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Breathe through your nose! I hear my teacher, Nancy Gilgoff say this repeatedly throughout a class while assisting someone. During our yoga practice we are taught to breathe through our nose only, but as it turns out this is the best way to breathe all day and all night long! As infants we are born obligate nose breathers—infants will try to breathe through their noses even when congested, when they can not inhale enough oxygen through their nose-they cry which makes air enter their lungs through their mouth, when the “emergency” is over, they return to nose breathing. As adults we should breathe the same way, most of our breathing should be through our nose, except in extreme situations when we need a quick shot of air to “fight or flight”. In the nose the entire nasal passage is lined with a protective mucus membrane to keep the air moist and ward off infection. The mucous membranes work together with small hair-like cilia to clean and filter the air we breathe; the air is warmed, cooled, or moistened depending on the outside conditions. When you inhale through your mouth it bypasses all the preliminary phases letting cold, dry, unfiltered air enter directly into our lungs, furthermore the mucous membranes in the throat dry out increasing the risk if irritation and infection. Breathing through your mouth is a more direct “emergency route” to get air to the lungs—it is reserved for those times in our life we need to “fight or flight”. Breathing through your mouth shunts the air to your upper lobes of the lungs. This is where most of the lungs’ stress receptors and connections to the sympathetic nervous systems—the fight or flight response—are located. Breathing through your nose delivers the air deeper into the lower lobes of the lungs; this is due to the turbinates inside the nasal passages. These turbines spin the air and allow it to move in a thin rotating stream, this more forceful and direct stream of air effectively penetrates the lower lobes of the lungs. Breathing into the lower lobes of the lungs is preferred because that is where 60-80% of the lungs’ blood supply awaits to receive oxygen delivery and gas exchange, also the receptors to the para-sympathetic nervous system (the calming part of our nervous system) are concentrated in the lower lobes of the lungs, nasal breathing connects our breath into the lower lobes of the lungs thereby calming our state of mind. Mouth breathing is a shallower faster breath, most of the air stays in the upper chest area where there is less blood for gas exchanges and also the shorter breath allows less time for this exchange so there is less oxygen in the blood, thereby meaning the heart has to pump more blood to get the same amount of oxygen which increases the heart rate and breath rate! Try this and see if you feel a difference in just three breaths: Take 3 breaths through your mouth, then take another three through your nose. Do you feel a difference? You have approx. 26,000 chances each day to take a nasal breath! Nasal breathing during exercise If your nasal passages are blocked, the best thing you can do is to try to breathe through them! If they are blocked and you stop using them the problem will only get worse (just like a child who has to wear an eye patch because they have a lazy eye, if they do not make an attempt to use the eye the body will stop sending “prana” to the eye and it will go blind). If you suffer from such breathing difficulties it will take more time to adjust, go easy on yourself and allow yourself to slowly adapt to nasal breathing, but your body will adapt and it may even solve the problem! Nasal care: keep your nasal passages clean with the neti pot or even by snorting up a little water and snorting it out. Then you want to lubricate the nasal passages so the mucous membranes can do their job—place sesame oil in an eye dropper or on a q-tip, sniff it up into the nasal passages and gently massage with your pinky finger. This is especially important in the winter months. In summary Nasal Breathing:
Clearly making the conscious effort to breathe through your nose day and night is a small and easy step toward living in a calmer state of mind and an improved state of health. We are designed to breathe through our nose and eat through our mouth!! References: Body, Mind, and Sport and Perfect Health for Kids by Dr. John Douillard Written by Bobbi Misiti founder of BeFit Body & Mind Yoga. Bobbi is known for her enthusiasm and love of Yoga. She combines this enthusiasm with education of the body and how it moves. © 2007 Bobbi Misiti BeFit Body & Mind YOGA
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