The five simple principles of proper breathing | Sunday Observer

The five simple principles of proper breathing

9 August, 2020

Luckily, changing your breathing habits isn’t all that complicated. All you have to do is adopt the

following five simple principles, and you’ll be sure to make the most out of the 25,000 breaths you take every day:

1 : Breathe through the nose

Every breath you take should go in and out through the nose. You can think of your nose as a little factory that refines and prepares the air coming in to be used by the body as efficiently as possible.

When you breathe through your mouth, the lungs get a lot more ‘unfiltered’ air that is raw, cold, dry and full of viruses and bacteria. So, be kind to your lungs and breathe through your nose.

If you feel like your nasal passages are too tight to breathe trough, that’s most likely because you’ve been breathing through your mouth for so long that your nose has adapted.

It usually won’t take more than a couple of days of nose breathing to open up your nostrils again.

2 : Breathe with the diaphragm

The air you breathe in through your nose should go all the way down in your belly. 70–80 per cent  of the inhaling should be done by the diaphragm so that your breathing is nice and deep. That has a couple of advantages:

 It helps your lungs with the gas exchange because it’s much more efficient in the lower parts of the lungs.

The diaphragm ‘massages’ your liver, stomach, and intestines, giving these organs a rhythmical balance.

The lymphatic system, which is important for your immune system, gets the help it needs to get rid of the waste products from the bowels.

The pressure in the chest and belly is decreased so that the heart won’t have to work as hard.

The chest becomes more relaxed, and so does the neck and shoulders. As a result, the likelihood of pain in these areas goes down.

3 : Breathe relaxed

No matter what you want to do, you’ll do it better if you’re relaxed. Since your breathing reflects your thoughts and feelings, situations that make you feel tense also lead to tense and stressed breathing pattern. That way of breathing then leads to a lack of oxygen which, in turn, makes your body and brain even more stressed.

By taking control of your breathing and making it more relaxed, your body ‘tunes in’ and becomes relaxed as well, which leads to better functioning in general.

When your body is relaxed, your health is good, and your energy is high, it becomes easier to be happy and loving toward yourself and others.

4 : Breathe rhythmically

Everything has a natural rhythm — the ocean waves, the seasons, the moon. Your body is no different. The rhythm of your heart is measured in EKG and the brain in EEG.

The hormones in the body follow our natural rhythm. One example is melatonin that is released when you’re going to sleep.

Optimal breathing is no different: When everything is in tune, your body functions at it’s very best.

5 : Breathe silently

Coughing, snoring, sniffling and so on, are suboptimal breaths in disguise.

It’s easy to neglect all these sounds we make, but a breathing pattern that contains a lot of them puts a considerable strain on the body. The breath loses its rhythm, and we mess up principle number 4 four

Before we sigh or cough we usually take a big breath which leads to irregular breathing. Snoring means we have to compensate through breathing faster.

A lot of us breathe quicker and louder when we talk. All these noises and talking lead to incorrect breathing.

Respiration or breathing. Gas exchange in humans. Path of red blood cells. Oxygen and carbon dioxide are transported in the blood: from the lungs to the organs and again to the lungs

 

 

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