Nose versus Mouth, 800000 and 73 days, and Our Best Weapon for Stress
Published May 30, 2022
Published May 30, 2022
Most of the time:
The nose is part of the respiratory system.
The mouth is part of the digestive system.
“With eight hundred thousand new medical articles being published every year, by 2020 medical knowledge is estimated to double every seventy-three days.”
Michael J Stephen, Breath Taking
Those numbers are insane. It’s basically impossible to keep up with science.
Fortunately, though, we know breathing (and sleep, exercise, meditation, etc.) has been used for millennia to improve mental and physical health.
Maybe we don’t know all the science, but that’s ok. We can just try it out, find what works for us, and enjoy the timeless (and timely) wisdom of the breath.
In The Art of Possibility, they have two steps for their practice of “giving way to passion.” I think they apply perfectly to breathing (or basketball, yoga, etc.):
“1. The first step is to notice where you are holding back, and let go. Release those barriers of self that keep you separate and in control, and let the vital energy of passion surge through you, connecting you to all beyond.
2. The second step is to participate wholly. Allow yourself to be a channel to shape the stream of passion into a new expression for the world.”
They sound a little idealistic and new-age, but that’s the point : )
Our greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one breath over another.
***
P.S. This is a play on a William James quote I saw on Insight Timer: “The greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one thought over another.”
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.