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Diaphragmatic breathing is the healthiest way of breathing and is a first step in normalising your breathing in order to manage anxiety or panic symptoms.
Diaphragmatic breathing is also the most natural way of breathing. Observe how a
very young baby breathes -
Years of poor posture, anxious thinking, tension and pressure will usually result
in breathing patterns which are less-
Relearning to use your diaphragm in breathing and to reduce your rate of breathing is an important first step in managing the symptoms of anxiety, anger, panic, etc.
The principle role of breathing is, of course, to stay alive! One of the ways in
which breathing does this is through seeking to maintain an optimum internal oxygen-
The important thing is not how much oxygen or how much carbon dioxide you have in
your system but rather the relationship between the two gases -
Too much oxygen (relative to the level of carbon dioxide) and we feel agitated and jumpy. Too much carbon dioxide (again, relative to the level of oxygen) and we feel sluggish and sleepy and tired.
Over the last hundred years or so carbon dioxide has received a loss of quite undeserved ‘bad press’ and for no sound scientific reasons. Rather than being a "bad" gas it's actually vital to our health. And one of its key roles is that of being our ‘natural tranquilliser’.
Upper chest, rapid breathing gets rid of too much carbon dioxide causing us to feel
agitated, breathless, and causing our nervous system to go into overdrive. In extreme
cases this can result in tetany -
Imagine that your chest is a rather like a cone with the lungs lightly attached to the inside of this cone. And with the floor of the cone being made up of a large muscle called the diaphragm. It's the movements of the wall and the floor of this cone that result in the movement of air into and out of your body.
Being more like sponges than muscles your lungs cannot produce the exchange of gases
required in breathing. They must rely on the contraction of the `cone' which surrounds
them -
Using mainly the top of the cone is called upper-
If the upper hand rises first you are using upper chest breathing. If the lower hand rises first you are breathing with your diaphragm. If both move at the same time you are using a mix of both.
If you mainly use upper chest breathing you have to breathe more rapidly in order to achieve the exchange of gases which breathing aims to produce. This more rapid breathing results in your getting rid of too much carbon dioxide and thereby upsetting the balance between carbon dioxide and oxygen. And, of course, in your getting rid of your ‘natural tranquilliser’, carbon dioxide .
This is why upper-
Diaphragmatic breathing, particularly if accompanied by a slower and more shallow
rate of breathing, optimises carbon dioxide-
Spend a few minutes a couple of times a day practising using your diaphragm:
This slow, relaxed, and shallow method of breathing takes a little time to acquire.
Recognize that you are re-
Many people find that, initially, there is a fluttering effect in the diaphragm area. This is caused by anxiety and tension and will pass with practise.
Again many people find that they can only do this form of breathing for a minute
or two at first. That's fine – accept this and keep to about a minute or two for
about a week or so. Gradually the time will extent, if you're patient. There's no
point in forcing things -
Some people experience sleepiness. (Incidentally, this is a great way of getting to sleep at night). This sleepiness is usually just your body trying to catch up on the rest and relaxation that it's been denied for so long. As you continue to practise this will and shallow diaphragmatic breathing this sleepiness should gradually recede.
Remember to read our caution about health-