A Mini Life, Breath-Brain, and Helping Everyone Else Relax
Published November 18, 2024
Reading Time: 1 min 32 sec
I hope the next 19’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.
Published November 18, 2024
Reading Time: 1 min 32 sec
I hope the next 19’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.
“When we truly observe the breath, we are automatically placed in the present. We are pulled out of the morass of mental images and into a bare experience of the here and now. In this sense, breath is a living slice of reality. A mindful observation of such a miniature model of life itself leads to insights that are broadly applicable to the rest of our experience.”
– Bhante Gunaratana, Mindfulness in Plain English
Yep, that sums it up perfectly. I have nothing else to add but several of these 👏👏👏
“The brain’s metabolic-energetic coupling to respiration is at odds with how neuroscientists methodologically treat respiration. Respiration-related neural activity is typically considered noise, and entire fields are dedicated to stripping it from brain data.”
The breath’s influence on the brain is so pervasive that “entire fields are dedicated to stripping it from brain data.” How crazy is that? 🤯
It’s a powerful reminder that, although we often talk about the breath’s impact on the nervous system, its effects on the brain may be the most profound (yet least appreciated) of all…
1. Shining your attention on your breath is like a dimmer switch: even if it’s not all the way up, it will still help you see better.
2. Scientific studies of breathing are timely and indispensable; personal experience with the breath is timeless and irreplaceable.
3. Equanimity is when the breather realizes they are the breath.
“Few persons realize that health actually varies according to the amount of laughter.”
– James J. Walsh, MD, PhD
Here is our weekly reminder to laugh. It is, after all, the best “breathing exercise” around… 😊
"Pressure is contagious, but so is good will. Just one person slowing down, one person not putting others under pressure, helps everyone else to relax too."
— — Eknath Easwaran
Answer: Breathing influences this organ over a wide set of frequencies, ranging from as slow as 0.01 Hz to as high as 80 Hz.
…
(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)
…
Question: What is the brain?
In good breath,
Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”
P.S. like I get it
The Anxious Person’s Breath Manual
Want a complete research-based breathing system for anxiety? The Anxious Person’s Breath Manual synthesizes 454 studies into one practical guide.
Get the Manual for $27As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
The Breathing 411
Weekly breath science, wisdom, and practical tools.