Friday, August 28, 2020

Handling Uncertainty - a Philosophical Approach


Preparing Your Mind for Uncertain Times

What ancient philosophers can teach us about embracing the unknown

Reprented from The Atlantic, 8/25/2020, written by Eric Weiner


This is a time of questions without answers. Will I get infected? When will there be a vaccine? Is my job secure? When will life be normal again? The experts may have guesses, or estimates, for some of these quandaries but there is no certainty, and this drives us nuts.

Humans abhor uncertainty, and will do just about anything to avoid it, even choosing a known bad outcome over an unknown but possibly good one. In one British study participants experienced greater stress when they had a 50 percent chance of receiving an electric shock than when they had a 100 percent chance. Intolerance for uncertainty puts people at greater risk for ailments such as depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

We take it as a given that uncertainty is always bad and, conversely, that certitude is always good. Yet ancient philosophy, as well as a growing body of scientific evidence, suggests otherwise. Uncertainty need not hobble us, and “in the right form and in the right amount, it’s actually a great pleasure,” says Daniel Gilbert, a psychology professor at Harvard.


We engage in certain activities—such as watching thrillers or reading mysteries—precisely because the outcome is uncertain. Or, say you receive a note from a secret admirer. The mystery of who sent it, Gilbert says, yields “the kind of uncertainty you would find delicious and delightful.” Yet we remain largely oblivious to our own love of pleasant—call it benign—uncertainty. Gilbert and his colleagues have found that even though uncertainty about a positive event prolongs people’s pleasure, we’re generally convinced that we’ll be happiest when all uncertainty is eliminated.

What about the darker kind of uncertainty, the kind many of us are facing now? Not only the immediate suffering of illness and job loss caused by the pandemic, but its open-ended nature. We don’t know when it will end. You might have noticed that this kind of uncertainty—let’s call it malign uncertainty—tends to make bad moods worse. But, again, this is only a tendency, not a foregone conclusion. We are not fated to suffer when faced with malign uncertainty. We have a choice.


In my experience, there are two ways to solve the “problem” of the unknown: by decreasing the amount of perceived risk or by increasing our tolerance for uncertainty. Most of us focus almost exclusively on the former. Many philosophers think this is a mistake.


Philosophers have wrestled with uncertainty and impermanence since at least the time of the ancient Greeks. Stoicism, a philosophy that flourished in the third century B.C. in Athens, is especially well suited for helping people cope with uncertainty. And for good reason: The Stoics lived during particularly unsettled times. Athens had lost much of its independence as a city-state, and the death of Alexander the Great several years earlier had left a power vacuum in the region. The old order had collapsed and a new one had yet to take its place.

Much of life lies beyond our control, Stoics believe, but we do control what matters most: our opinions, impulses, desires, and aversions. Our mental and emotional states. “Change what you can, accept what you cannot” sums up the Stoic creed. Master this skill, they say, and you will be “invincible.” This isn’t easy, the Stoics concede, but it is possible. Accepting the uncertainty inherent in life—particularly pandemic life—is better than fighting a constant battle against it, one we are bound to lose, the Stoics would say.


There’s a scene in the movie Lawrence of Arabia where Lawrence, played by Peter O’Toole, calmly extinguishes a match between his thumb and his forefinger. A fellow officer tries it himself, and squeals in pain.

“Oh! It damn well hurts,” he says.

“Certainly it hurts,” Lawrence replies.

“Well, what’s the trick, then?”

“The trick,” Lawrence says, “is not minding that it hurts.”

Lawrence’s response is pure Stoic. Sure, he felt the pain, yet it remained a sensation, a reflex. It never metastasized into panic. Lawrence didn’t mind the pain, in the literal sense of the word: He didn’t allow his mind to dwell on, and amplify, what his body had felt.


Likewise, the pandemic has hijacked the circumstances of our lives—that’s the reality we can’t avoid. But our minds and our reactions are still our own.


To show the power of mindset, Stoics use the metaphor of a cylinder rolling down a hill. Gravity ensures the cylinder will start rolling, but its shape determines how smoothly and quickly it rolls. We can’t control the hill, or gravity, but we can control the shape of our cylinder, the state of our minds.


For instance, let’s say you find yourself, like many parents, working from home while caring for a young child. Those facts represent the hill; they are immovable. What you can move is your attitude. It needn’t be a momentous shift either—we can’t all be Mother Teresa—but a subtle realignment from resistance to, if not total acceptance, at least tolerance.

The ability to tolerate uncertainty can bring great rewards. Uncertainty, after all, drives the quest for knowledge. The best scientists know this intuitively, and are willing to live with unknowns as they explore new frontiers. “I don’t have to know an answer,” the theoretical physicist Richard Feynman said. “I don’t feel frightened not knowing things, by being lost in a mysterious universe without any purpose.” Tolerance for uncertainty and ambiguity are also linked with greater creative thinking, as several studies have found. The English Romantic poet John Keats introduced the term negative capability to describe a similar phenomenon. Writing to his brothers in 1817, he posited that writers are at their most creative when “capable of being in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after fact and reason.”


Japanese philosophers go a step further. Don’t merely tolerate uncertainty and its close cousin impermanence, they counsel; celebrate it. “The most precious thing in life is its uncertainty,” wrote Yoshida Kenkō, a 14th-century Buddhist monk.

Consider the sakura, or cherry blossom. The trees are famously fleeting. They bloom for only a week or two, and then the petals are gone. Other flowers—plum blossoms, for instance—last considerably longer. Why go to such great lengths to cultivate something as fragile as the cherry blossom?

Because “beauty lies in its own vanishing,” says Donald Richie in his book A Tractate on Japanese Aesthetics. Life is ephemeral. Everything we know and love will one day cease to exist, ourselves included. That is life’s one certainty. The cherry blossom is lovely not despite its transience but because of it. This has always been the case. 


The pandemic has driven home our own transience. And while it may be too much to ask to celebrate this truth under such dire circumstances, we can learn to tolerate the unknown, and perhaps even catch glimpses of the beauty underlying life’s uncertainties.


Erich Weiner is the author of The Socrates Express: In Search of Life Lessons from Dead Philosophers.




Sunday, July 5, 2020

Cultivating Bravery in Everyday Life

How to be brave - 7 traits of a brave person



To cultivate bravery in your own life, make sure to set clear boundaries with others and take care of yourself first. Get out of your comfort zone and set goals that you feel you can achieve. Don’t neglect your inner health, either. Remember to meditate and practice positive self-talk so you can bring your best self forward into the world.


Brave People:


  1. THEY ALWAYS STAND UP FOR WHAT’S RIGHT, EVEN IF THEY’RE STANDING ALONE.


A person who displays courage will never hesitate to stand up for others or voice their beliefs even if they have an unpopular opinion. Bravery doesn’t just mean physically coming to the aid of others; it means using your voice to speak up about wrongdoings. As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.” We can see a perfect example of this right now with the Black Lives Matter movement, and MLK would undoubtedly be proud.

If you have a brave person in your life, you will feel you can always go to them for the truth about a situation. They won’t ever sugarcoat things or make everything out to be butterflies and rainbows, because they want the best for you. Brave people put the well-being of others first, and keep them out of harm’s way. They never use their courage to hurt others.


  1. THEY STICK TO THEIR MORALS AND DON’T GIVE IN TO PEER PRESSURE


A brave person doesn’t care what other people think of them. They follow their moral compass, and if they don’t want to participate in an activity, they will politely let their friends or family know. For instance, if a person goes to a party and doesn’t drink, but their friends urge them to, they still have no problem saying no. Real friends don’t stop being your friend because of differing beliefs anyway.


  1. A BRAVE PERSON WILL SHOW KINDNESS TO EVERYONE THEY MEET.


Kindness takes a lot more courage than hate. It takes a lot of strength to quell your fears and fully open your heart to others. If you listen to most conversations today, you’ll probably hear gossip and superficial topics being brought up some of the time. A brave person never talks about people behind their backs. They speak lovingly to everyone, whether in person or conversation with someone else.

They treat others how they wish to be treated. Of course, they make mistakes like everyone, but most of the time, they have a kind, poised demeanor.



  1. THEY TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR LIVES.


A brave person does not shift the blame for their problems onto others. They take full responsibility for the problems in their life and do what they can to correct them. A person full of courage would never make others feel small so that they can feel more significant. They own up to their mistakes and acknowledge what they need to work on.



  1. BRAVE PEOPLE KNOW WHEN TO SAY “NO.”


A courageous person knows when to back down from something, whether it’s a work project, activities after school or work, or even a friendship. They don’t feel bad for doing what’s best for them, as long as it doesn’t hurt others. If they’ve taken on too much at work, for instance, they wouldn’t hesitate to tell their boss “no” if he or she assigns them another task. They consider everyone’s feelings, but ultimately, they know they can’t keep giving from an empty cup.


  1. A BRAVE PERSON KNOWS WHEN TO ASK OTHERS FOR HELP.


They also know that they can’t accomplish everything alone. Courageous people don’t feel bad about asking other people for help, because they know pride can quickly alienate them. They’ve banished any thoughts of shame or guilt about asking other people for help. As they say, everything gets done a lot quicker when we work together.

Brave people understand that while some things must get done alone, you just can’t accomplish specific tasks by yourself. They have a supportive group of people to reach out to when they need something, and they would do the same for others.


  1. THEY SEE THEIR IDEAS AND PLANS THROUGH TO THE END.


A courageous person doesn’t fold on their plans. They have a vision, and nothing in the world will stop them from achieving their goals. They make sure that their dream will positively impact others as well, and if not, they shift their goals so everyone benefits. A person with courage will not let minor setbacks and obstacles keep them from their final destination.

After all, what dreams got accomplished without blood, sweat, and tears? Nothing worthwhile ever comes easily, and the bravest people know this. However, they don’t allow any fears to stop them; they simply work through the fears and expand their comfort zones.


HERE ARE SOME WAYS TO HAVE MORE COURAGE:


Get out of your comfort zone. Talk to new people and do kind things for them. Set goals and don’t stop until you achieve them. Know when to set boundaries with people or projects. Have positive self-talk. Meditate.

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Four Habits to Improve Mental Health

Adapted from an article published by "Power of Positivity."


Our habits can influence our neurotransmitters (dopamine, norepinephrine/noradrenaline, serotonin, GABA) and, in so doing, improve the state of our mental health.


1 – OBSERVE YOUR MIND

“You have the power over your mind – not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.”~ Marcus Aurelius


Metacognition is actively observing your mental processes and understanding habitual emotional reactive patterns. It’s also a crucial component of good mental health.

If you’ve ever sat back and wondered why in the heck your mind is making so much noise, then you know what metacognition is. You’ve also made a crucial and potentially life-changing discovery: you are not your mind or feelings.

Rather, you are the awareness behind the thoughts and feelings. When you recognize and embrace this fact, you can observe the activity of our mind at a distance – as a passive ‘witness.’ You may even start to get curious about the inner-workings of your mind, and it’s this attitude that will lead to a transformation.

While it’s possible to observe your mind amid daily life, it’s often difficult – especially at first. This is where a regular meditation practice can help.

Try taking 15-20 minutes at the start of each day to sit and allow your mind to become quiet.



2 – SLOW DOWN

The soft overcomes the hard. The slow overcomes the fast.” ~ Lao-tzu


Okay, so this sounds like commonsensical gibberish nonsense. “What? Slow down? That’s it?”

Okay, then why do we fail at things repeatedly?

Reason #1: society has taught us that frenzied action is the same as productivity. Not only is this untrue, but it’s also potentially disastrous to our mental and physical health.

Slowing down – more specifically, not rushing – can have a powerful impact on our state of mind. Things still get accomplished, and with much less stress. Often, you’ll find that slowing down and focusing on one task at a time (see ‘Single-tasking’ next) not only improves the quality of your work but, ironically, can increase the pace at which things get done!

Practice performing one task a day slowly. Put all of your attention on the job – washing the dishes, showering, vacuuming, etc. – and while doing the activity gradually and deliberately.



3 – SINGLE TASK

“He did each single thing, as if he did nothing else.”   ~ Charles Dickens


Few things have been more damaging to our state of mind than multitasking. How harmful is it? Well, per a study conducted by researchers at Michigan State University, participants who multitasked using multiple forms of entertainment media “showed symptoms of anxiety and depression” based on mental health surveys.

Did you get that? Multitasking – even with entertainment – causes symptoms that mimic those of anxiety and depression!

The truth of the matter is that not only is multitasking a myth; it’s also stress-inducing and harmful.

The human brain simply is not meant for multitasking. When we perform a job, our neural circuitry is concentrated around that task – and that task only. It is incapable of diverting mental resources to a secondary task.

Unless, say, we’re talking about chewing gum and walking at the same time.

Instead, make it a habit to focus your attention single-mindedly on each task. Not only is this a more effective way of living, but it’s also much more peaceful.



4 – BE COMPASSIONATE TOWARDS YOURSELF

“If compassion does not include yourself, it is incomplete.”  ~ Jack Kornfield


Most people have good hearts. Although the media may try to convince you otherwise (their motto is “Bad news sells” after all) there is plenty of good happening in the world.

Since most people have good hearts, most of us are compassionate by nature. When someone is visibly hurting, we will often try to comfort and console.

But one problem that so many of us have is this: we don’t extend our compassionate nature to ourselves.

Indeed, each one of us is our own worst critic. We don’t even think about self-compassion. Many people live their entire lives without ever once practicing self-love or compassion.

To deny yourself some compassion is not only wrong; it is harmful to your mental wellbeing.

How do you practice self-compassion? Try picturing yourself as a child. If you have a picture of when you were a kid, take a good look at it.

Would you ever want this individual to suffer? Of course not. Talk to that inner child with compassion and love. How do you feel during and afterward?


Saturday, June 6, 2020

ZOOM/ FB LIVE CLASS INFORMATION



Zoom online classes 
Donations to class from $0- $15, please use Venmo, Zelle, and PayPal. Contact me for payment and class info at mirayogastudio@gmail.com



EATING HABITS OF YOGA PRACTITIONERS



1 – THEY EAT ONLY WHEN THEY ARE HUNGRY
What a lot of people don’t realize is that there is a tremendous difference between appetite and hunger. Hunger is when you are actually hungry for food. It is when your body is telling you that it is time, once again, to acquire nutrients.
Appetite is the feeling of being hungry. Just because you have an appetite, that doesn’t mean that you are starving. Appetite is affected by a variety of different factors. For example, the smell of a particular food may trigger a desire to eat, even if you aren’t really hungry.
Many people learn as children that they must “clean their plates.” This means that they have to eat everything on their plates—regardless of whether or not they are truly hungry. This is a destructive mindset because it encourages people to force-feed themselves, which can make them overweight or obese.
There are people who eat out of a response to an emotion. They eat whenever they feel anxious, angry, sad, or annoyed. Eating out of emotion is another extension of the appetite concept. People have an appetite, suddenly, when they are facing a stressful situation. There is that infamous habit of scarfing down a pint of ice cream out of sadness or stress.
Healthy and fit people eat when they are actually hungry for food. They do not eat until their stomachs feel like “exploding.” They also know that it is not a wise eating habit to eat things just because those things are right in front of them.

2 – THEY ACTIVELY THINK ABOUT NUTRITION
Healthy and fit people engage in the wise eating habit of actively thinking about nutrition. For example, while preparing meals, a healthy/fit person might think about the most nutritious ratios of food to include in a meal. Generally, nutritionists recommend that ½ of a meal consists of vegetables, ¼ consists of protein, and ¼ consists of carbs. A healthy/fit person might take these ratios into account to create the healthiest meals.
Someone who is actively thinking about nutrition will think about the nutrition content of each ingredient as they are preparing and eating food.
There are situations where you may end up eating whatever your friends and family members are eating. Your loved ones might eat things that you would never touch on your own time. However, as a result of being around them, you might end up taking on their eating habits. Again, this is where actively thinking about nutrition comes in.

3 – THEY STAY AWAY FROM OPTIONS THAT ARE UNHEALTHY
Healthy/fit people tend to stay away from unhealthy food options. For example, fast food items have a reputation for being exceptionally unhealthy and fattening. It is the type of food that healthy/fit people would stay away from on their thoughtful eating journeys. They also try to stay away from junk food items like candy, cookies, cakes, fried foods, and whatever else.

4 –  HEALTHY/FIT PEOPLE EAT SLOWLY
It takes some time for your brain to register the fact that you have eaten enough. Slowly eating gives your mind enough time to make your body aware that you are satiated. If you devour food, you will not provide your brain enough time to register being satisfied, and in a quest to be satiated, you may eat more than you need.
It is especially important to chew slowly because the more you do, the more appetite-suppressing hormones release into your body. At the same time, there is a drop in appetite-stimulating hormones.

5 – THEY CONSUME WATER
Another wise eating habit is to drink water to stay hydrated. There are some people who eat more food or drink sugary beverages when, in reality, they are just thirsty for water. As a result, they are putting extra nutrients and calories into their bodies that they do not really need. Also, 60% of the human body is water. Water is a crucial nutrient that directly affects metabolism.

6 – COOKING MEALS USING HEALTHIER INGREDIENTS
Healthy/fit people try to cook and eat healthier alternatives. For example, many people cook with plant-based oils like vegetable oil, olive oil, and walnut oil—as opposed to animal-based fats like butter. People who consume dairy may opt for dairy products that are low-fat. Sometimes, you can just completely omit an ingredient from your meal if it is too unhealthy.

7 – THEY PREFER EATING FRESH, WHOLESOME FOODS
 Healthy/fit people make it a point to eat the most wholesome foods that they can find. Ideally, your meals should be as close to being composed of fresh, whole ingredients as possible. For example, you are much better off eating fresh broccoli that you recently bought from the store than eating packaged, pre-processed broccoli in a container that has preservatives, butter, salt, and artificial flavors added to it.
Ideally, you should be eating meals that have been prepared from fresh foods. The least processed, the healthier the food is.
You don’t need to make meals overly fatty or salty to make them taste “good.” Using the right mixture of ingredients, you can easily create meals that are tasty, satiating, and sit well in your stomach.

8 – HEALTHY/FIT PEOPLE DEVELOP A TASTE AND HABIT FOR EATING HEALTHY
People who are healthy and fit develop a taste for healthy food. They veer themselves away from the stuff that they know is worse for their health. For example, they may only have appetites for healthier kinds of food.  People may eventually develop a repulsion toward foods that are not good for them while craving healthier foods.  After a while of veering yourself toward healthier foods, you may notice a difference between how the unhealthy foods taste and how the healthy foods taste.
Develop a habit of wise eating by surrounding yourself by foods that are good for you. Stock your home with fresh, whole, unprocessed ingredients that are nutrient-dense and healthy. Make sure to bring snacks with you that are healthy so that you are not forced to buy unhealthy foods.

9 – CHOOSING QUALITY, NOT QUANTITY
Some people have it in their minds that eating as much as possible is a good thing. This is even a value that is ingrained in many cultures. “Eat, eat, eat!” is the motto of people from some cultural backgrounds. Many people have grown up in these cultural backgrounds to find themselves overweight and with health issues.
However, it is not good to eat as much as possible. When it comes to wise eating habits, you must focus on quality—not quantity. Focus on the quality of the food that you are consuming—not the quantity. Is your food nutrient-dense? What nutrients are plentiful in the food?
Eating as much as possible on a regular basis is generally not healthy, even if some people encourage it. Having such a habit will give you a one-way ticket to not being a healthy and fit person. It may even give you a variety of health problems.

10 – LOOKING AT THE INGREDIENT LABEL
Health and fit people always look at ingredient labels. Manufacturers are sneaky because they sometimes put undesirable ingredients into their food products that would have otherwise been considered “healthy.”
For example, a lot of companies put added sugar into their foods. At first, a can of peaches might appear healthy. After all, peaches are healthy, right? Well, if you look at the label and see that there are 50 grams of added sugar added to the peaches, then that is a sign that the canned peaches are not healthy.
This is also the same deal with ingredients such as salt and fat. You may purchase frozen food, thinking that it is healthy. However, upon looking at the ingredient label, you may realize that the company laced the food with butter and salt.
The ingredient label informs you about the nutrition status of a food product. You can tightly plan out your meals based on the information that you see on nutrition labels. For example, if you need more fiber in your diet, the nutrition label on a bag of flax might inform you of its high fiber content. A nutrition label that shows a higher fat content might warn you to stay away from that product.

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

The Healing Power of Proper Breathing


How we inhale and exhale has profound effects on our health- and not just during a crisis like the pandemic.
—This essay is adapted from James Nestor’s new book, “Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art”,   published on May 26 by Riverhead Booksand and is reprinted from the Wall Street Journal.


Breathing is not an activity that anyone is feeling confident about right now. We spend our days covering our mouths and noses with masks, struggling to inhale and exhale. We toss and turn at night, worried that we might be feeling a cough coming on or some tightness in our chests. Covid-19 has turned us into a planet of breath-obsessed people.
But as hard as it might be to fathom now, there is a silver lining here: Breathing is a missing pillar of health, and our attention to it is long overdue.
Most of us misunderstand breathing. We see it as passive, something that we just do. Breathe, live; stop breathing, die. But breathing is not that simple and binary. How we breathe matters, too.
Inside the breath you just took, there are more molecules of air than there are grains of sand on all the world’s beaches. We each inhale and exhale some 30 pounds of these molecules every day—far more than we eat or drink. The way that we take in that air and expel it is as important as what we eat, how much we exercise and the genes we’ve inherited.

Doctors who study breathing say that the vast majority of Americans do it inadequately.
This idea may sound nuts, I realize. It certainly sounded that way to me when I first heard it several years ago while interviewing neurologists, rhinologists and pulmonologists at Stanford, Harvard and other institutions. What they’d found is that breathing habits were directly related to physical and mental health.

Breathing properly can allow us to live longer and healthier lives. Breathing poorly, by contrast, can exacerbate and sometimes cause a laundry list of chronic diseases: asthma, anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, hypertension and more. Poor breathing habits can even change the physical structure of our skeletons, depleting essential minerals and weakening our bones.
The ancients understood this. Almost every major religion and many cultures—from the Greeks to the Buddhists, Hindus to Native Americans—considered proper breathing essential to health. Starting around 400 B.C., Chinese scholars wrote several books on breath, believing that it could be a medicine or a poison, depending on how we used it. “Therefore, the scholar who nourishes his life refines the form and nourishes his breath,” says a Tao text. “Isn’t this evident?”
Not really. Think back to your last health check-up. Chances are that your doctor took your blood pressure, pulse and temperature and then placed a stethoscope to your chest to listen to your heart and lungs. Maybe she discussed diet, taking vitamins, stresses at work. Any issues digesting food? How about sleep? Were the seasonal allergies getting worse? But she likely never checked your respiratory rate or breathing habits. And yet how we breathe affects all of these things, and much more.
Today, doctors who study breathing say that the vast majority of Americans do it inadequately.
We can blame some of our poor breathing habits on morphological changes in the human skull. Over the past 300,000 years, our mouths and sinuses have shrunk. It’s gotten so bad that today humans are the only species whose teeth no longer fit in our mouths; they grow in crooked. A smaller mouth and obstructed nose make it harder to breathe. Humans now have the sad distinction of being the most plugged-up species in the animal kingdom.
We can also blame our middle-aged bodies. Starting around 30, bones in the chest become thinner and collapse inward. We lose about 12% of our lung capacity by the time we hit 50, and then the decline speeds up. We’re forced to breathe faster and harder, making it even more difficult just to catch a breath.
But it’s not all bad news. Unlike problems with other parts of the body, such as the liver or kidneys, we can improve the airways in our too-small mouths and reverse the entropy in our lungs at any age. We can do this by breathing properly.
In the 1980s, researchers with the Framingham Study, a 70-year research program focused on heart disease, gathered two decades of data from 5,200 subjects, crunched the numbers and discovered that the greatest indicator of life span wasn’t genetics, diet or the amount of daily exercise, as many had suspected. It was lung capacity. Larger lungs equaled longer lives. Because big lungs allow us to get more air in with fewer breaths. They save the body from a lot of unnecessary wear and tear.
That’s the first step in healthy breathing: extending breaths to make them a little deeper, a little longer. Try it. For the next several minutes, inhale gently through your nose to a count of about five and then exhale, again through your nose, at the same rate or a little more slowly if you can. This works out to about six breaths a minute.
When we breathe like this we can better protect the lungs from irritation and infection while boosting circulation to the brain and body. Stress on the heart relaxes; the respiratory and nervous systems enter a state of coherence where everything functions at peak efficiency. Just a few minutes of inhaling and exhaling at this pace can drop blood pressure by 10, even 15 points.
Two New York psychiatrists, Richard Brown and Patricia Gerbarg, found that patients who practiced these slow-and-low breaths could blunt the symptoms of anxiety, depression and other mental disorders. It even helped 9/11 survivors restore airway damage caused by debris, a horrendous condition called ground-glass lungs. Where other therapies failed, breath alone offered significant improvement.
By building healthy breathing habits we can stop the entropy of our respiratory systems and increase our lung capacity. We can also reduce—or in some remarkable cases, reverse—modern maladies such as asthma and allergies and even emphysema and autoimmune diseases.
Last year, I wanted to see just how dramatically breathing habits—good and bad ones—could affect my own brain and body. I’d learned that up to 50% of us are chronic mouth breathers, a problem well described by an ancient Tao text: “The breath inhaled through the mouth is called ‘Ni Ch’i, adverse breath,’ which is extremely harmful.”
Scientists have known for decades that inhaling through this pathway saps the body of moisture, irritates the lungs and loosens the soft tissues at the back of the mouth. Mouth breathing has also been linked with neurological disorders, periodontal disease and increased risk of respiratory infection. But nobody knew how quickly this damage came on.

Working with Dr. Jayakar Nayak, chief of rhinology research at Stanford’s Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery Center, I spent 10 awful days with silicon plugs up my nose, breathing only through my mouth. Within a single night, my formerly minimal snoring increased 13-fold. I suddenly had sleep apnea. My blood pressure shot up to stage 2 hypertension while my stress levels spiked and cognitive scores plummeted. I felt anxious, stressed, fatigued.
Within a day of switching back to nasal breathing, my snoring began to revert and soon was almost gone. I went from having two dozen sleep apnea events a night to zero. My blood pressure dropped 20 points from its peak. The other subject in the experiment suffered the same damage from mouth breathing and the same restoration from nasal breathing.
Which brings us to the second step in healthy breathing: Breathe through your nose. Nasal breathing not only helps with snoring and some mild cases of sleep apnea, it also can allow us to absorb around 18% more oxygen than breathing through our mouths. It reduces the risk of dental cavities and respiratory problems and likely boosts sexual performance. The list goes on.
Covid-19 has forced modern medicine to broaden its outlook and look for new solutions, even in the wisdom of the past. Fortunately, a remedy for many of our chronic health problems is right under our noses. It requires no batteries, Wi-Fi, headgear or smartphones. It costs nothing and takes little time and effort. It’s a therapy our ancestors self-administered for thousands of years with only their lips, noses and lungs. Let’s hope that this time around we don’t forget it.The Healing Power of Proper Breathing
How we inhale and exhale has profound effects on our health= and not just during a crisis like the pandemic

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Reflexology, a Quick Nutshell


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Our feet have about 7,500 nerve endings, connected to our inner organs. As we age, these nerve endings become less sensitive to stimuli and that can lead to balance issues and falls.
A quick way to stimulate your nerve endings, on a daily basis, as you sit down reading or watching TV, is a simple massage.

Start at the top - the big toe pad is connected to the brain and the pineal and pituitary glands. Underneath the big pad is a spot for high blood pressure sufferers. The little toe pads are connected to our sinuses and the foot pad under the little toes, in the middle, is connected to the eyes and on the outside to the ears.

The pad under the big toe, as well as the middle portion of the foot next to it, is connected to our lungs.
Slide down to the middle of the foot and stimulate the liver, then a little below the kidneys, and a little below that the digestive system.

The heel in the middle is connected to our genitals, its side age to our hips and its very last bottom edge to our sciatica nerve.

Massage both feet, enjoy it, and enjoy good health!

Sunday, April 26, 2020

Coping with Covid-19 Fears, Practical Advice

How to keep coronavirus fears from affecting your mental health


Pare Down Sources of Information

  • Find a few sources you trust and stick with them. Choose one national or international source like the CDC, and another local nor national source so you can know what's going on in your community.
  • Limit the frequency of your updates. Things may be changing rapidly, but that doesn't mean you need to hang on every update. Think of it this way: If there is a tornado coming your way, you need information as soon as possible. The coronavirus is not a tornado. This may mean disabling constant notifications from news sites or social media.
  • Know when to walk away. Try to get used to not knowing every little thing, and feeling okay with uncertainty. Get your phone off your person so you're not tempted to check it. Leave your phone on a charging station when so it's not constantly with you, beckoning with new information.
  • Practice social media self discipline. No, it's not easy to limit time on social media. But chances are, the churn of information and commentary you get from friends and acquaintances on your Facebook feed is more incessant than actual updates from news or health organizations. Uninstall social media apps so it's harder to get to the content, or using tools to limit your aimless scrolling.
Name Your Fears

A pandemic is a rather abstract villain, so it may help to sit down and really consider what specific threats worry you. Do you think you will catch the coronavirus and die? The fear of death taps into one of our core existential fears. But you have to think about what your fear is, and how realistic it is. Consider your personal risk and how likely it is that you will actually come in contact with the virus.
And, even if your greatest fear is realized and you or someone you love fall ill, you may not have really thought about what comes next. Yes, you may get it. Yes, you may need treatment. But in all likelihood, hope is still not lost. We tend to overestimate the likelihood of something happening, and we tend to underestimate our capacity to deal with it.
Of course, you could have other, more practical fears. Some people may worry about what would happen if they were moved into self quarantine, or if they're not able to work. They're wondering if they would have access to groceries or childcare. Again, people have greater abilities to manage hardships than they think they do. Think about a plan. Consider options if you can't telework. Do you have savings? Do you have support?  Being prepared for your fears will help keep them in scale.

Think Outside Yourself

Since action can allay our anxieties, you may want to also consider what you can do to help others who may be more affected by the outbreak than you. Service workers, medical workers, hourly workers and people in the restaurant or entertainment industries may have their livelihoods paralyzed or have to put themselves in disproportionate danger. "It will be important for us as communities to think about how to support these individuals whose lives are going to be disrupted," Bufka says. "How can we even this burden and support those who have less options?"
After all, most of the precautions put in place to help stall the spread of the virus aren't just for you, as an individual. They're intended to keep entire communities and vulnerable demographics safe. Doing the same with your own time and care can empower you to see the real effects of the situation, rather than your abstract fears.

Seek Support but Do It Wisely

People are going to talk. But if you want to run to a friend to discuss the latest outbreak cluster or your family's contingency plans, try not to create an echo chamber. If you are overwhelmed, don't necessarily go to someone who has a similar level of fear.  Seek out someone who is handling it differently, who can check you on your anxiety and provide some advice."
If you can't seem to get a handle on your thoughts, professional help can be an option. It doesn't need to be a long-term thing. It means you can get some guidance for this specific situation.

Pay Attention to Your Basic Needs

In short, don't get so wrapped up in thinking about the coronavirus that you forget the essential, healthy practices that affect your wellbeing every day. In times of stress, we tend to minimize the importance of our foundation when we really should be paying more attention to it. Make sure you are:
  • Getting adequate sleep
  • Keeping up with proper nutrition
  • Getting outside as much a possible
  • Engaging in regular physical activity
Practicing mindfulness, meditation, yoga or other forms of self care can also help center you in routines and awareness, and keep your mind from wandering into the dark and sometimes irrational unknown.

Don’t Chastise Yourself for Worrying


Finally, don't let guilt be your anxiety's unwelcome companion. You are allowed to worry or feel bad. When discussing how to talk to children about the coronavirus, health experts say that people should acknowledge a child's fear and let them know their feelings are valid. Surely, you can afford yourself the same compassion. The key is to work toward understanding and contextualizing your fears so they don't keep you from living your healthiest life.




Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Prānāyāma- Breath Control. Lesson 2 - Ujjayi Kumbhaka

Ujjayi Kumbhaka 

Verse 2.53  - Haṭhayogapradīpikā
This prānāyāma, called ujjayi, can be done while moving, standing, sitting or walking. It removes disorders of the nadis (channels) and dhatu (bodily fluids).


Ujjayi Kumbhaka  -  Technique
You will inhale through both nostrils but exhale through the left nostril alone.
Ujjayi is known as the "psychic breath" because of its effect on the mind and it can occur spontaneously when concentration becomes deep and intense.  It helps relax the physical body and the mind,  leading to a deeper awareness of the subtle body and psychic sensitivity.   (The subtle body refers to energy in our bodies, such as chakras, that yogis believe to be part of our physical existence, even though it cannot be seen.) If ujjayi is used in meditation, kumbhaka (breath retention) is omitted and ujjayi is performed through both nostrils with natural inhales and exhales. 

1. Sit in a comfortable meditative pose or lie in savasana. Become aware of your natural breath and feel the air passing through the windpipe.

2. Slightly contract the region at the back of the throat as you do when you swallow.

3. Inhales and exhales are through the nose but there is a partial contraction of the glottis which produces a light snoring sound. The sound is coming from the throat, not the nose. Concentrate on the sound.  You can also incorporate khechari mudra by folding the tongue back so that the tip of the tongue presses the back of the soft palate.

4. After you inhale through both nostrils, hold your breath in kumbhaka, then exhale through the LEFT nostril only. Concentrate on the soft "snore" both on the inhale through both nostrils and the exhale through the left nostril.



Monday, March 30, 2020

Prānāyāma- Breath Control. Lesson 1 - Suryabheda Kumbhaka

Haṭhayogapradīpikā,    हठयोगप्रदीपिका 
or Light on Hatha Yoga

is a 15th-century yoga manual and a very good way to be introduced to prānāyāma - breath control. 
Below are a few verses on prānāyāma from the text of Haṭhayogapradīpikā, and below the verses a few simple breath techniques that use kumbhaka (breath retention):

Verses

2:40   As long as the breath is restrained in the body, the mind is devoid of thought and the gaze is centered between the eyebrows, why should there be fear of death?

2:41  By systematically restraining the prāna, the nadis and chakras are purified. Thus the prāna bursts open the doorway to sushumna and easily enters it.

2:43  By practicing the various kumbhakas (breath retention), wondrous perfections are obtained. Those who are the knowers practice the various kumbhakas to accomplish them.

2:44  The eight kumbhakas are suryabheda, ujjayi, seethari, sheetali, bhastrika, bhramari, moorchha and plavini.

Techniquies - kumbhakas

Suryabheda Kumbhaka  - right nostril breathing. 
Inhalation is done only through the right nostril, activating pingala nadi, and exhalation is always only through the left nostril.  
Suryabheda eliminates imbalance in the vata (wind) dosha and also balances the pitta and kapha doshas. Stimulation of the pingala nadi removes dullness from the body and mind, and the heat produced through the practice burns up impurities in the body. 

1. Sit in a comfortable meditative pose, relaxing the body. 
2. Close the left nostril and inhale slowly and deeply through the right nostril.
3. Hold both nostrils closed and lower your chin to chest to activate the throat lock (jalandhara bandha) and then the root lock (mula bandha) as you continue to hold your breath as long as you can.
4. Release mula bandha first, then jalandhara bandha and raise your chin to neutral.
5. Keeping the right nostril closed, open the left nostril and slowly exhale.

If necessary, take a few normal breaths between rounds, hands on the knees, eyes closed, concentrating on your third eye (sixth chakra).