing asanas, when your are meditating, when you are chanting or practicing pranayama is a wonderful time to focus your attention to your third eye, or to a light at the back of the head.  Allow yourself to envision the entire skull to be filled with light – it is our connection to the soul.  If you don’t believe me…just ask Rene Descartes.
The system endorine

What are hormones?

Hormones are chemical substances created by the body that control numerous body functions. They actually act as “messengers” to coordinate functions of various body parts. Most hormones are proteins consisting of amino acid chains. Some hormones are steroids, fatty cholesterol-produced substances. Functions controlled by hormones include:

  • activities of entire organs
  • growth and development
  • reproduction
  • sexual characteristics
  • usage and storage of energy
  • levels of fluid, salt and sugar in the blood

Hypothalmus

The hypothalamus is located in the brain, at the base of the optic chiasm. It secretes hormones that stimulate or suppress the release of hormones in the pituitary gland, in addition to controlling water balance, sleep, temperature, appetite, and blood pressure.

pineal body

The pineal body is located below the corpus callosum, a part of the brain. It produces the hormone melatonin.

pituitary

The pituitary gland is located at the base of the brain. No larger than a pea, the gland controls many functions of the other endocrine glands.

thyroid and parathyroids

The thyroid gland and parathyroid glands are located in front of the neck, below the larynx (voice box). The thyroid plays an important role in the body’s metabolism. Both the thyroid and parathyroid glands also play a role in the regulation of the body’s calcium balance.

http://www.umm.edu/endocrin/anatomy.htm

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A Powerful Tool to Help You Achieve What YOU Want!

March 29th, 2011

I know, there are a million of these out there, and there shall be a million more after this. But if even one version sticks to your mind and helps you…then all of this was worth it, wasn’t it? If you keep hearing something, if you keep seeing something, you ultimately have to believe it must be true. And it is!

Our happiness, our prosperity, our dreams can all become reality – we have complete responsiblity for all that comes our way. We are constantly bombarded with negativity and thoughts that lead us down the path of sickness, unhappiness, depression, pain, and possibly even poverty. We are meant to have it all, but we are meant to work for it, and not only in the traditional sense of hard work, but we must keep our minds elevated with thoughts that are positive and emotionally support our happiness.

We must remember that our thoughts manifest themselves into our reality, and so if we can keep our thoughts positive and strong we can make our reality what we want it to be. Easy to say – I know. But it is also with the correct tools in our repertoire that we can make it all real.

So step one:
Set your alarm, phone, calendar, whatever…..every hour on the hour you will stop and remind yourself that you are a ‘powerful being’ or maybe a ‘peaceful soul’ or a ‘loveful soul’ or any affirmation of strength and positivity that resonates with you. Don’t let your thoughts of the previous hour interrupt the affirmation. Don’t let thoughts of the next hour interrupt that affirmation. It takes a few seconds, and you can go back to work, or whatever it is you were doing. But do this every hour on the hour. Try it for ten days…see the changes that can occur in your life, in your attitude, in your relationships, in your role in your very own life.

We are powerful beings…we have to remind ourselves that…we didn’t just come out of the pumpkin patch, we were put here on this earth by another powerful entity – we are the children of a divine source – how can we not be powerful beings? Remind yourself every hour, instead of feeling depleted by the end of the day, you will feel stronger, alive, exuberant. Ready to take on life with joy and peace. Its not just for Christmas Cards…its for everyday living. Feel free to let me know how it works out for you. I’d love to hear.

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Breathing Exercises to Make You Stronger!

March 21st, 2011

Okay everyone…you can do this! The following exercises will help your lung capacity, will help expel stale air from your lungs, will help increase the elasticity of your lungs, and diaphragm. What does that all mean, and why should you care? it means you’l breath better and feel better and look better.

Relax your shoulders, roll them back and front a couple of times.
Shrug your shoulders, holding them high and then dropping them a couple of times.
Roll your head from side to side and all around.
Come back to center and start to breath….long and deep
Now start to count your inhale…maybe 4
Hold your inhale…again 4
Release your breath slowly …now 8
Hold the exhale…again 4
Repeat again and again…try to build that up to inhale and holding for 10, then exhaling for 20!
Be gentle with yourself, enjoy the oxygen intake and release of toxins from your lungs!

More next time…believe me, its good for you. May happiness be yours!

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About time…ain’t it?

March 15th, 2011

I let myself get down sometimes, just complaining about how things are when they really aren’t in my hands. We all get such opportunities, and I excel in playing mine up. Why not? Who wants to take care of the elderly and watch them deteriorate into nothingness? Who wants to constantly clean up pee, geriatric diapers, and laundry that makes hell seem like it would provide a pleasant outing? Who likes to see the dark side of God’s humour? It ain’t pretty.

People, if you love your family, do the best you can by them. Take care of yourself now! so that your aren’t sorry later. Aging happens to everyone- and you aren’t guaranteed a pleasant old age even if you do take care of yourself. But you are guaranteed a crappy old age if you don’t. and as I said before…it ain’t pretty.

Let today be the day you decide to start. Pick up one apple and eat it. Eat the orange before you bite into that slice of chocolate cake. Pcik up some grapes before you grab a handful of goldfish. You can do it. You will feel better. Take a ten minute walk before you eat your dinner. Stretch before you get into bed. …and when you wake up remind yourself that you are worth every bit of effort you put into yourself.

We take care of our cars better than we take care of ourselves. That is hardly the way to say Thanks to our Maker. That says F* you, and that is blasphemous! It’s about time. Take care of yourself. .

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Why do the glossy magazine pictures always get me?

January 6th, 2011

I should know by now…I’ve practiced yoga for about 15 years, shouldn’t it be ingrained in me?  I don’t need to look like the person on the cover of “Yoga Journal” to be good at what I do.  And I am good at what I do:  I teach people to reach their health goals.  I teach them to feel good – to live life to their highest potential.  Yoga is not about that perfect ‘Hanuman’ pose, I can’t do that either.  In all likelihood, very few of us can, and fewer still will ever be served by being able to achieve that beautiful pose.  It’s beautiful, but in our daily lives, really serves no function. We are unlikely to need to reach our tiny little limbs across the oceans to Sri Lanka and form a bridge for Lord Rama – so just get real.

And I am telling myself this, because just this morning I found myself idiotically, egotistically and quite hilariously trying to stretch myself into another one of the poses that will never serve us: “Bird of Paradise.”  It isn’t listed in the 80 some important poses one should be doing, it isn’t going to serve anyone, other than showing off, and the body and mind most certainly cannot unite while you are grunting and groaning.  It just doesn’t happen. 

So be free everyone – you are your own ‘Bird of Paradise’ – you need to be able to breath softly through whatever poses your body brings you to comfortably, and then bring your attention inwards.  Feel good, feel strong, feel like a most elegant Bird of Paradise. You will find that perfect health is not reached through perfect poses…but through perfectly understanding your true self…even if that self can’t always touch your toes.

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My life…my way

January 5th, 2011

It’s true…the secret, law of attraction, divine intervention, whatever you call it…if you decide and focus your thoughts on what it is you want in life, you’ll find it. It will come to you. If you focus your thoughts on what you don’t want in life, you’ll find that too, it will come to you.

So you may as well think about your thoughts and get them right.  Stop sweating the small stuff!!! Really. Focus on the nasty part of your life, and more will follow. So just stop it.

Cut out more pictures of the places you want to go and the things you want to do…and put them all over your desk, your desktop, your refrigerator, your underwear drawer, everywhere!  That way your imagination runs wild with the good thoughts – the most powerful tool we have to succeed in life.  Our thoughts. Why do you think Yogis work so hard to control those pesky things?  Ahaa!  It makes sense…doesn’t it? Control your thoughts ( meditation, anyone?)  and control your life.

Your life…your way.

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Zentemplations for 2011

January 5th, 2011

It’s a New Year…obviously, and like everyone else, it becomes necessary to make resolves that last at least a week. But this is a fun one:  I resolve to make this blog about more than just the one aspect of life, but about all aspects of life.  In my case, that means not only about yoga, but writing, and cooking as well…but I invite all of you to share what makes your life whole, too. 

Yes – yoga is a large part of my life, with all its subheadings of meditation, healthy eating, non-harming, truth, truth and truth.  And the truth is, asana alone is not yoga. My yoga comes in various forms…yoga is a ‘union’ of the body, mind and soul

Naturally then…this blog must be about all of the above:)

Cheers to 2011!

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When Will I be Enlightened?

November 19th, 2010

What does it take?  At what point can I just shake off the ‘small stuff’ and say it’s okay?  I’ve been meditating for years, doing yoga on and off the mat…I walk, I breath, I do everything one is supposed to to stay ‘mindful.’  And yet, put people in my space and my mindfulness is gone.  I can only see the people invading my choices, invading my privacy, smothering my sense of freedom to do as I wish, when I wish. 

I like people in small doses…my husband and my kids, sure.  Everyone else – go away to your own home, do your own thing and stay out of my way, and don’t affect the manor in which I run MY house and my family.  Especially if you are my in-laws.  If you don’t like it – go away. I have accommodated, I have compromised, and I have tried to please way to many people in my life.  No good deed goes unpunished.  You give  an inch – there are countless people ready to take a mile.

Learning to say ‘no’  is probably one of the most enlightened ways to keep your sanity.  “No thank you…no, I can not…no, I will not…no, you can not…NOT happening!” No.  Short and sweet, yet conveys more meaning than the two short letters can possibly ever symbolize. 

Maybe on not exactly enlightened yet…maybe a few more years to go before I am a really good person who can handle any amount of in-laws..right now, I’m still working on my “no.”

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Holiday 2010 Special!

November 8th, 2010

Holiday 2010 Special

One Month UNLIMITED Yoga

ONLY $40/person

Classes  Offered:

Mon—Tues-Fri   6-7 pm

Tue—Thurs 9-10 am

Kennett Square

Call 508-561-7428 for more information

Awesome opportunity for all of you who haven’t tried yoga because you think its cost prohibitive – that excuse is gone!  …and for all the rest, if you think its just for thos who aspire to Cirque Du Soleil – think again.  This yoga makes EVERYONE feel better – do away with chronic pain, feel more energetic, and happier all around.  You don’t have to swing your leg around your neck to feel the difference!

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