In A World Full of Bad News, How About
Everyone Taking A Breather?
The rise of conscious breathing
You do it more than 23,000 times a day, but
are you breathing properly? From a rebirthing session to holotropic breathwork,
Richard Godwin inhales the latest wellness craze
Are you sitting
comfortably? Airways clear, back straight, no respiratory conditions? OK. Take
a series of short, deep breaths. Activate your diaphragm, pull the air right
down into your belly, let the chest fall. Repeat 30-40 times. Feeling a little
floaty? Fingers tingling? Don’t worry. It’s just oxygen saturating your cells.
Now take a big breath, then expel all the air from your lungs
and hold it. Relax, you’ll be fine. (As long as you’re not doing this in a
swimming pool.) That slight feeling of panic? It’s nothing to worry about. You
might be surprised how long you can push it before you have to take a huge
gasp.
After three attempts, I managed three minutes 23 seconds of not
breathing. The person who formulated this exercise, Dutch endurance specialist
and multiple world record holder Wim Hof, 59, has trained himself to go up to
six or seven minutes. He claims that by performing this exercise daily (along
with a regimen of cold showers and meditation), we can help treat a whole suite
of conditions and diseases, from depression to arthritis. “It’s so simple,” he
tells me. “That’s why people overlook it. They stay in their brains thinking,
‘This cannot be so simple.’ But it is!”
While Hof may be the most
eccentric person to tout breath as a panacea for the 21st century, he is not
alone. I first started noticing how fashionable breathing had become when I
moved to Los Angeles in 2016. One of the
first people I met, an English film producer, had just had the word “BREATHE”
tattooed on her wrist. New friends told me about conscious breathwork circles
and breathing re-education classes. Hardcore gym types talked excitedly about
breathing as a “remote control for the brain”. Even Hillary Clinton claimed,
in her book What Happened, that yogic
alternate-nostril breathing was what helped her get over losing the
presidential election to Donald Trump: “Breathing deeply from your diaphragm,
place your right thumb on your right nostril and your ring and little fingers
on your left…” and so on.
Now breathing classes and retreats have reached Britain , too: the Transformational
Breath Foundation UK lists events all over the country,
promising that “you’ll access the full potential of your breathing system”.
“Breathfulness” is touted as the new mindfulness (though one attendee of a
recent session in London described it as
“yoga without the yoga”). Breathing: once you start noticing it, everyone’s
doing it.
And, in some ways, it’s inevitable. A whole self-care industry
has made us doubt everything we do naturally – eat, exercise, sleep – and
breathing is at the heart of it all. Since you do it around 16 times a minute,
960 times an hour and 23,040 times a day, there’s an awful lot of room for
improvement.
Still sitting comfortably? You can breathe normally now.
***
“Breath has been ignored by the general public,” Dr Belisa Vranich says. I suppose she
would say that: a child psychologist by training, she now works at the Ash Center in
New York , an “integrative and functional
medicine” practice, where she teaches breathing techniques to firefighters,
police officers and soldiers to help them manage stress. She now has her sights
on the general breathing public. “Pulmonologists have been looking at severe
dysfunction. Yogis have been looking at pranayama. But no one has been thinking
of the average person like you and me. People are realising that they’ve been
completed neglected.”
When you’re looking
at a screen, your breathing changes. You’re like an animal in stalking mode
She has developed a breathing IQ test, designed to measure both
lung capacity and breathing style. In her 2017 book Breathe, she asks further questions: do you
sit in front of a computer all day? Did you experience trauma, fear or anxiety
as a child? She thinks 95% of us are breathing in a way that is
“biomechanically unsound”, which is to say, we’re breathing “vertically”
(short, shallow, stressed-out breaths up in our chests) as opposed to
“horizontally” (long, expansive, restful breaths that make full use of our
lower lung capacity). “Most people have no idea where their lungs are,” she
says. She tells me to spread my fingers between my nipples and my belly button.
“In the middle is where the biggest part of your lungs are. Not up in your
collar bones.”
She tells a respiratory version of The Fall; humans used to
breathe correctly. When a three-year-old breathes, their tummy goes in and out.
Same with animals. But at a certain point we started breathing “vertically”.
That’s how we’re designed to breathe when we face genuinely stressful
situations – but not, say, when our phone pings 150 times a day. The way she
describes it, we have been hit by a “perfect storm”; not only are we much more
sedentary, we’re also constantly responding to digital technology, a
respiratory disaster. “When you’re looking at these screens, your breathing
changes. You’re like an animal in stalking mode. And, if you notice, you’re
spending all day taking incredibly small breaths. The only time you’re really breathing
is when you take a big, expansive sigh.” Breathing properly, she maintains, is
the single most important intervention you can make for your own health. Cheap,
too.
Breathing is automatic and not automatic at the same time.
Respiratory function is controlled in the brain stem, the part of the brain
that controls the basic things that keep us alive, like a heartbeat. You still
breathe when you’re unconscious, asleep or anaesthetised. But, in some ways,
it’s closer to somatic functions (such as walking) than autonomic, involuntary
functions (such as sweating). You don’t have to think about each step you take,
you just head somewhere. Your brain automatically adjusts your steps, just as
your brain will occasionally insert a sigh when it needs more oxygen. But you
can also decide to hold your breath, hyperventilate or, as the more out-there
breathwork practitioners promise, use your breath “to journey between the
conscious and unconscious mind”.
***
When I first became conscious of my breathing, aged five or so –
about the time Dr Vranich thinks we start doing it wrong – I remember
experiencing a childhood version of an existential crisis. What if I forget to
breathe? Sometimes, I’d catch myself not breathing and worry. Not without
reason: I used to faint frequently due to a lack of oxygen in the brain. But
somehow I went through the next few decades barely thinking about it, until one
Sunday morning last year when I went to report on a communal exercise class on
a basketball court in Runyon Canyon , LA , hosted by a group
of wellness bros who call themselves the Wildfire
Initiative.
I was expecting a gruelling session of weights, cardio,
humiliation. In fact, it was quite pleasant. The instructor, Bryan Ellis, a
singer-songwriter with a face tattoo and a messianic demeanour, told us that
since he was “lazy as fuck”, he had finessed his exercise routines right down
to the two essentials: walking and breathing. He asked us to lie down and put
us through a breathing exercise in which we hyperventilated, then held our
collective breath.
“I want you to notice that point of anxiety,” Ellis said as we
lay under the sun. “Because that feeling of anxiety we get when we realise we
need more air is very similar to that feeling of anxiety we get 100 times a day
from the littlest thing. This feeling is natural in life-or-death situations,
like when we can’t breathe. Not when
our phone has died.” I expected to faint, but I felt fantastic. As we hiked up
the canyon, Ellis told me that he can hold his breath for six minutes, despite
smoking 10 cigarettes a day.
I later discovered that his teachings are a loosely modified
version of Wim Hof’s patented Method (known as WHM), which has
gained a cult following among bodybuilders, athletes and celebrities, including
Oprah Winfrey and Orlando Bloom. Hof is also known as the Ice Man, which comes
from his penchant for encasing himself in ice, swimming under bits of the
Arctic and climbing up mountains in shorts. (He made it up Kilimanjaro, but
didn’t quite manage Everest.) He holds 26 world records for withstanding
extreme temperatures, partly thanks to his breathing technique, and runs
retreats in Holland , Poland and Spain ; he also sells
online courses, while giving away the basics free in his app.
“The autonomic nervous system! The endocrine system! The
lymphatic system! The immune system! The vascular system!” he declaims when I
Skype him in Holland . “According to
science, humans couldn’t actively influence any of these. But we have shown
that you can tap into them.” Just by breathing? “Yes! That’s why we made a
T-shirt that says: ‘BREATHE MOTHERFUCKER!’” He bursts out laughing. “It’s so
good, because it’s so simple!”
His thesis is that modern humans live in a comfort zone that’s
slowly killing us (and also making us fat: you burn many more calories in the
cold). Our ancestors used to be fine mooching around the tundra in loincloths.
But as humans have learned to control our environments – with central heating,
insulation, coats and so on – we are losing our ability to respond to nature.
There’s no doubt Hof is a peculiar
individual. But while he is what you might call “conspiracy minded”, he is
careful not to position his method as any kind of substitute for conventional
medicine. And there is some evidence that he may be on to something. The
American author Scott Carney set out to debunk Hof ’s methods for his
2017 book What Doesn’t Kill Us, but ended up broadly
convinced. The most credible evidence came in 2014, when
a team of researchers at Radboud University in Nijmegen in the Netherlands studied 12 subjects
who had followed the Wim Hof Method and found they had an increased ability to resist infection and
fight inflammation. The researchers concluded that this had “important
implications” for the treatment of diseases that involve excessive
inflammation, especially autoimmune diseases. It was a small sample, and it
remains to be seen whether it’s the cold exposure or the breathing that’s the
crucial factor, but there are a number of further medical trials under way
across the world.
Still, the notion that breathing is good for you is one of the
least controversial things you could say about the human body . “All chronic
pain, suffering, and disease are caused by a lack of oxygen at the cell level,”
wrote Dr Arthur C Guyton in his Textbook Of
Medical Physiology in 1956, one of the world’s most widely used medical
primers. “Proper breathing nourishes the cells of the body with oxygen and
optimises the functioning of the body on all levels.” Studies have shown that
conscious breathing exercises such as the 4-7-8 (breathe in for
four, hold for seven, out for eight) are beneficial for a wide variety of
conditions. Conscious breathing activates the body’s relaxation response, which
in turn reduces blood pressure, which in turn lowers the risk of stroke and
improves cardiovascular health. It’s also good for digestion and general
immunity, both of which are impaired by stress. Similar techniques are at the
heart of hypnobirthing classes, which are becoming increasingly popular. As
long as you don’t expect breathing alone to cure you, it probably won’t hurt you.
It takes a lot of
effort to breathe to someone else’s command. But before long, my mind wanders
A little more on the edge are the consciousness-altering
breathing techniques adapted from various Buddhist practices by the psychedelic
pioneer Stanislav
Grof at the Esalen Institute in California in the 1960s – now
seeing a comeback as part of a wider psychedelic renaissance. Essentially, Grof
learned how to induce “natural” psychedelic states through controlled
hyperventilation. The author Michael Pollan tries out one such technique,
holotropic breathwork, in his new book How To Change Your Mind, and pictures himself
on a horse, galloping through a forest, “absorbing the animal’s power”, before
returning to normal consciousness to find his heartbeat is all over the place.
Holotropic breathwork is not recommended if you have prior heart conditions, as
Pollan had. But that hasn’t stopped it gaining popularity in Hollywood , Silicon Valley and beyond.
A British entrepreneur, Poppy Jamie, 28, tells me she was so
inspired by the holotropic breathing workshop she attended in LA that she
decided to reassess her whole career. “We were in this room of 40 people, all
hyperoxygenated. And it was such a release, I cried for two hours afterwards.”
She decided to “pivot” away from her online accessories brand
and concentrate on her wellness app, Happy
Not Perfect, which offers a series of exercises and techniques
designed to help stressed-out young millennials cope with their hyperconnected
lives – a tech-on-tech solution. When she conducted focus groups, Jamie says,
the breathing exercises were the most popular part of the app: “My generation
found it really difficult to ‘think of nothing’ and ‘meditate’, but breathwork
was something they could focus on and feel the physical effects of
immediately.” She sees it as being a bit like yoga or mindfulness, but without
the complicated bits. “I think more and more people need to hear about
breathing. It grounds you in the present moment. In my dreams, there would be a
breathing centre on every street corner.”
Belisa Vranich teaches a client to use his diaphragm to
breathe. Photograph: Willspace NYC
Intrigued, I visit a breathwork practitioner named Federica
Ferro at her home in London . She used to work
in fashion in Milan and New York , but became
disillusioned. On holiday in Mykonos , she decided to submit
to a “rebirthing” at the hands of Katia Boustani, the founder of an initiative
called Global Breathing Awareness. This is described
as a “safe and natural breathing method which connects us with our subconscious
mind”. The idea is not to pause between exhaling and inhaling, so every time
you breathe out you cut it a little short and breathe in again. This induces a
trance-like state in which the conscious mind quietens down, apparently allowing
the subconscious to do a little rewiring.
Her own first experience was life-changing. “At some point,
everything that was in my mind started to dissolve, almost like I was detaching
from my thoughts,” Ferro says. “Then I started to laugh. It came up through me
and I felt this spiritual liberation. After a while, I saw galaxies, darkness,
stars, and felt this sense of belonging. I had this incredible peace of mind.
But it wasn’t just my mind. It was my body, my breath, all of my dimensions:
everything. And it lasted for quite a while.” When she emerged an hour later,
she tried to explain what had happened. “Katia told me, ‘Well, you’ve had what
we call a cosmic orgasm.’” Ferro decided to become an instructor herself,
performing rebirthing work for private clients at her home.
“So what do you want from your rebirthing session?” she asks me
as I lie on her bedroom floor. A cosmic orgasm? Instead, I get a sort of waking
trance. After a few preliminary deep breaths, Ferro instructs me to breathe in
and out on her instruction, establishing a deliberate rhythm. “When you inhale,
you can think you’re breathing in everything you need: love, compassion… The
exhale corresponds to the surrender, the letting go of everything you don’t
need.”
At first, I find it sort of stressful. It takes a lot of effort
to breathe in and out to someone else’s command. But before long, my mind
wanders away from my tangle of deadlines and errands to some other zone. Time
bends a little. I emerge after what feels like 10 minutes but is actually an
hour. I feel refreshed. Clear-headed. I didn’t quite experience what she
experienced, but perhaps the cosmos wasn’t willing.
Ferro writes me a list of things I should take from the
experience: “I now give myself permission to prosper and flourish in all areas
of my life. It is safe to feel all my emotion and let my heart guide me.”
I’m not holding my breath.
How
to breathe
Put one hand on your belly and one on your chest, between your
collar bones. Breathe slowly and deeply from the diaphragm. Your belly should
expand in an exaggerated way on the inhale, your top hand should be still. This
is the sort of “horizontal” breath you should aim for.
Now do it “wrong” to feel the contrast. Breathe upwards into the
chest, so your top hand moves but your bottom hand is still. This is the
“vertical” breathing you should try to eliminate.
Exercise 1
Perch on the edge of a chair with your back straight. Breathe through your mouth. On the inhale, lean forward while expanding the belly. On the exhale, contract the belly as you lean back – breathe out until you are completely empty. Repeat 20 times. The movement should help situate the breath low in the body.
Perch on the edge of a chair with your back straight. Breathe through your mouth. On the inhale, lean forward while expanding the belly. On the exhale, contract the belly as you lean back – breathe out until you are completely empty. Repeat 20 times. The movement should help situate the breath low in the body.
Exercise 2
Lie on your back and place a large book on your belly. Take a deep belly breath so it rises up in your peripheral vision. Repeat 50 times, adding heavier books. This will strengthen your core breathing muscles. Belisa Vranich
Lie on your back and place a large book on your belly. Take a deep belly breath so it rises up in your peripheral vision. Repeat 50 times, adding heavier books. This will strengthen your core breathing muscles. Belisa Vranich
Adapted from Breathe: The Simple, Revolutionary 14-Day Programme
To Improve Your Mental And Physical Health (£12.99, Hay House) by Belisa
Vranich
Patsy
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