The importance of correct breathing cannot be overstated.
Breathing is responsible for over 99 percent of your entire oxygen and energy
supply. Correct breathing not only provides ample oxygen to your lungs for
long-term holistic health, but also nourishes your body in the form of internal
vital life energy, known as qi. This life-giving energy is responsible for
the growth and rejuvenation of your body cells and organs by supplying them
with oxygen and nutrients.
Poor breathing leads to chronic maladies, such as
allergies, anxiety, asthma, depression, fatigue, headaches, high blood
pressure, impaired heart conditions, obesity, sleep deprivation, and stress,
among others. As a matter of fact, all diseases are caused or worsened by poor
breathing.
Remember, breath is life. Without food and water, you can
still survive a while, but without breath you die in minutes. Optimum breath is
correct breathing.
Unfortunately, the average people reach their peak
respiratory function and lung capacity in their mid 20s. Then their respiratory
capacity begins to decline by as much as 10 to 20 percent for every decade of
life!
To enhance your correct breathing, learn diaphragm
breathing.
Diaphragm Breathing
Consciously change your breathing pattern. Use your
diaphragm to breathe. If you place one hand on your breastbone, feeling that it
is raised, with the other hand above your waist, feeling the diaphragm muscle
moving up and down, then you are practicing diaphragm breathing correctly.
When you put your hand on your tummy, you feel it expanding upwards when you
breathe in. When you breathe in correctly, the air fills up the lower parts of
your lungs first and then goes upwards. When you breathe out,
your chest pushes out your breath and your tummy then deflates and lowers again.
This is how you do your diaphragm breathing:
Sit comfortably.
Begin your slow exhalation through
your nose.
Contract your abdomen to empty
your lungs.
Begin your slow inhalation
and simultaneously make your belly bulge out.
Continuing your slow inhalation,
now, slightly contract your abdomen and simultaneously lift your
chest and hold.
Continue your slow inhalation, and
slowly raise your shoulders. This allows the air to enter fully your lungs to
attain the complete breath.
Retain your breath with your
shoulders slightly raised for a count of 5.
Very slowly exhale the air.
Repeat the process.
Learn to slowly prolong your breath, especially your
exhalation. Relax your chest and diaphragm muscle, so that you can extend your
exhalation, making your breathing out complete.
To prolong your exhalation, count “one-and-two-and-three”
as you breathe in and breathe out. Make sure that they become balanced. Once
you have mastered that, then try to make your breathing out a little longer than
your breathing in.
Correct breathing is developing your awareness of good posture
at all times.
Stephen Lau
Copyright© by Stephen Lau
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