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  1. TopTop #1
    Barry's Avatar
    Barry
    Founder & Moderator

    Use Controlled Breathing to reduce stress, anxiety and depression

    Here's a useful technique anybody can do to help out during difficult periods.
    May you be happy!



    Breathe. Exhale. Repeat: The Benefits of Controlled Breathing

    By LESLEY ALDERMAN
    Take a deep breath, expanding your belly. Pause. Exhale slowly to the count of five. Repeat four times.

    Congratulations. You’ve just calmed your nervous system.

    Controlled breathing, like what you just practiced, has been shown to reduce stress, increase alertness and boost your immune system. For centuries yogis have used breath control, or pranayama, to promote concentration and improve vitality. Buddha advocated breath-meditation as a way to reach enlightenment.

    Science is just beginning to provide evidence that the benefits of this ancient practice are real. Studies have found, for example, that breathing practices can help reduce symptoms associated with anxiety, insomnia, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and attention deficit disorder.

    “Breathing is massively practical,” says Belisa Vranich, a psychologist and author of the book “Breathe,” to be published in December. “It’s meditation for people who can’t meditate.”

    How controlled breathing may promote healing remains a source of scientific study. One theory is that controlled breathing can change the response of the body’s autonomic nervous system, which controls unconscious processes such as heart rate and digestion as well as the body’s stress response, says Dr. Richard Brown, an associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and co-author of “The Healing Power of the Breath.”

    Consciously changing the way you breathe appears to send a signal to the brain to adjust the parasympathetic branch of the nervous system, which can slow heart rate and digestion and promote feelings of calm as well as the sympathetic system, which controls the release of stress hormones like cortisol.

    Many maladies, such as anxiety and depression, are aggravated or triggered by stress. “I have seen patients transformed by adopting regular breathing practices,” says Dr. Brown, who has a private practice in Manhattan and teaches breathing workshops around the world.

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    Last edited by Barry; 11-17-2016 at 02:48 PM.
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  3. TopTop #2
    Dorothy Friberg's Avatar
    Dorothy Friberg
     

    Re: Use Controlled Breathing to reduce stress, anxiety and depression

    Works great in traffic jams. Om!

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Barry: View Post
    Here's a useful technique anybody can do to help out during difficult periods.
    May you be happy!

    Breathe. Exhale. Repeat: The Benefits of Controlled Breathing
    Continue reading
    Last edited by Barry; 11-18-2016 at 04:48 PM.
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  5. TopTop #3
    parlyvous's Avatar
    parlyvous
     

    Re: Use Controlled Breathing to reduce stress, anxiety and depression

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Barry: View Post
    Here's a useful technique anybody can do to help out during difficult periods.
    May you be happy!



    Breathe. Exhale. Repeat: The Benefits of Controlled Breathing

    By LESLEY ALDERMAN
    Take a deep breath, expanding your belly. Pause. Exhale slowly to the count of five. Repeat four times.

    Congratulations. You’ve just calmed your nervous system.

    Controlled breathing, like what you just practiced, has been shown to reduce stress, increase alertness and boost your immune system. For centuries yogis have used breath control, or pranayama, to promote concentration and improve vitality. Buddha advocated breath-meditation as a way to reach enlightenment.

    Science is just beginning to provide evidence that the benefits of this ancient practice are real. Studies have found, for example, that breathing practices can help reduce symptoms associated with anxiety, insomnia, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and attention deficit disorder.

    “Breathing is massively practical,” says Belisa Vranich, a psychologist and author of the book “Breathe,” to be published in December. “It’s meditation for people who can’t meditate.”

    How controlled breathing may promote healing remains a source of scientific study. One theory is that controlled breathing can change the response of the body’s autonomic nervous system, which controls unconscious processes such as heart rate and digestion as well as the body’s stress response, says Dr. Richard Brown, an associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University and co-author of “The Healing Power of the Breath.”

    Consciously changing the way you breathe appears to send a signal to the brain to adjust the parasympathetic branch of the nervous system, which can slow heart rate and digestion and promote feelings of calm as well as the sympathetic system, which controls the release of stress hormones like cortisol.

    Many maladies, such as anxiety and depression, are aggravated or triggered by stress. “I have seen patients transformed by adopting regular breathing practices,” says Dr. Brown, who has a private practice in Manhattan and teaches breathing workshops around the world.

    Continue reading
    Try Googling 'Glottis Breathing' and give it a try. I use it near bedtime to try and relax myself as I'm going through the tough Benzodiazepine withdrawal/tapering process.
    Also known as Darth Vader Breathing.
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