Health Awareness and Disease Prevention
BREATH
Breathing and alterations in our breathing pattern can
affect our health. There are many art forms that have a
focus on proper breathing. Proper breathing is an important
part of Martial Arts, Yoga, Tai Ji Chuan and Qi Gong. Have
you ever noticed how your breathing pattern changes when
you're sleeping or when you're laughing or feeling depressed?
Breathing does more than just oxygenate the body. Breathing
removes Carbon Dioxide, helps blood circulation, aids in
the control of the proper PH in the body. Hyperventilation
is an excess inhalation of oxygen without a balanced exhalation
or exchange of carbon dioxide. This can quickly change the
PH balance of our body. Any minute changes in the delicate
PH (acid-base balance) balance of our bodies can be very
harmful. Breathing into a paper bag decreases the amount
of oxygen rapidly entering the lungs and alleviates hyperventilation.
Breathing can be affected by the quality of the air around
us, our emotional and mental state, and very typically by
body posture. During a proper deep breath the diaphragm
pulls downward causing the lungs to descend and expand.
The inside surface of the lungs is filled with alveoli which
diffuse oxygen and carbon dioxide across a membrane that
is shared by the pulmonary capillaries which eventually
leads to the heart. If you could stretched out the alveoli
so the entire inner surface of the lungs could be flatten
it would be comparable to the size of a tennis court. A
slouching posture impedes the full expansion of our lungs
thereby decreasing the intake capacity. During inhalation
the abdomen should rise and expand and during exhalation
the abdomen will fall and relax. Sitting up straight or
standing tall will promote a natural and deeper breath because
the abdominal region is not compressed and will give less
resistance to the descention of the lungs on inhalation.
There are many benefits to deep breathing over shallow
breathing. When we feel tired we have a natural reaction
to yawn and stretch. The body circulation has become stagnate
and the body is naturally trying to open up to increase
circulation. Deeper breathing opens and relaxes the body
and improves circulation. As the lungs expand and descend
it gently massages the surrounding organs, glands, muscles,
blood vessels and other various structures. Blood vessels
such as veins, which are responsible for recycling blood
back to the heart and lungs aren't pressurized like the
arteries that are pressurize by the pumping action of the
heart. Muscle contraction and body movement helps circulate
venous blood within the veins. The heart and lungs are the
two organs that are in constant motion even when the body
is still. This gentle massaging action that comes from deep
breathing impacts and aids the functioning of all the surrounding
organs and tissue and helps maintain good circulation and
functionality.
States of emotional distress alters our breathing patterns.
Laughing causes us to exhale more. Crying can increase inhalation.
These are all natural patterns of breathing but if we continued
these patterns for a long period of time it can affect our
general health. The common affects of stress has a way of
continually altering our breathing patterns for longer periods
of time causing tension that leads to systemic stagnation
of our body's circulation. Fibromyalgia is considered to
be rooted in long term emotional upset that results in systemic
stagnation and pain throughout the body. Regarding emotional
disturbances, some consider stress to be the number one
cause of disease in our society today. Being aware of improper
breathing patterns and correcting them can relieve stress.
You can take breaks for a few minutes here and there throughout
your workday and do the following exercise. Sit quietly
and relax your mind, place your hands on your abdomen, sit
up straight so as not to compress your abdomen, breath in
a long, gentle and relaxed manner. Feel your abdomen rise
and fall. Continue until you feel centered, grounded and
relaxed. You will feel a shift in your energy and your awareness.
This exercise will shift your attention and awareness from
a scattered position outside the body to a consolidated
position centrally within the body. This is called returning
to the source.
It's important to remember that good health equals good
circulation. Keeping the body open and avoiding stagnate
posturing can develop good circulation and deeper breathing.
So maintain a good posture, sit up straight, don't compress
your abdomen by slouching, relax and inhale deeply, and
when stress comes your way don't hang on to it just breath
deeply - let it flow and then let it go.
Christopher Carlow, D. Ac.
Date: 8/19/05