Chinese proverb

See the World, Deep Rest, and a Simple Step for Profound Effects


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Reading Time: 1 min 48 sec

I hope the next 27’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.



4 THOUGHTS

1. A Lens Through Which We See the World

“How do emotions guide our actions?

The first is this: emotions transform how we perceive the world. … Each emotion is a lens through which we see the world.”

– Dacher Keltner, Awe: The New Science of…

“Each emotion is a lens through which we see the world.” This unintentionally yet beautifully explains the power of breathing. By giving us access to our emotions, breathing exercises can quite literally put a new lens on life, providing more clarity, focus, and joy.

Be sure to take advantage of this power this week 🙏

2. How All Contemplative Practices Work (deep rest)

“In conclusion, contemplative practices are a powerful tool for enhancing health. Routinely practicing a contemplative technique may reduce harmful stress-related threat arousal, promote cellular-level healing and restoration, and ultimately promote positive mental and physical health.”

- Deep Rest: An Integrative Model of How Contemplative Practices Combat Stress…

This paper could be the “science mascot” of my life 😂

It’s unique because it doesn’t favor one approach; instead, it offers a unifying framework—called deep rest—explaining the benefits of all contemplative practices (but slow breathing does play a crucial role).

If you feel so inspired, go give it a read. Or, read my 2 min 49 sec review (or listen to the podcast version) for as little as $5.

3. A Tiny Thought on Breathing Methods

Every method works when used correctly, but no method works for everybody.

4. Two Ideas to Contemplate on Breathing & Connection

“The heaven, the earth and I share one breath, but each manages it individually.” – Lao-Tzu

“It is quite a striking example of evolutionary balance and beauty that the trees around us that give off oxygen and the trees in our lungs that absorb it share a similar structure.” - Patrick McKeown


1 Quote

The pace you set first thing in the morning is likely to stay with you through the day. If you get up early and set a calm, unhurried pace, it is much easier to resist getting speeded up later on as the pressures of the day close in on you. This simple step has profound effects.”
— Eknath Easwaran

1 Answer

Category: Emotions

Answer: Across different people, these show similar patterns for different emotions and may be one way to distinguish states of joy, anger, fear, and sadness.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What are breathing patterns?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”

P.S. how to send emails

Nurture Your True Self

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The Breathing App for Diabetes

This is the first program specifically made for people with diabetes to help manage their stress through breathing and mindfulness practices. In addition to the amazing program inside the app, we have some really neat things coming up, so sign up now!

Learn more here.


Amazon Associate Disclosure

I’ve been recommending books for almost 6 years. Yet somehow, I just discovered that I could be an Amazon affiliate [face-palm]. In any case better late than never. Now, any Amazon link you click is an affiliate link. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. So, if you’d like to support my work, buying books through these links is helpful : )

* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


 

Connection, a Wordless Mantra, and 4 Thoughts on Nose Breathing


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Reading Time: 1 min 48 sec

I hope the next 27’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.



4 THOUGHTS

1. A Wordless Mantra

A wordless mantra you can always come back to is your breath.

2. We Are All Connected, not Just Figuratively but Literally

“The air I inhale enters my body and becomes part of me.

The air that I exhale moves into someone else and becomes part of her.

Just by looking at how the air moves, we realize we are all connected to one another, not just figuratively but also literally.”

- Haemin Sunim, The Things You Can See Only…

I’ve shared this before, but it’s always worth revisiting timeless wisdom like this 🙏

3. You Can’t Live There: A Mountain Story to Consider

“I was once talking with the teacher Steve Armstrong, who had trained as a monk in Asia. I asked him if he could tell me about nibbana. He looked at me intently and then got a faraway look and said something I’ve thought about many times since: ‘It’s as if you live in a deep valley surrounded by mountains. Then one day you’re standing on top of the highest peak. The perspective is amazing. Still, you can’t live there. And so you come back down to the valley. But what you’ve seen changes you forever.’”

- Rick Hanson, Ph.D., Neurodharma

Of course, not many of us will reach nibbana (I even had to look it up to make sure it was the same as “nirvana” 😂😂).

But, this story is an excellent reminder that we can’t prolong peak experiences forever, whether they’re from meditation, surfing, running, yoga, etc. “You can’t live there…But what you’ve seen changes you forever.”

4. Four Tiny Thoughts on Nasal Breathing

Slow, nasal breathing is like driving a Tesla; fast, mouth breathing is like driving a Hummer.

Most of the time: the nose is part of the respiratory system; the mouth is part of the digestive system.

Nasal breathing doesn’t make you feel better: It makes you feel how you’re supposed to feel.

“There’s the saying that sometimes when we go looking all over the world for answers to our life questions, that the answers were there, right under our nose, the whole time. In the case of breathing, it’s literally true.” - Eddie Stern


1 Quote

Laughter is the language of the young at heart and the antidote to what ails us. No drugstore prescription is required; laughter is available to anyone at any time.”
— Barbara Johnson

1 Answer

Category: Brain Function

Answer: Slow breathing has consistently been found to improve this functioning of the brain, allows us to better plan, monitor, and execute our goals.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is executive functioning?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”

P.S. me haggling:

Nurture Yourself: Breath Science & Wisdom Meditations for a Better Life

Learn to think, speak, and act in alignment with the person you want to be.

Get started today.

The Breathing App for Diabetes

This is the first program specifically made for people with diabetes to help manage their stress through breathing and mindfulness practices. In addition to the amazing program inside the app, we have some really neat things coming up, so sign up now!

Learn more here.


Amazon Associate Disclosure

I’ve been recommending books for almost 6 years. Yet somehow, I just discovered that I could be an Amazon affiliate [face-palm]. In any case better late than never. Now, any Amazon link you click is an affiliate link. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. So, if you’d like to support my work, buying books through these links is helpful : )

* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


 

Breathing Heals, Memory, and 4 Thoughts on Gratitude and Love


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Reading Time: 1 min 31 sec

I hope the next 23’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.



4 THOUGHTS

1. One Way Breathing Heals (…is that it doesn’t)

“In sum, an incredible amount of cellular energy is spent navigating states of moderate threat arousal, energy that could otherwise be used for other health-promoting biological processes such as cellular restoration.”

- Crosswell et al. (2024)

Here’s one way slow breathing heals. By reducing stress, it allows energy that would be used on stress processes to be redirected toward healing processes.

Thus, we might say: Slow breathing isn’t healing; it allows healing.

2. A Heuristic for How Slow Breathing Helps Memory

“The degree of slowness is directly proportional to the intensity of memory; the degree of speed is directly proportional to the intensity of forgetting.”

– Milan Kundera

Although Kundera isn’t discussing breathing, that’s a perfect heuristic for understanding how slow breathing helps cognitive function: Slowing down intensifies memory; speeding up intensifies forgetting.

3. Only You Know the True Scientific Results

“On the one hand, researchers mainly take a third-person approach—they study the states of the brain using various techniques—and a second-person approach—they use a questionnaire about what participants in the experiment have experienced. Yet only the meditator themselves is in a position to offer true interpretations of the scientific data from their first-person perspective.”

- Matthieu Ricard, Buddhist monk and scientist

Although understanding the science is paramount (and just plain fun), this is an excellent reminder that only you can interpret what it means for you through your first-person experience 🙏

4. Four Tiny Thoughts on Breath, Gratitude, and Love

Breathing saves your life 20,000 times a day; mindfulness helps you appreciate this truth.

A daily breathing practice is self-love, preparing your heart and mind to love others.

Slow breathing is air appreciation.

“It is enough to be grateful for the next breath.” - Brother David


1 Quote

We can take a wonderful vacation in spirit, even though we are obliged to stay at home, if we will only drop our burdens from our minds for a while.”
— Laura Ingalls Wilder

1 Answer

Category: Emotions

Answer: Experiencing this emotion is associated with “elevated vagal tone, reduced sympathetic arousal, increased oxytocin release, and reduced inflammation—all processes known to benefit mental and physical health.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is awe?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”

P.S. productivity hack

Breath Science & Wisdom Meditations for a Better Life

Learn to think, speak, and act in alignment with the person you want to be.

Get started today.

The Breathing App for Diabetes

This is the first program specifically made for people with diabetes to help manage their stress through breathing and mindfulness practices. In addition to the amazing program inside the app, we have some really neat things coming up, so sign up now!

Learn more here.


Amazon Associate Disclosure

I’ve been recommending books for almost 6 years. Yet somehow, I just discovered that I could be an Amazon affiliate [face-palm]. In any case better late than never. Now, any Amazon link you click is an affiliate link. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. So, if you’d like to support my work, buying books through these links is helpful : )

* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


 

Living Better, Loving-Kindness, and 4 Reminders to Laugh


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Reading Time: 1 min 37 sec

I hope the next 24’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.



4 THOUGHTS

1. Why Slow Breathing Helps Us Live Better

Slow breathing is like creating healthy soil in your body.

With it, latent seeds, which are common to every human—those of kindness, goodwill, forgiveness, and confidence—begin growing.

And new seeds of wisdom you encounter are met with fertile ground, allowing them to flourish in your daily living.

2. Switching Channels in Your Mind

“You train your mind to do this by switching your attention just as you change the channel on your TV set. There are many injurious channels in the mind, negative channels like anger, greed, arrogance, fear, and malice. But for every negative emotion there is a positive emotion, and you can learn to change channels.”

– Eknath Easwaran, Take Your Time

Of course, negative emotions are okay and part of being human. But when we do want to change channels, breathing can be helpful. By slowing our breath, we can slow our minds, which can help us change emotional channels more effectively 🙏

3. The Power of Loving-Kindness Meditation

“The research of Barbara Fredrickson, for example, has shown that practicing Loving-Kindness meditation improves heart rate variability, baroreceptor sensitivity, and vagal tone, leading to an ‘upward spiral’ of positive emotions. Simply by having loving thoughts, directed at various people, you can improve your heart health. The positive thoughts release a cascade of electrical and chemical reactions in your nervous and endocrine system that are associated with healing and cellular repair.”

- Eddie Stern, Healing Through Breathing

Controlling our breath is usually easier than controlling our minds. But when we do put aside time to deliberately have loving thoughts, the benefits for body and mind are profound ❤️🙏

4. Four Reminders to Laugh (it’s the most healing breathing exercise)

“The human race has only one really effective weapon and that is laughter.” ― Mark Twain

“I don't trust anyone who doesn’t laugh.” ― Maya Angelou

“I honestly think it’s the thing I like most, to laugh. It cures a multitude of ills. It's probably the most important thing in a person.” ― Audrey Hepburn

“Laughter is the shortest distance between two people.” ― Victor Borge


1 Quote

When the heart is at ease, the body is healthy.”
— Chinese Proverb

1 Answer

Category: Cell Energy

Answer: Breathing supplies oxygen to the mitochondria, which produce this substance, creating energy that sustains life.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is adenosine triphosphate (ATP)?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”

P.S. tax day

Breath Science & Wisdom Meditations for a Better Life

Learn to think, speak, and act in alignment with the person you want to be.

Get started today.

The Breathing App for Diabetes

This is the first program specifically made for people with diabetes to help manage their stress through breathing and mindfulness practices. In addition to the amazing program inside the app, we have some really neat things coming up, so sign up now!

Learn more here.


Amazon Associate Disclosure

I’ve been recommending books for almost 6 years. Yet somehow, I just discovered that I could be an Amazon affiliate [face-palm]. In any case better late than never. Now, any Amazon link you click is an affiliate link. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. So, if you’d like to support my work, buying books through these links is helpful : )

* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


 

The Breathing 411 - The Best (and Second Best) Time to Start

 

Welcome to another edition of The Breathing 4.1.1. Below, you’ll find 4 thoughts, 1 quote, and 1 answer (like "Jeopardy") related to breathing. Let’s jump right in.

 
 

 
 

4 THOUGHTS

1. The Best Way to Invest in Your Health

Investing in your breathing is like putting your money in an S&P 500 index fund.

You’re investing a little bit into your body's many essential functions, including your respiration, autonomic nervous system, cardiovascular system, metabolism, and brain.

Suppose you picked only one of these areas to focus all of your attention on. If you got really lucky, it could make a massive difference in your life (like getting lucky with one stock). But with breathing, like with an index fund, you add a little to each bucket. Together, these gains add up to meaningful health benefits.

But unlike the stock market, there are no speculators, and there is no gambling. You just have to show up each day, add a little to your health fund, and enjoy the compounding over time.

2. A Never-Ending Cleanse?

"The waste that is collected by the blood and delivered to the lungs is expelled with the next inhale, but few people realize that 70 percent of the waste that our bodies generate is removed by the breath. Only 30 percent is removed via sweat and elimination."

- Al Lee and Don Campbell, Perfect Breathing

At first glance, that’s a pretty crazy statistic. But, it makes a lot of sense.

Those other ways of removing toxins (sweating, restroom breaks) only occur several times a day (or maybe not at all for sweating). We typically breathe 20,000+ times a day and upwards of 3000 gallons of air.

So, perhaps it is not surprising that our bodies use the breath to eliminate toxins. And maybe what’s more surprising is that optimizing breathing isn’t the first step of any "cleanse."

3. The Best (and Second Best) Time to Start a Breathing Practice

"Build before you have to.

- Build knowledge before you have to.
- Build strength before you have to.
- Build an emergency fund before you have to.

Let internal pressure drive you today, so you can handle external pressure tomorrow."

James Clear, 3-2-1 Newsletter (3 Sep 2020)

This excellent idea reminded me of the ancient Chinese proverb that begins: The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. If you want a tree now, you need to have planted it 20 years ago. If you need strength now, you need to have been building it previously.

The Chinese proverb, however, ends like this: The second best time is now.

With COVID-19 shining light on the importance of a healthy respiratory system, we all realized how critical a breathing practice is. With that in mind, I’d like to play off of that idea:

The best time to start a breathing practice was 12 months ago.
The second best time is now.

4. How Breathing Impacts Urination during Sleep

"But if the body has inadequate time in deep sleep, as it does when it experiences chronic sleep apnea, vasopressin won’t be secreted normally. The kidneys will release water, which triggers the need to urinate and signals to our brains that we should consume more liquid. We get thirsty, and we need to pee more."

- James Nestor, Breath, pg. 30

When people switch to nose breathing at night, they commonly notice they need to get up to pee less. Here, James explains why.

Vasopressin "communicates with cells to store more water," he tells us. When you get inadequate deep sleep, this communication is disrupted.

Nose breathing at night, as we know, reduces obstructive sleep apnea, leading to deeper sleep. This helps explain why we wake up less when we switch to nose breathing at night.

(Thanks to 411 reader J. M. for inspiring this thought!)

 
 

 
 

1 QUOTE

One day I noticed that I wasn’t breathing—I was being breathed.

– Byron Katie

 
 

 
 

1 ANSWER

Answer: The number of scents the human nose can smell.

(Cue the Jeopardy music.)

Question: What is 1 trillion?


In good breath,
Nick

P.S. Only once every 257 years