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Breathing: The Master Key to Self Healing
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DescriptionListeners get a complete course of eight breathing exercises that Dr. Weil has used in his own life and prescribed to hundreds of patients to aid in physical healing. To learn the art of healthy breathing, Weil turned to Eastern traditions, including yoga, which view breath as a vital link to the energy of the universe. |
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Breatheasy: Slow Breathing with Music (6 CD Set - Classical & Ambient)
Sale Price: $43.95 |
DescriptionThis special 6-pack CD set includes both classical and ambient segments of the Breatheasy series. The classical segment includes over 200 minutes of music, featuring masterpieces from the masters including Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and many, many more... |
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Assessing Breath Sounds (Video Skills Series: Nursing Video)
Sale Price: $12.99 |
DescriptionComes with 12-page booklet. |
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Breathing Easy (Getting the Most From Your Asthma Medication)
Sale Price: $1.09 |
DescriptionA how to guide by Gary Rachelefky MD and colleen Lum Lung RN,leading authorities on breathing disorders. What is asthma? What causes it? How is it treated? How to use your inhaler...all cover in this VHS program. |
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Snorepin(TM) - The Smarter Solution Against Snoring and Sleep Apnea (Advanced Design Save Your Lungs)
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DescriptionSnorepin - The Smarter Solution Against Snoring The new designed and real functional Snorepin is one of the best Anti Snore products so far. The Snorepin with its anatomic conical shape feels very comfortable in the nose and looks unobtrusive... |
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Vicks Personal Steam Inhaler
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DescriptionFor cold, flu, bronchitis, sinusitis, laryngitis, and allergy sufferers, this personal steam inhaler restores sufficient moisture to the lungs and respiratory tract. The patented plastic hood is contoured to cradle the face comfortably and directs warm moist air right into the nose and throat to temporarily relieve nasal, sinus, and chest congestion... |
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STEAM INHALER AND MASK |
DescriptionSteam inhaler eases congestion and symptoms of, cold, allergies, coughs, or a dry throat. Breathing is easier in minutes as the warm, variable flow of steam penetrates nasal, sinus and throat passages... |
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Elenco My Health Breathing Kit
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DescriptionActivities show how the lungs work. Explanation of how to check the volume of air intake into your own lungs. A precision made air flow meter that can check your own intake of air and check if you are within the normal range... |
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Breath Control Meter Only
Sale Price: $61.00 |
DescriptionThis is the "Breath Control Meter" used in the "Breathing Fitness Health Lab" that was originally developed by the Lawrence Hall of Science. The photo shows the complete "Lab", however, with this offering, you only get the "Breath Control Meter" which is the tall item with mouthpiece sitting on the black round base in the photo. |
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3M R6211 Low-Maintenance Half-Mask Organic Vapor, P95 Respirator Assembly, Medium
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DescriptionPAINT SPRAY & PESTICIDE RESPIRATOR Low profile for visibility and to accommodate safety glasses Lightweight to reduce pressure on neck and nose Soft pliable facepiece for comfortable fit Easy breathability Comfortable, lightweight, easy-to-adjust Low maintenance, only cartridge and prefilter to replace Easy-to-clean between use Peggable card |
The Key to Breath Control when Diving
Breathing is easy, isn't it? We do it all the time. Good air in, bad air out. Simple, and easy, right? Wrong! In scuba diving, breathing properly serves three major purposes, and missing out on knowing how to breathe properly can lead to a messed up dive.
Why should your learn a different way to breathe for diving? Well, the technique that will be given here isn't just for diving, it's meant to increase the efficiency at which your body processes oxygen in general, and will benefit every aspect of your life that requires physical activity.
First off, proper breathing helps you to control your buoyancy. If your scuba instructor tells you to hold your breath while adjusting your regulator to control your dive depth, you'll quickly wind up blue in the face. Definitely not a pleasant experience. Instead of holding your breath and relying on the weights and regulator to adjust buoyancy, breathing properly can cause subtle shifts in your floatation.
Secondly, proper breathing on a dive extends your air time. The breathing technique given here helps the body process more oxygen, sending it to the body with greater efficiency and maximizing the amount of oxygen that gets introduced into the blood stream. You won't use your air up as quickly, and can extend your time underwater.
Lastly, proper breathing combined with good control over your descent and ascent rate helps to minimize decompression sickness, which is a problem that hits divers when the sudden changes in external pressure on the body trigger collections of air pockets in the blood stream, heart, and sinuses. Those little air pockets cause a condition that divers refer to as The Bends, which can be anything from merely painful and annoying, to outright fatal by leading to a stroke or brain damage.
That said and done, let's get into the actual breathing method to use.
Speaking from personal experience, the breathing technique that should be employed in diving are related to that used by martial artists, singers, yoga practitioners, and gymnasts. This is a method called diaphragm breathing, and goes by many different fancy names depending on which discipline is using it, like in martial arts where it is referred to as Ki or Chi Breathing.
To practise diaphragm breathing, either stand or sit up straight (your choice), and just breathe in. Don't slouch. Observe how you take the air in. Most people will have their chests expand when they take a breath. This is normal, regular lung breathing. In diaphragm breathing, the lower stomach expands instead of the chest.
To do this properly, the biggest key is to relax. Your abdominal muscles will actually instinctively tighten up when you take a breath and try to focus on your gut. Don't focus on your gut, just relax and breath in, but make a point of actually relaxing your navel area when you inhale. Most people get diaphragm breathing wrong because they tense up the muscles in their gut in an effort to send their breath there. Tensing up these muscles actually causes them to contract, which keeps air from going that deeply. That's all there is to this form of breathing, really. It's simple, once you get the hang of it.
It's also important to keep your breathing rhythm deep, slow, and even when you're practising this method, inhaling as far as you can go, holding the air in your lungs for just a few seconds, then exhaling the air slowly and evenly. Shallow, rapid breathing, as most medical practitioners know, is a very, very bad thing, which leads to asphyxiation, a state where not enough oxygen gets cycled through the body.
By the way, the air, of course, isn't really going into your stomach. It just expands because the diaphragm is positioned right above it in the body. Basic anatomy lesson here: the diaphragm is a membrane which controls the expansion of the lungs, which causes the inhalation and exhalation of air. Basically, what this form of breathing achieves is to strengthen your diaphragm itself, as well as increasing the capacity of your lungs. Keep practising this method until it becomes automatic and natural, and you'll be surprised at the results. Not just in your scuba diving, but in your overall physical condition.
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Tags: breathing · health · lung · lung breathing · lung breathing exercises · lung breathing problems · lung breathing sounds · lung breathing test · respiratory · scienceNo Comments













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