How Bad Do You Want It?

Helping the Mind-Body System, Give Yourself a Break, & Share What You Learn


Reading Time: 2 min 2 sec

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


4 THOUGHTS

1. Breathing as a First Line of Defense

“We propose that the ANS [autonomic nervous system] is modulated by breathing so that in sympathetic dominant states like stress and anxiety, slow-deep breathing techniques and meditation can shift sympathetic dominance to parasympathetic dominance…We propose that these breathing techniques could be used as first-line and supplemental treatments for stress, anxiety, depression, and some emotional disorders.

Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback (2015)

I’m revisiting some old papers as part of a project I’m working on and came back across this gem. I think it’s safe to say that, a decade later, research has backed up this proposal 👏

2. Helping Nearly Every Part of Your Mind-Body System

“The reduction of stress is like the great leveler because the messages and substances produced by the relaxation response are sent throughout the body systemically—they go basically everywhere. When you move your body out from the stress response and into the relaxation response, it is good for your heart, but also good for digestion, your pancreas, your brain, and basically every part of your mind-body complex.”

– Eddie Stern, Healing Through Breathing

And this is why the stress-reducing benefits of slow breathing (see Thought #1) are so helpful for so many different health problems 👏

3. It’s a Mistake to Rely on a Single Approach

“…it's a mistake to rely on a single guide. No one else knows your exact journey. But if you collect directions from multiple guides, they can sometimes combine to reveal routes you didn’t see. The more uncertain the path and the higher the peak, the greater the range of guides you’ll need. The challenge is to piece the various tips together into a route that works for you.”

– Adam Grant, Hidden Potential

This is perfect advice for our contemplative practices, too 🙏

4. Circulate What You Learn for the Use of Others

“I follow the practice and counsel of an old Greek monk, Callistus Telicudes, who wrote: ‘One ought not to keep what is learned by Meditation, but one should make notes of it and circulate the writings for the use of others.’ This is why I communicate these inner experiences to those who might be helped, to those who might receive more vision of and more belief in life itself.”

– Paul Brunton, Instructions for Spiritual Living

This applies not only to meditation, but to every aspect of life. You never know when something you share might help someone else piece together a route that works for them 🙏


1 Quote

Laugh at yourself once in awhile; give yourself a break.”
— Greg Evans

1 GOOD BOOK

How Bad Do You Want It? by Matt Fitzgerald

A detour from our usual breathing and meditation books, this was one of my all-time favorites on the mind, written through the lens of endurance sports. It’s filled with inspiring stories and fascinating science that’ll have you rethink what you’re capable of.


In good breath,

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

Enjoy these posts? Donate to say thanks!


P.S. my two new favorite words


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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.


 

Element of Choice, Less Effort, and Focus on Enjoyment for Better Results


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4 THOUGHTS



1. Focus On Enjoyment (but only if you want better results)

“Literally anything you can do to augment your enjoyment of training will facilitate a process focus and lead to better performance. If you will enjoy a given workout more in location A than in location B, you'll get more out of it in location A. If you will enjoy a workout more with training partner C than with training partner D, you'll get more out of it with training partner C. If you will enjoy a given workout more with music than without, you'll get more out of the workout with music. And so on.”

- Matt Fitzgerald, The Comeback Quotient

I think this applies to our breathing, mindfulness, or any contemplative training: focus on enjoyment, and you’ll get way more out of it.

2. Jimi Hendrix and Breath Awareness

I bet when Jimi Hendrix picked up his guitar, it changed his whole demeanor.  Just holding it likely put him in a different state.

That’s what breath awareness is like. 

Sure, we can breathe in specific ways to tune our minds for certain thoughts or our bodies for certain states.  But just noticing your breath immediately transforms you, like a musician holding their instrument.

So even if you don't change it, make sure you at least “pick up” your breathing several times today 🙏

3. Less Perceived Effort: Slow Breathing Helps with Both Layers

“Perceived effort actually has two layers. The first layer is how the athlete feels. The second layer is how the athlete feels about how she feels. The first layer is strictly physiological, whereas the second is emotional, or affective.”

- Matt Fitzgerald, How Bad Do You Want It?

This passage pertains to sports, but it applies perfectly to perceived effort in life in general. And slow breathing helps with both layers:

  • First Layer: Slow breathing improves how you feel by reducing physiological stress (cortisol, sympathetic activity, brain waves).

  • Second Layer: Slow breathing helps you feel better about how you feel by improving your emotional health.

So practice some mindful, slow breathing and watch your perceived effort in everyday tasks go down, allowing you to live a better life.

***

P.S. If you want to learn more about breathing for better emotional health, consider signing up for my 4-week course starting Aug 20th.

4. Element of Choice: Meditation’s Benefits for Your Whole Life

“If I had to say in one or two sentences what the benefits of meditation were for your whole life—for your emotional life in particular—it is that meditative practice helps introduce the element of choice. … We cannot necessarily control what the outside world offers us, but we can control how we respond to it. That is the element of choice, and choice creates freedom.”

- Erika Rosenberg, Ph.D., The Healing Power of Meditation

I have nothing to add but a few of these 👏👏👏


1 Quote

It takes only two seconds, three seconds, to breathe in, to bring mind home to your body. And there, mind and body together, we are established in the here and the now, and you get in touch with the wonders of life, the Kingdom of God.”
— Thich Nhat Hanh

P.S. This was transcribed from this wonderful 58-sec clip.


1 Answer

Category: Meditation Retreat

Answer: Participating in a meditation retreat has been shown to positively impact this metric, representing an increase in well-being, mindfulness, empathy, and ego resiliency and a decrease in depression, anxiety, neuroticism, and difficulties in emotion regulation.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is adaptive functioning?

P.S. I found this in The Healing Power of Meditation.


In good breath,

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


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* 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.