Breathing Techniques

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Becoming aware of the breath

Breathing is perhaps the most important thing we do. Without fresh oxygen the body can only survive a few minutes except under rare and unusual circumstances. Yet the science and art of breathing is completely unknown in the West. There are no breathing classes taught in schools yet the ancient sages discovered that breathing affects the mind and so proscribed ways of meditation and breathing to counter habitual practices.

Cultural significance

In t'ai chi ch'uan, aerobic training is combined with breathing to exercise the diaphragm muscles and to train effective posture, which both make better use of the body's energy. In music, breath is used to play wind instruments and many aerophones. Laughter, physically, is simply repeated sharp breaths. Hiccups, yawns, and sneezes are other breath-related phenomena.

Ancients commonly linked the breath to a life force. The Hebrew Bible refers to God breathing the breath of life into clay to make Adam a living soul. It also refers to the breath as returning to God when a mortal dies. The terms "spirit," "qi," "prana" and "psyche"[1] are related to the concept of breath.

Exercise

Sit in a chair with your back upright yet relaxed with your feet flat on the floor. Place the hands in a comfortable position and close the eyes and do nothing but watch the breath as it flows in and out of the nostrils. Keep your atention on the breath as it flows in and out of its own accord. If you find yourself thinking, gently let the thoughts go and return the attention to the natural flow of breath.

Notes

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