STEP 3: Breathe!
Here is the key message of this Step: use
straightforward and simple breathing skills to relieve your body's stresses and quiet your
mind. They will help you to quickly clear unwanted thoughts and let you enjoy your flight
with a quiet mind and a calm body.
Our breathing patterns are medically proven to influence our
physical symptoms. During an emergency, our breathing rate and pattern change. Instead of
breathing slowly from our lower lungs, we begin to breathe rapidly and shallowly from our
upper lungs. If during this time we are not physically exerting ourselves, then it can
produce a phenomenon called "hyperventilation." This in
turn can explain many of the uncomfortable symptoms during panic:
dizziness, shortness of breath, a lump in the throat, tingling or numbness in the hands or
feet, nausea, or confusion. We'll call that the Emergency Response.
The good news is that by changing your breathing you
can reverse these symptoms.
By shifting your breathing rate and pattern, you can
stimulate the body's parasympathetic response. This is the body's equally powerful and
opposite system to the Emergency Response and is often called the relaxation response. For
our purposes I will call it the Calming Response.
The table below lists the physical changes
that take place in the Calming Response. As you can see, all of the primary
symptoms
of the Emergency Response are reversed in this process. One of the differences in
these two physical responses is that of time. The Emergency Response takes place instantly
in what is called a mass action: all the changes occur together. After we flip on that
emergency switch, it takes awhile for the body to respond to our calming skills. For this
reason it is important for you to know what specific skills will reverse this emergency
response and will help calm your body and clear your mind.
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The
Calming Response
(Parasympathetic Response)
|
- oxygen consumption decreases
- breathing slows
- heart beat slows
- blood pressure decreases
- muscle tension decreases
- growing sense of ease in body, calmness in mind
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Calming Your Breath
People who are anxious tend to breathe in their upper lungs
(upper chest) with shallow, rapid breaths, instead of breathing into their lower lungs
(lower chest). This is one contribution to hyperventilation: shallow, upper lung
breathing.
The three breathing skills that I will describe next start
with inhaling into your lower lungs. This is a deeper, slower breath. Below
the lungs is a sheetlike muscle, the diaphragm, which separates the chest form the
abdomen. When you fill your lower lungs with air, the lungs push down on the
diaphragm and cause your abdominal region to protrude. Your stomach looks as though
it is expanding and contracting with each diaphragmatic breath.

Two kinds of breathing, upper chest
(thoracic) above, and lower chest (diaphragmatic) below.

You will now be introduced to three breathing skills.
In later steps you will learn how to change your fearful thinking and your negative
imagery, because each time you frighten yourself with catastrophic thoughts or images, you
re-stimulate your body's emergency response. To begin with, however, you need a solid
foundation in proper breathing.
The first breathing skill is called Natural
Breathing, or abdominal breathing. In fact, this is a good way to breathe all day
long, unless you are involved in physical activity. In other words, you should
practice
breathing this way all day long, since it provides for
sufficient oxygen intake and controls the exhalation of carbon dioxide.
It's very simple and it goes like this:
|
Natural
Breathing
|
- Gently and slowly inhale a normal amount of air through your
nose, filling only your lower lungs. (Your stomach will expand while your upper chest
remains still.)
- Exhale easily.
- Continue this gentle breathing pattern with a relaxed
attitude, concentrating on filling only the lower lungs.
|
You might first try it with one hand on your stomach and one
on your chest. As you inhale gently, your lower hand should rise while your upper hand
stays still.
As you see, this breathing pattern is opposite of that which
comes automatically during anxious moments. Instead of breathing rapidly and shallowly
into the upper lungs, which expands the chest, you breathe gently into the lower lungs,
expanding the abdomen.
The second technique is deep diaphragmatic breathing
and can be used during times when you are feeling anxious or panicky. It is a powerful way
to control hyperventilation, slow a rapid heartbeat and promote physical comfort. For this
reason we will call it the Calming Breath.
Here's how it goes:
|
Natural
Breathing
|
- Take a long, slow breath in through your nose, first filling
your lower lungs, then your upper lungs.
- Hold your breath to the count of "three."
- Exhale slowly through pursed lips, while you relax the muscles
in your face, jaw, shoulders, and stomach.
|
Practice this Calming Breath at least ten times a day
for several weeks. Use it during times of transition, between projects or whenever you
want to let go of tension and begin to experience a sense of calmness. This will help you
become familiar and comfortable with the process. And use it any time you begin to feel
anxiety or panic building. When you need a tool to help you calm down during panic, you
will be more familiar and comfortable with the process.
The third technique is called Calming Counts.
It has two benefits over Calming Breath. First, it takes longer to complete: about 90
seconds instead of 30 seconds. You will be spending that time concentrating on a specific
task instead of paying so much attention to your worried thoughts. If you can let time
pass without such intense focus on your fearful thoughts, you will have a better chance at
controlling those thoughts. Second, Calming Counts, like Natural Breathing and the Calming
Breath, help access the Calming Response. That means you will be giving yourself 90
seconds to cool your body out and quiet your thoughts. Then, after that time has passed,
you will less anxious than you were.
Here's how this skill works:
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Calming
Counts
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- Sit comfortably.
- Take a long, deep breath and exhale it slowly while saying the
word "relax" silently.
- Close your eyes.
- Let yourself take ten natural, easy breaths. Count down with
each exhale, starting with "ten."
- This time, while you are breathing comfortably, notice any
tensions, perhaps in your jaw or forehead or stomach. Imagine those tensions loosening.
- When you reach "one," open your eyes again.
|
As you apply these skills, keep two things in mind. First,
our breathing is dictated in part by our current thoughts, so make sure you also
work
on changing your negative thoughts, as well as your breathing, during panic. And
second, these skills work to the degree you are willing to concentrate on them.
Put
most of your effort into not thinking about anything else -- not your
worried thoughts, not what you will do after you finish the breathing skill, not how well
you seem to be at this skill -- while you are following the steps of these skills.
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