★★★★★
The method might be the CURE for diabetes (diabetes type 1 and type 2!) and a lot of other ailments, like almost all grave bowel diseases like IBS, IBD, Reflux (GERD), Colitis ulcerosa, Crohns disease (Morbus Crohn) and so on, see the books by Dr. Artour Rakhimov. It also helps regarding high blood pressure (hypertension), anxiety and so on.
There is a breathing trainer called "Samozdrav Comfort" which is built very well as far as I can see and which is an optimized frolov device.
Breathing Techniques
★★★★★
The link you need for that Breathing Interview with Mr James Nestor on our Radio New Zealand National Programme, is to go to the Site and key in Afternoons with Jesse Mulligan & enter with the word Breathing - that should get you going.
Cheers,
M
EC: Hi Michael!
Here is the link that you weren't able to post yesterday:
Breathing Techniques
★★★★★
Here's the Bad News!! Sorry!! Ready??
Turns out that most of us are breathing all wrongly and I have just finished listening to an American chap who says he can fix this for us, if we will but take on board his sage advice for Self Improvement. (No, his initials are not D.T.).
On our national treasure: "Radio New Zealand-National Radio" to-day, he was interviewed on this gripping topic and sounded extremely plausible (unlike D.T.)
I was particularly intrigued, as for years I was a "mouth breather" due to the fact that I experienced an accident when I was a small ankle biter and my nose got smashed up and blocked from there on in. You could say that years later, after the ops, I had to learn to do what most people don't have to think about (but nevertheless do wrongly anyway).
After two operations to open up the airways, I studied Ayurvedic breathing practices and benefited immensely at the time: even the constant headaches began to recede.
James Nestor in his recently published book: "Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art" claims that the nose is a sophisticated air-conditioning system that, if allowed to do its job properly, becomes our body's first line of defence against a myriad of nasties that seek to enter our bodies via our ventilation system! (Cheeky blighters).
It might be fun to listen to him being interviewed on our N Z National Radio (I tried to copy the link but failed) and you could hear a Kiwi accent at the same time - hey two for the price of one, education and entertainment together!
Or possibly actually read the book.
Maybe there's a Podcast lurking about somewhere? Over to you health enthusiasts.
If you're quick, it will still be on RNZ's site for you to listen to.
Cheers and Happy Breathing
Michael from Down Under
P.S. Said to help with Stress also.
Breathing for Life
★★★★★
Here's what I'm trying to say........ when you get old and worn out then you have to get oxygen into your body. You see all these people with oxygen bottles hanging on them. The are not trying to feel good, they are trying to survive.
As a result of my status, I am reading and watching everything I can about how to breathe. They tell me that babies know how to breathe, but old folks don't. Babies breathe with their bellies, but us old smart folks breathe from our chest. Why....... well the military told us to stick our chests out and breath.
I am working on this and no one on EC is. I think people are missing the boat. When was the last time some bright dude on EC talked about breathing? I have never seen any post on EC about breathing. Are we dumb or what?
====ORH====
★★★★★
This is about the OTHER carb - carbon dioxide.
Carbohydrates have a place in the diet of carnivores which is as a stop-gap in times of famine - I.e. the absence or unavailability of prey.
In a famine, carbs provide strength and energy for a short period of time. Not the carbs themselves, but the adrenaline production they trigger.
This is good for providing energy in an otherwise weakened animal so that it can hunt food, but what it does is not good as a way of life.
Adrenaline creates a state of hyperventilation which floods the muscles with oxygen-loaded blood. Which is good in famine conditions, but what that does, is not good as a way of life.
Hyperventilation interferes with the production and processing of carbon dioxide which is also good, but not as a way of life.
Depleted carbon dioxide enriches the blood with oxygen which is good, but not as a way of life.
Without carbon dioxide, the blood can't release its oxygen to the cells, which isn't good as much as it is a handy thing to be able to do when one is weakened by hunger to facilitate the strength and energy to hunt for a short period of time.
When the cells' flow of oxygen is reduced to that degree, pathogens go in and the oxygen in the cells is spent destroying them. Then the cell is oxygen depleted which means the next pathogens to come along can move right in.
Oxygen and pathogens can't coexist which is why dead bodies decompose - no oxygen=pathogen party.
Carbon dioxide is not waste. It is absolutely necessary to get the blood to release oxygen to the cells and it is provided in the pause between breaths. Hyperventilation eliminates the pause, thereby interrupting the carbon dioxide supply and inviting pathogens into the cells.
Proper, healthy, calm breathing is a light breath in, a light breath out and a pause. One can test one's overall state of health by relaxing, breathing normally/lightly through the nose with the mouth closed, holding one's nose after exhaling and counting the seconds that elapse before you feel a need to take a breath. Not to measure how long you can hold your breath, but to measure how long before you feel the need for another breath. 40 seconds and above is considered good - 60+ seconds is considered optimal and there aren't a lot of people who are in the "good" range of 40 and above.
Buteyko Breathing
My daugther has been diagnosed with Crohns and we have eliminated all grains (except Rice), milk, cheese (except SCD yougrt) and sugar from her diet and she is already feeling better. I want to know more about LND and how it helped you. Are there any doctors who can prescribe LDN?
Please let me know . Appreciate and thank you for your reply.
Tom.
Buteyko Breathing
However, there are good ways to get rid of lactose and still get the benefit of the protein and fat that milk/cream provides. One is: make your own yogurt; and DON'T use skim milk -- use at least whole milk and better yet, that mixed with 1/2 and 1/2 or straight 1/2 and 1/2. (That kind of fat content is NOT bad for you, despite what the conventional wisdom says. For really good, intensely researched information about fats, sugars and their effects on the body, read "Good Calories, Bad Calories" by Gary Taubes. And "Life Without Bread" is another good one. ) Make sure you start with plain, whole milk yogurt as the starter that has no additives, including no added probiotics like bifidus. If you have a gastrointestinal illness bifidus can and usually will colonize your gut, which it doesn't do in "normal" people, so you want to avoid it. Ferment your yogurt for a full 24 hours and all the lactose from the milk/cream will get consumed by the fermentation process. You're left with basically lactose-free natural yogurt that tastes phenomenal.
Secondly, you don't have to eliminate aged cheeses if you're lactose intolerant, as aged cheese (sharp cheddar, among quite a few others) also consumes the milk's lactose in the aging process. Thirdly, butter contains no lactose as it's pretty much entirely fat -- and a healthy fat, again contrary what you often hear from a lot of sources about fats. If you're very sensitive and think it might bother you, clarify it (melt and skim off any residue) and turn it into ghee.
I wholly agree with eliminating sugars from the diet in order to be healthy and to fight disease -- many diseases, actually, not just gastrointestinal ones. I would eliminate starches too (that means grains, including corn and rice). That sounds draconian, but if you have digestive problems that's a must. And you can still eat very, VERY well and very healthily on a diet of meat, eggs, fruits, vegetables, nuts, yogurt and aged cheese.
If you have Crohn's or colitis (I've had Crohn's for 30 years), the best thing going is the Specific Carbohydrate Diet (which implements the kind of stuff I've been saying), supplemented with LDN (a no-side-effects generic drug -- low-dose naltrexone -- that will help your body regulate its immune system). It works! I've been on the SCD and LDN for two years, as have many hundreds of people I'm on an Internet list with, and most of us have never felt better. Ever. I might also add that the diet and LDN virtually eliminated my asthma, allergies and joint pain.
Buteyko Breathing
★★★★★
Buteyko Breathing
Buteyko Breathing
http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/sc-health-0512-pharm-20100512-11, 0, 4146905.story
Q A caller on your radio show said that using Crest desensitizing toothpaste instead of the usual brand had abolished his lifelong asthma symptoms. I went right out and bought some. This toothpaste contains potassium nitrate, an ingredient in asthma relievers in the days when the pharmacist used to compound medicines. I hope this toothpaste will work for me as well.
Or this example:
http://www.peoplespharmacy.com/2010/08/09/toothpaste-lets-her-cuddle-kitty/
I've been treating symptoms such as wheezing and itchy eyes with prescription medicines (including an inhaler, eye drops and Flonase). I started brushing my teeth with Crest toothpaste for sensitive teeth after hearing a caller on your radio show say it helped his asthma. Now my allergy symptoms have almost completely disappeared. I'm only using the Flonase because I KNOW I have a cat allergy! Why is this working?
But note that just because a toothpaste tube says "Sensitive" or some variant of the word, doesn't mean it's potassium nitrate inside! http://www.mynewsmile.com/dental/toothpaste_sensitive_teeth.htm
There are two formulations of toothpastes that treat sensitive teeth. Sensodyne was the original toothpaste for treating sensitive teeth, and its active ingredient was strontium chloride.
Buteyko Breathing
Nose Breathing
★★★★★
Buteyko Breathing
★★★★★
Thank you,
Steven
Slow Breathing
Slow Breathing
★★★★★
★★★★★
It has been over a months since I have used an inhaler.
Do as One Website
★★★★★
EC: Interesting concept!
Yoga Breath to Lower High Blood Pressure
★★★★★