Contributing writer for Wake Up World
Breathing is universal, habitual and nearly always automatic. However, you do have choices about the way you breathe — fast or slow, shallow or deep. This can send messages to your body that affect your blood pressure, immune function, mood and stress level.
For instance, when you get stressed, your breathing pattern and rate change, often resulting in more chest breathing in response to a fight-or-flight situation. This is triggered by the autonomic nervous system.1 What’s interesting about the function of breathing is that it’s both a voluntary and involuntary process.
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This means that your body breathes automatically, but you also can consciously control your breathing, which is one strategy that has proven effective in reducing physiological stress markers and increasing feelings of calm.
So, simply by changing the way you breathe, you influence your health. This is a strategy taught most frequently in the practice of yoga. Breathing consciously, maintaining awareness and intent on the function, is called breathwork. Yogis have used this technique for centuries as a tool for healing and to relieve physical, mental and emotional stress.2
Common Breathing Habits May Promote Anxiety
If you have ever watched a baby breathe, you may have noticed they are obligate nose breathers, which means they breathe through their noses except when they’re crying.3 You may also have noticed that their belly rises and falls with each breath, and not their chest.
One reason this feels unnatural for adults is the impact body image has on your breathing patterns.4 Women and men find a flat abdomen attractive and many work hard to attain strong core muscles to achieve it. While a strong core is necessary for good posture and to protect your back, it isn’t healthy to hold those strong muscles in while breathing.
This gradually makes chest breathing seem more natural, which creates vertical breathing, so named since as you breathe your chest and shoulders rise. This type of breathing limits the amount of air that gets into the lowest part of the lungs and creates a shallow breathing experience.
Breathing Is Connected to Your Nervous System
The link between shallow breathing and your emotions is found in your neurological system. It is critical that your body engages the fight-or-flight response during emergency situations, but chronic activation is unhealthy. For instance, when faced with running away from a bear or an assailant, your breathing quickens and becomes shallower.
The response begins in the amygdala of your brain, an area of the brain which plays a role in how you handle emotions.5 It sends a signal to the hypothalamus, which communicates through the autonomic nervous system. This controls your heart rate, blood pressure and breathing.
The autonomic system has two parts: one that raises the alarm (sympathetic nervous system) and one that helps you to calm down (parasympathetic nervous system). The sympathetic system triggers the fight-or-flight response and the parasympathetic system helps apply the brakes to the release of hormones so your body can rest.
These changes happen quickly and without any input from you. However, you have some control over the autonomic nervous system through your breathing. By using controlled breathing, you can calm yourself and create real physiological changes including:6
- Lowering levels of stress hormones
- Balancing carbon dioxide and oxygen blood levels
- Lowering your heart rate and blood pressure
- Increasing feelings of calm
- Improving immune functioning and energy levels
One way to trigger the parasympathetic nervous system is through deep breathing. Anatomically, diaphragmatic breathing can trigger the vagus nerve that plays a major part in the parasympathetic nervous system.7 This stimulation can help reduce the experience of stress, anxiety and the release of stress hormones.8
Diaphragmatic breathing helps correct shallow chest breathing and stimulates the vagus nerve, thereby helping to reduce the effects of chronic stress many experience every day. Americans are no strangers to stress. In April 2019, a headline in The New York Times announced “Americans Are Among the Most Stressed People in the World …”9
It was an announcement that likely shocked no one, and yet came slightly less than one year before the COVID-19 pandemic raised stress levels even further. The benefits of controlled abdominal breathing include a full exchange of oxygen and lowering or stabilizing blood pressure.10 Siri Rishi Kaur — yogini, meditation facilitator and KRI Kundalini teacher — spoke with a reporter from Get Pocket about the benefits that controlled breathing have on health:11
“The quality of breath directly effects the quality of our life, our health, our emotions, our mind, and our ability to feel connected.
When we practice breathing exercises, we are relaxing the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing built-up toxins in our lungs, stimulating endorphins, stimulating our pituitary gland which will activate our intuition, cleaning our blood, strengthening our electromagnetic field, expanding our lung capacity, and balancing our brain hemispheres. The benefits are truly endless.”
Healthy Breathing Starts With Your Nose
Before diving into the different techniques you might try, it’s important to recognize that the most basic is to be sure you’re always breathing through your nose. Mouth breathing tends to promote hyperventilation, which decreases the amount of oxygen delivered to your tissue and brain.12 This can sometimes result in fatigue or lightheadedness.13
It also decreases the ability of your body to filter toxic air pollutants14 and diminishes your levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the body.15,16 This is important since your body needs a balance of oxygen and CO2 to function optimally. While most of the time CO2 is recognized as a waste product, it also has biological roles, one of which is helping your body utilize oxygen.17
When your CO2 levels get too low, it changes your blood pH, which in turn impairs your hemoglobin’s ability to release oxygen, called the Bohr effect.18,19 Nose breathing is a strategy you should also attempt to use while exercising. Although it’s tempting to huff and puff through your mouth, consider reducing your effort until you can breathe through your nose most of the time.
This will only be temporary until your body adjusts to the slight increase in CO2 levels. To achieve this, you’ll have to get used to air hunger, which is an admittedly uncomfortable feeling of mild suffocation. It’s important to realize it’s normal, safe and helps your body develop a tolerance for increased CO2 that ultimately improves your body’s ability to use the oxygen being delivered to your cells.
Chronic mouth breathing has been associated with several health problems, such as sleep problems and poor dental health, which I discuss in “Have You Tried Box Breathing?”
What’s Your CO2 Tolerance?
There’s a simple self-assessment you can do at home to estimate your body’s tolerance to CO2. Dr. Konstantin Pavlovich Buteyko, a Russian physician, discovered that the level of CO2 in your lungs is related to your ability to hold your breath after exhaling normally.20 To do this test you can use a stopwatch or simply count the number of seconds to yourself.21
- Sit straight without crossing your legs and breathe comfortably and steadily.
- Take a small, silent breath in and out through your nose. After exhaling, pinch your nose to keep air from entering.
- Start your stopwatch and hold your breath until you feel the first definite desire to breathe.
- When you feel the first urge to breathe, resume breathing and note the time. The urge to breathe may come in the form of involuntary movements of your breathing muscles, or your tummy may jerk or your throat may contract.
- Your inhalation should be calm and controlled, through your nose. If you feel like you must take a big breath, then you held your breath too long.
The time you just measured is called the “control pause” or CP, which reflects the tolerance of your body to carbon dioxide. Here are the criteria for evaluating your CP:
•CP 40 to 60 seconds — Indicates a normal, healthy breathing pattern and excellent physical endurance.
•CP 20 to 40 seconds — Indicates mild breathing impairment, moderate tolerance to physical exercise and potential for health problems in the future (most people fall into this category).
To raise your CP, physical exercise is necessary. You might begin by simply walking with one nostril occluded. As your CP increases, consider incorporating more intense exercise to build up an air shortage.
•CP 10 to 20 seconds — Indicates significant breathing impairment and poor tolerance to physical exercise; nasal breath training and lifestyle modifications are recommended. When your CP is less than 20 seconds, do not keep your mouth open during exercise, which is particularly important if you have asthma.
•CP under 10 seconds — Serious breathing impairment, poor exercise tolerance and chronic health problems.
Short CP times correlate with low CO2 tolerance and chronically depleted CO2 levels. As a result, the shorter your CP, the more easily you’ll get breathless. The good news is that you will feel better and improve your exercise endurance with each five-second increase in your CP.
Breathing Exercises Are ‘Massively Practical’
Belisa Vranich is a psychologist and author of “Breathe,” a book about using breathing exercises to affect your health. She spoke with a reporter from The New York Times about controlled breathing, saying, “Breathing is massively practical. It’s meditation for people who can’t meditate.”22
Dr. Chris Streeter and colleagues published a small study evaluating the effects of breathing exercises on depression and found improvement in psychological symptoms in participants with major depressive disorder.23
The team concluded the intervention “reduced symptoms of depression and anxiety and increased feelings of positivity.” She also spoke to the Times reporter: “The findings were exciting. They show that a behavioral intervention can have effects of similar magnitude as an antidepressant.”24
Below are five different breathing techniques you may consider that use controlled breathing. You’ll find several more at “Top Breathing Techniques for Better Health,” along with a video of my interview with Vranich.
Choose a quiet place where you can comfortably and quietly do the exercises once or twice a day. Consider using a journal or diary to record your results, because after a couple weeks and different techniques, it may be difficult to remember which works best for you.
•Engage your diaphragm — This technique is foundational to all the other breathing exercises, so it’s crucial to learn this first since it helps activate your diaphragm and teaches you how to fill your belly with breathing.25
?Begin by relaxing and unbracing your midsection.
?Take a deep breath in and feel the middle of your body get wider. Let your belly go.
?On the exhale, roll backward, tipping your hips underneath you while pressing your fingers gently into your belly, giving it a little squeeze.
•Box breathing — This is a technique Navy SEALS use to calm their mind under duress.26 They practice box breathing, so tactical breathing is effective when it’s needed. There are four steps to practice box breathing and each is done for the same amount of time.
Step 1 — Begin by exhaling the air out of your lungs to a slow count of four. Some recommend exhaling through your mouth; others recommend exhaling through your nose.
Step 2 — Hold your breath for a slow count of four.
Step 3 — Inhale slowly to a slow count of four through your nose, keeping your back straight and breathing through your abdomen so your shoulders do not rise.
Step 4 — Hold your breath for a slow count of four and return to Step 1.
•Coherent breathing — The goal in this strategy is to breathe five times every minute. This means you’ll inhale for a count of five, pause and then exhale for a count of six. If this is difficult at first, start with inhaling and exhaling to a count of three and work your way up to a count of six.27 Work your way up to practicing this for about 10 minutes each day.
•Rock and roll — This is a technique you can use while under stress that has the added benefit of engaging your core muscles.28 Start by sitting up straight and placing your hand on your stomach. As you breathe in, lean forward and expand your stomach. As you breathe out, curl forward and lean backward at the same time until you’ve completely emptied your lungs. Repeat this up to 20 times.
•Relaxing breath 4-7-8 exercise — I first learned this exercise when I attended a presentation by Dr. Andrew Weil at the 2009 Expo West in California. Here’s a quick summary of the process. Weil also demonstrates the technique in the video below.
?Sitting straight, place the tip of your tongue up against the back of your front teeth. Keep it there through the entire breathing process.
?Breathe in silently through your nose to the count of four.
?Hold your breath to the count of seven.
?Exhale through your mouth to the count of eight, making an audible “whoosh” sound.
?That completes one full breath. Repeat the cycle another three times, for a total of four breaths.
Sources and References:
- 1 Harvard Health Publishing, May 1, 2018 Command Center
- 2 Chopra, October 5, 2020
- 3 Minnesota Department of Health, Choanal Atresia
- 4, 10 Harvard Health Publishing, July 6, 2020, Deep Breathing Benefits
- 5 Harvard Health Publishing, May 1, 2018 Sounding the alarm
- 6 Better Health, September 2015 Relaxation response
- 7 Frontiers in Psychiatry, 2018;9:44
- 8 Psychology Today, May 16, 2017
- 9 The New York Times, April 25, 2019
- 11 GetPocket, How to Transform Your Life, Just by Breathing
- 12 LVI Global, Spring 2017
- 13 Topics in Primary Care Medicine, 1983;138(5)
- 14 Allergy and Asthma Network, Your Nose: The Ultimate Air Cleaner, What’s up your nose?
- 15 Dental Sleep Practice November 26, 2018
- 16 Saint Luke’s, Understanding Hyperventilation Syndrome
- 17 Physiology, Carbon Dioxide Retention, October 17, 2020, Introduction
- 18 Concerning a Biologically Important Relationship – The Influence of the Carbon Dioxide Content of Blood on its Oxygen Binding
- 19 Buteyko.com FAQ
- 20 Buteyko.com
- 21 Buteyko, Practical Elements
- 22, 24, 27, 28 The New York Times, November 9, 2016
- 23 Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 2019;25(6)
- 25 YouTube, April 16, 2017
- 26 YouTube, February 25, 2015
Originally published at mercola.com and reproduced here with permission.
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- High Blood Pressure Linked to Increased Risk of Dementia
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About the author:
Born and raised in the inner city of Chicago, IL, Dr. Joseph Mercola is an osteopathic physician trained in both traditional and natural medicine. Board-certified in family medicine, Dr. Mercola served as the chairman of the family medicine department at St. Alexius Medical Center for five years, and in 2012 was granted fellowship status by the American College of Nutrition (ACN).
While in practice in the late 80s, Dr. Mercola realized the drugs he was prescribing to chronically ill patients were not working. By the early 90s, he began exploring the world of natural medicine, and soon changed the way he practiced medicine.
In 1997 Dr. Mercola founded Mercola.com, which is now routinely among the top 10 health sites on the internet. His passion is to transform the traditional medical paradigm in the United States. “The existing medical establishment is responsible for killing and permanently injuring millions of Americans… You want practical health solutions without the hype, and that’s what I offer.”
Visit Mercola.com for more information, or read Dr. Mercola’s full bio and resumé here.
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