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Breathing Your Way to a Healthier Mind

Breathing Your Way to a Healthier Mind

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Many of us lead chaotic lives, juggling responsibilities, deadlines and commitments, taking little time out for ourselves other than when we finally put the phone down and clamber into bed of an evening. However, taking just a few moments out of your day to simply concentrate on your breathing could see a wide-ranging impact on your mental health and furthermore your overall well-being.

Mindfulness has become increasingly popular in wellness circles with many health practitioners advocating the benefits of concentrated attention to one’s breath while allowing thoughts to come and go and in time with practice enable ourselves to gain a better understanding of our thoughts and feelings and a greater awareness of the world around us. Being present in the moment rather than chasing tomorrow with typical abandon.

Leading London based Yoga and Mindfulness teacher Mollie McClelland Morris has more than 16 years experience of helping people to live in the now, gaining a better understanding of why breathing correctly is paramount to living a healthy, happy life and how breathing can help us be more mindful and more connected in our day to day lives. Here are Mollie’s top tips and techniques to get you started on the path to a healthier, cleaner mind.

1. Connection of breath to nervous system/stress

Breathing is both a conscious and unconscious activity. In that way, it is both a participant and an agent of the autonomic nervous system, which controls the aspects of our bodily functions beyond our conscious control. The autonomic nervous system has two aspects, the sympathetic nervous system, our flight/ fight or freeze response which prepares us for activity, and the parasympathetic, which is responsible for our rest and digest states.

A faster breath is both symptom and cause of the sympathetic nervous system. So, by slowing down the breath, and dropping into the parasympathetic nervous system, we receive the benefits, both immediate and long term, of reduced stress including the good feeling of relaxation, better sleep, digestion, creativity and reflection.

2. Correlation between breathing and health

In the modern world, we operate predominantly in the sympathetic nervous system, often in an overstimulated or stressful way. Some doctors and researchers believe that almost every health issue has a stress-related component.

There is growing scientific evidence that specific breath techniques can improve health. This is clear in stress-related conditions, like PTSD, but also in other types of disease. In the flight, fight or freeze state, the body prioritises action over healing, so our immune system function is suppressed. Breathing has been shown to affect metabolism, insulin secretion and inflammation, which are all linked to health and disease.

Another route many people are exploring for health benefits, thanks to new positive research is the effect of Psilocybin, or magic mushrooms, on the body. They take direct action on central nervous system serotonin (5-HT) receptors that help modulate mood, emotion and sleep. Check out magicmushroomsdispensary for more information.

3. Connection of breath to mindful awareness

Learning to “calm the mind” is one of the hardest and most fundamental aspects of yoga and meditation. The nature of the mind is to think, so it is obvious how big a challenge this is. Personally, the way I have found to “calm the mind”, is to connect to my feeling sense. It seems that when I am observing feeling, my thoughts have less pull over me (not that they stop!)

Our bodies are designed for efficiency, so when a part of the body is consistent or still, it is more difficult to bring in awareness. But the breath is always moving. As an object of meditation, it can be an access point to awareness of the physical body. The breath also mirrors the emotional state, for example, a short, high breath is both cause and effect of anxiety. The act of witnessing and focusing on the qualities of the breath cultivates mindful awareness.

Breathing is one of our bodies most basic functions, and most essential to life. An efficient breathing practice has many health benefits, from toning the abdominal muscle wall in a dynamic way, to improving immune and brain function. You can do this “training” anywhere and any time, and you will benefit you even when you aren’t concentrating on it.

Some breathing techniques to try:

* Full yogic breathing (belly breathing) –The torso has two main sections, with the diaphragm muscle as the divider. Above the diaphragm are the lungs and heart and below, the belly, with the remaining organs. When we inhale the diaphragm muscle shortens and moves down. This increase in pressure pushes down on the organs, which move down and out into the abdominal wall. This is why the belly moves out on a deep breath.

If we inhibit this movement (consciously by holding the belly in, or unconsciously through habitual movement patterns), we inhibit the quality of deep breath. Belly breathing is partially about letting the diaphragm and abdominal muscles work to breathe efficiently. Try this one lying on your back in a comfortable position, with your hands on the belly. Notice the hands rise and fall with the breath, but do not force them. You can also do this sitting, but if you cannot sit with good posture, you will limit the possibility of breathing in this way.

* Sama vritti pranayama – “equal wave breathing” in this technique, we aim for inhale and exhale of equal duration. You can add in pauses after inhale and exhale to create a 4 phase breath: inhale, pause, exhale and pause. In sama vritti pranayama, all of those phases should be the same length of time. Start with a count of 1 or 2 and build up to a sustainable pace. Notice what this breathing pattern does for the mind and body.

* Sitali pranayama – Considered a cooling breath, the exhale is done through a rolled tongue (edges folded up to create a tube). Not everyone can do this, so using pursed lips is possible. When you breath out like this, the breath usually feels cool to the skin. Take inhale and then exhale slowly and steadily. Do this for a few minutes at a time, and notice the changes to the mind and body.

 

For more wisdom and inspiration head on over to Mollie’s Website

 

 

 

 

 

 

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