TED Radio Hour - Body Electric: Type, tap, scroll, BREATHE! How our tech use impacts our breath
Episode Date: June 11, 2024Do you have "screen apnea"? Our special series Body Electric continues with former Microsoft executive Linda Stone who coined the term. Around 2007, Linda noticed she had an unhealthy habit while answ...ering emails: she held her breath. On this episode, she tells host Manoush Zomorodi how she tested her friends and colleagues for "screen apnea" and what she's done since.Then, Manoush talks to the bestselling author of Breath, science writer James Nestor, who explains how shallow breathing impacts our physical and mental health. He takes us through a simple exercise to 'reset' our breath and relieve screen time stress.Binge the whole Body Electric series here.Sign up for the Body Electric Challenge and our newsletter here.Talk to us on Instagram @ManoushZ, or record a voice memo and email it to us at BodyElectric@npr.org.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, Ted Radio Hour listener, it's Manus.
We are continuing our special series called Body Electric,
which is all about how our tech habits are impacting our physical health.
Today, we are exploring the relationship between screens and how we breathe.
Maybe you've been holding your breath while you scroll.
You don't even realize it.
Hopefully this episode will help you out.
And if you like it, please go to the Body Electric Feast.
for more. All the episodes from season one are there. Plus, all we're doing for season two,
which includes five-minute walk-and-talks for you to listen to when you take your breaks from
your technology. Oh, you're not doing that yet? Hmm, you better go listen. Hey, it's Manushe.
I've been a journalist covering technology and how it changes us for over a decade. And a woman
named Linda Stone was someone I had read about and would occasionally bump into pretty much
from the beginning. My name is Linda Stone, and I worked at Apple for seven and a half or eight
years, and I worked at Microsoft for a little over eight years. Linda has a background in educational
psychology. She did marketing, innovation, and research all those years. But what made her
well known in certain nerdy circles was what she did outside of her work.
at those tech companies. It all started in 2007. In 2007, I was experiencing some health challenges,
and as a result of that, I began to work with someone on breathing techniques and breathing exercises.
And I noticed day after day that once I got to my computer, I was either holding my breath for long
periods of time, or I was breathing very shallowly, and this would go on for hours.
You know, as I would open my email and the email would stream in, I would inhale because we
tend to inhale in anticipation, but I wouldn't exhale because so many emails would be streaming
in. And I'm guessing you can relate to that. I'm getting stressed out just hearing you describe all
your emails coming in. Yeah, and it didn't change unless.
I interrupted myself very consciously or stood up, walked around, and did my breathing exercises again.
And I wondered, was this just me? Or was this a more universal experience?
So you are someone who likes to get to the bottom of the things that you observe.
And you embarked on what you have referred to as kitchen table science.
I love this so much.
Kitchen table science are citizen science.
And so I went out and got a piece of technology that had an earclip that would allow me to see pulse and heart rate variability displayed on the computer.
And I decided that anyone brave enough to come over and visit me was going to be tested.
So Linda invited people over.
Friends, friends of friends, former colleagues from Microsoft, random people that I just thought were interested.
And she'd hook them up to the health monitoring gadgets she had and then sit them down at her computer.
I would have them do email and I would have them do web browsing randomly and also web browsing around specific assignments that I gave them.
And I think it's important to tell you that almost always I gave them cookies or some kind of dessert afterwards.
Because you were like, oh, thank you for being my guinea pig.
Thank you for allowing me to observe you for the last 30.
minutes and yes, thank you for being my guinea pig.
Linda observed dozens of people.
And the only ones who didn't hold their breath or take shallow breaths were a former military
test pilot, a triathlete and professional performers, including dancers, singers, and a chillist.
Who was really the most impressive.
Those were the people who stayed embodied.
They were people who had learned.
to breathe and do something at the same time as part of their training.
So you observe this happening.
You're not surprised, it sounds like, and you gave it a name.
Yes.
Email apnea or screen apnea.
What I really wanted to communicate was that there was disturbed breathing when we were in front of screens.
We've all heard for years that taking deep breaths is a way of calming ourselves, taking life.
down a notch. But what if we're not breathing properly, or much at all, when we probably need
calming down the most, all those hours when we're on our screens? I'm Manus Zamoroti, and this is
season two of NPR's Body Electric. This season, we've been doing two kinds of episodes for you.
A weekly five-minute episode to entice you to take a break from your screen, but we're also
continuing our investigations into the relationship between our technology and our bodies.
Today, our tech habits and our breath.
How we can retrain our bodies to be more resilient and better deal with all the screen time stress
coming at us.
So, back to Linda Stone.
She figures out she's not breathing well when she's on her computer, and neither are a lot of other people she knows.
But so what? Like, what's the big deal?
Well, the big deal is when I discovered that there was this compromise in breathing,
I did reach out to people in health care and researchers that I knew.
And boy, did I get a lot of information.
The body becomes acidic.
The kidneys begin to reabsorb sodium.
And as oxygen, carbon dioxide and nitric oxide balance are undermined,
our whole biochemistry is thrown off.
So all of these chronic diseases that have been on the rise and probably follow the same trajectory as the ubiquity of our adoption of personal technology, I began to see that it was probably related.
At the time, did you change any of your habits, your tech habits?
Oh, boy, did I ever try. It's not that easy. So I tried taking actually inspiration from the
cellist.
Observing the cellist was probably one of the most powerful things that I had witnessed when I was doing all this testing.
Because I could see that his whole body stayed enlivened, energetic, and he was fully present when he was sitting in front of a screen.
So I began to pick up different instruments to see if there was some instrument.
that I would enjoy playing that would help me in terms of relating to an object while I was
maintaining posture and breathing.
I started to take ballroom dancing lessons, which was the most fun.
That's awesome.
Because that was both rhythmic and I had to stay completely embodied and present in relation to a dance
partner.
I got up more frequently.
First, I got up for five minutes once an hour, but I really realized that it was really five minutes every 30 minutes that mattered.
What also strikes me is the fact that here we are, you know, 16, 17 years since you first did this.
And I just read an article in the New York Times that mentioned your work.
It still makes me think that, you know, in a society that's obsessed with mindfulness and meditation and breathwork,
why we are not really making the connection as you did, especially if every time you talk about it,
or I read about you and your work, everyone's like, yes, yes.
We all resonate with it, yeah.
But I'll tell you, I'm humbled by the continued interest in this.
And I really believe that the more aware we are of how our relationship with technology is
impacting our personal health and our personal relationships, the more that we will take steps
to discover ways to improve that.
As Linda pointed out all those years ago, when we're on our devices, we do two things
that affect our breath. We change our posture. So as Linda puts it, we melt into our technology.
We become one with it. And when we do that, we also get a steady stream.
of interruptions, pings, and information.
So, what's a gal to do if she doesn't want to take up an instrument,
and she's already trying to take breaks?
I think you can absolutely be a healthy breather looking at a screen, without a doubt.
When we come back, James Nestor, author of the mega bestseller,
Breath, the new science of a lost art.
Talk to James on finding out if you have screen apnea,
and he'll explain how to reset your breath.
We'll be right back.
We're back.
And I just want to note that a lot of people are talking about breath, right?
It's kind of trendy, especially in the world of bro podcasts.
I don't think that most people realize just how important how we breed is.
This is the land of cold plunges.
Tell me if you were ever in a bad mood getting out of a cold plunge.
Intermittent fasting.
Just eat all the food you want to eat.
just eat it in that window.
And other wellness trends taken to the extreme.
You're on polyphasic sleeping.
How would you guys like to learn a 60-second breathwork technique?
I just finished up like a seven-minute guided breathing session.
Oh my God, bro.
Why am I shaking?
Whose idea was this?
Yeah.
Writer James Nestor has no time for this.
Most of those bros who claim to be at absolute peak health are the worst breathers you can find out there.
Really?
I'm being serious.
Because a lot of them are completely vain and they do not allow their stomachs to relax.
If you are constantly inhaling and sucking up your gut, you're inhibiting the extension of the diaphragm, you're inhibiting blood flow, you're inhibiting the ability of the body to pump lymph fluid.
You are causing stress because you are clenching your stomach and sending signals up to your brain that you're,
You were in a state of stress.
So don't look to those bros for healthy breathing.
James is a science journalist, but he embarked on trying to better understand what happens when we breathe properly because of personal problems.
I was suffering from chronic bronchitis.
I was getting mild bouts of pneumonia every year.
I was starting to wheeze when I was working out.
And I thought I was doing everything right, you know, eating the right foods, exercising, sleeping eight hours.
night, all of that. But I just kept getting sick with breathing problems. So it wasn't until a doctor
friend suggested I look into my breathing habits, which is something I had never thought about before.
And once I adjusted those habits and started understanding that it's not just that we're breathing,
but how we're breathing, it had a huge transformational effect, not only on my
respiration, but on other aspects of my health.
Yeah, can you explain, like, what is poor breathing and what is good breathing?
Poor breathing is what you see when you look at around 90% of the population.
It includes breathing through the mouth.
It includes breathing up into the chest.
It includes unconsciously holding your breath, breathing too much, snoring, sleep apnea, asthma, on and on and on.
And what are the consequences?
of that, how does that impact a person's health? Because I think people think, well, if as long as I'm
like breathing, I'm alive, right? Well, on the milder spectrum, the consequences are more asthma,
more panic, more anxiety, more stress. On the more severe spectrum, if you continue having
very dysfunctional breathing habits throughout your life, especially at night, that can lead to
increase risk of stroke, heart disease, periodontal disease, diabetes. So all
of these major chronic diseases that we're contending with have some sort of connection to how we're
breathing. You call breathing like this a lost art. When did we lose it? It's hard to trace the
exact moment, but you can trace a lot of this to the age of industrialization. We lost so much
400 years ago, 300 years ago. So we lost our food supply that used to be. We lost our food supply. That used to
whole foods and natural and require a bunch of chewing, which allowed us to expand our mouths and
tone our airways and breathe better. But we've also lost our ability to have proper posture.
And without having proper posture, it is very difficult to take a proper breath. If you are hunched
over, you can't extend your belly. You can't take that soft, slow, deep breath. All your breath gets
caught up in your chest. And that is extremely inefficient. You're right. There's no room. I just caught
myself. Like, I'm leaned over my laptop and there's nowhere for it to go. The air just has to go up
because whatever happened to stomach's in shoulders back. That's what I used to be told.
The old days, yeah. So if you are ever apprehensive about how you're breathing,
look at how a healthy dog breeds, healthy infant breeds, a cheetah, a horse, a cow.
They breathe very deep.
Their stomachs expand very gently when they breathe.
They breathe very slowly, and they breathe in and out of their noses.
So the problem with chest breathing is that the majority of the area of the lungs that absorbs oxygen are those lower lobes.
So if you're just breathing into your chest, you're taking air in that you never use.
About 50% of that air you won't be using.
And so that causes you to breathe more.
And the more you breathe, you start sending stress signals to the brain.
And if you have dysfunctional breathing habits in the day, absolutely it's going to affect your ability to focus, to get oxygen efficiently, to regulate your emotions and more.
I'm thinking someone might be listening and wondering, do I do this?
I don't even know if I do this.
What is a way that we can really see how well we're breathing during the day while we are trying to do our work?
It's hard. You know, you can go into a lab and be assessed that way. A few people are going to do that.
HRV is one thing that can provide a good general outlook of your stress levels.
HRV, heart rate variability, right?
Heart rate variability. This is the latest craze in wearables. Everybody's measure.
it nowadays. So right now, if you were to place your hand over your heart, if you're really focusing,
as you inhale, your heart rate speeds up. And as you exhale, it slows down. So the more space
you have between those heartbeats on the inhale and exhale are indicative of your stress levels.
You want more of a difference, more of a variability between those two things.
That's funny also because I always thought a nice, steady heartbeat is what you want.
But actually, you don't.
That is a harbinger of disease and future death.
That's what I've been told by cardiologists.
Once they start hearing a heartbeat that sounds like a clock, they get really scared.
I worry about, well, I worry about adding more worries to people's plates.
There's a lot to worry about these days.
And I don't want people to be like, oh, my gosh.
God, please tell me, don't tell me one more thing that I need to measure or need technology for or I need to think about.
What is, I don't know, a more holistic, somatic, internal way of checking in with yourself during the day?
So nobody needs more boxes to check, right?
I think that breathing doesn't have to become a burden.
maybe for a couple of weeks as you develop better habits that might require you to spend a little more time and energy.
But once you develop those habits, you don't have to think about it because no one wants to have to think about the 20,000 breaths they're taking every single day.
You want to have good habits so your body automatically does that.
When we come back, James takes us through the reset breathing exercise that you can do,
to get back on track with your breath.
You'll also hear my manifesto for breathing while typing.
We'll see in a sec.
We're back.
James Nestor is a science journalist who ended up writing a best-selling book
about the art of breathing, the lost art.
But first, he had to teach himself to breathe better.
He did one exercise regularly until his body learned to do it automatically.
to breathe better without him having to constantly remind himself while he was working.
Are you ready to give it a try?
The first thing I would ask people to do is taking your hand, placing it around where your belly button is, just lightly over your stomach.
And as you inhale, you want to feel that slight expansion of that abdominal region.
And then as you continue inhaling, try to lift that breath.
up to your chest area.
So you start low and you work it up a little higher.
And then if you slow that down, breathing in and out of your nose,
at a rate of around five to six seconds in, five to six seconds out,
you'll start to notice your shoulders relaxing.
You'll start to notice the muscles in your face relaxing.
you'll feel your heart rate lower.
If you are looking at your blood pressure,
most people see a significant drop in blood pressure
because this is your body re-entering its natural state,
the state in which it was designed to be in that we are so divorced from today.
So this is taking some concentration on my part, and it's lovely.
It's going to take some concentration at the beginning,
especially with people who have never taken a focused, deep, easy, soft breath.
But then tomorrow, when you do it, you're going to say,
hmm, this is a little bit easier.
And then the next day, it gets easier.
And a few weeks from now, you're going to be doing this unconsciously.
I cannot tell you what a difference this is going to make for your stress levels at work,
for your ability to focus.
There's been studies that have found that people make significantly better
decisions when they are breathing slowly, when they are breathing calmly. It helps you regulate
your emotions better. Breathe this way for two minutes a day. And I think even that's going to
make a difference. What I love about our conversation is that it feels like it's something
that you could work on. And then maybe your body would take over in some ways. That feels like a
relief to me. That's exactly the point of so many of these practices. Once you establish it,
you don't have to think about it. And once you don't have to think about it, you start to notice
that you're feeling different. And this is backed up by any wearable that you happen to have on your
body. And then you feel so much better that you want to go further into this. You want to explore
what else breathing can do.
That's James Nestor.
His book is called Breath,
the new science of a lost art.
So in preparation for this episode,
I started collecting the results
of my own heart rate variability monitoring.
I started wearing an Apple Watch,
gathering data on my phone.
Look, I'll be honest,
the numbers are not terribly encouraging.
But I have decided not to engage
with more tracking and data on this one.
Keep thinking about the cellist that Linda talked about.
What strikes me is that this person has made peace with her work instrument.
I mean, granted, that is way easier and enticing than me making peace with my laptop.
But I do love what my technology makes possible.
Maybe I'm not producing soothing sonatas, but hey, I wrote this episode.
on it. So what if I started thinking of myself as a professional performer who needs to regulate
their body in order to do their best work? What if we take inspiration from the pilot who is
able to keep his anxiety and stress in check for the well-being of himself and therefore his
passengers? What if, like the dancer, we accept that we do our best work when we feel loose
and limber.
We are information workers.
And instead of that sounding depressing and like a total grind,
what if we treat ourselves like the mental athletes,
we kind of are and accept that there is a body attached to our brains
and it needs oxygen and brakes to function best
to keep the plane from crashing.
We've been doing five-minute episodes for you to listen to as you hopefully take brief breaks from your work.
Check out the body electric feed to hear from all kinds of different people who are trying to balance work, technology, and their health.
This is not a one-size-fits-all.
You know, some people are counting the steps.
Other people absolutely are not.
I hope you will listen along as you take a break from your screen.
If you are not taking breaks, we have a quick start guide to get you going.
and a weekly newsletter with more info and motivation to keep you going.
Go to npr.org slash bodyelectric to sign up.
And if it's your thing, I'm on Instagram at Manushe Z.
I am posting more there about this episode and tips from all the other topics that we
cover on Body Electric.
I'd love to see you over there too.
Again, only if it's your thing.
Okay.
This episode was produced by Katie Monarch.
to Leone and edited by Sana's Meskampur.
Original music comes from David Herman.
Our audio engineer was Robert Rodriguez.
Special thanks to Colin Campbell, Fiona Giron, and Ariel Redding.
I'm Manushe Zamoroti, and you've been listening to Body Electric from NPR.
