The School of Greatness - This Ancient BREATHING TECHNIQUE Will Transform Your BODY & MIND w/ James Nestor EP 1434

Episode Date: May 6, 2023

https://lewishowes.com/mindset - Order a copy of my new book The Greatness Mindset today!My guest today is author and journalist James Nestor. He has written for Scientific American, Outside Magazine,... The New York Times, The Atlantic, National Public Radio, Surfer’s Journal, The San Francisco Chronicle, and several other publications.Today’s episode talks about the power of optimizing something as simple as breathing and how it can make a difference in our lives. With the help of author and journalist James Nestor, we will rediscover the long-forgotten truth about breathing and finally understand how we’re doing it wrong.Whether you’re an athlete, a sufferer of sleep apnea, or just looking for meditative ways to go through life’s challenges and surprises, you’ll surely find value in today’s episode!In this episode you will learn,The difference between breathing through the mouth vs. the nose.How to increase CO2 in the body.The best breathing routine to start the day.How to breathe when you’re dealing with anxiety and panic attacks.How to maintain and increase your lung capacity even through old age.How breathing affects our immune system.Why the diaphragm is considered the second heart.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1434 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 My friend, I am such a big believer that your mindset is everything. It can really dictate if your life has meaning, has value, and you feel fulfilled, or if you feel exhausted, drained, and like you're never going to be enough. Our brand new book, The Greatness Mindset, just hit the New York Times bestseller back to back weeks. And I'm so excited to hear from so many of you who've bought the book, who've read it and finished it already, and are getting incredible results from the lessons in the book. If you haven't got a copy yet, you'll learn how to build a plan for greatness through powerful exercises and toolkits designed to propel your life forward.
Starting point is 00:00:38 This is the book I wish I had when I was 20, struggling, trying to figure out life. 10 years ago, at 30, trying to figure out transitions in my life and the book I'm glad I have today for myself. Make sure to get a copy at lewishouse.com slash 2023 mindset to get your copy today. Again lewishouse.com slash 2023 mindset to get a copy today. Also, the book is on Audible now so you can get it on audiobook as well. And don't forget to follow the show so you never miss an episode. When you are breathing through your nose, you are humidifying air, you're pressurizing it, you're filtering it so that you can use that air so much more efficiently. If you want to make your body a very violent place for viruses to live in,
Starting point is 00:01:27 I would argue... Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur. And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin. Welcome to today's special episode. Over the last 1,300 plus episodes, there have been so many impactful interviews that I've been lucky enough to have, and I always like to reflect on some of the most powerful. And this episode was one that resonated with most of you guys in the past. And
Starting point is 00:02:08 I'm excited for the value it's going to bring you today as well. So I hope you enjoy today's episode. Seems to me that most of the world, at least in America, breathes through their mouth. Is that the case in your mind that from all of your research of this, that most people breathe through their mouth? The estimates are that somewhere between 25 to 50% of the population habitually breathes through its mouth. And a lot of us think, well, who cares? We've got a mouth, we can breathe through it. But very different breaths you're taking through those two different channels that affect us in various ways. What's a breath through the mouth due to the body and the mind versus a breath through the nose? One of them. And then what is a day of that consistently doing for a body?
Starting point is 00:02:53 I'll introduce my friend here at this time. Yes. I love this. Show me the science. I usually wait a while to bring them on. Let's bring it. No, you called them up. So for people listening and not seeing this, I'm showing a cross section of a human skull. And so you will notice if you take the breath in through your nose, it has to run this gauntlet
Starting point is 00:03:14 of different structures past different tissues, past cilia, before it makes it into the throat and before it makes it into your lungs. If you look at the mouth, none of that is there. So when you are breathing through your nose, you are humidifying air, you're pressurizing it, you're filtering it so that you can use that air so much more efficiently. So yes, we can breathe through our mouths. What a wonderful thing. We have a backup delivery system for our lungs. That does not mean you should be breathing
Starting point is 00:03:44 through your mouth throughout the day. And this is something the ancients have known for thousands of years. And modern Westerners just have not been hip to this fact. Why is this not taught to us at a younger age to be nose breathers over mouth breathers? This is an eternal question that I've asked myself for years and years, because the science is so clear that when you're mouth breathing, you're going to make yourself more susceptible to respiratory ailments. You're going to be denying yourself more oxygen. You can actually change the shape of your face. If you breathe through your mouth, when you're young, the skelelicature will start forming to that slack-jawed posture, and you
Starting point is 00:04:26 will have this long face. I'm a great example of this, right? Because I was mouth-breathing through a lot of my youth and even up into adulthood. But there is more than 50 years of research on this stuff down at Stanford, which is very close to me, and it's indisputable. No one is arguing with this research. And yet go around and look. And what do you see? A bunch of mouth breathers, wherever you go. I had Andrew Heuermann on recently. I'm not sure if you've been familiar
Starting point is 00:04:55 with his work at Stanford. Oh, yeah. And he was sharing some breathing techniques and the power of breathing for the mind and the neuroscience behind breath. And he was talking about a powerful breathing technique, which is a deep long inhale through the nose with an additional breath at the top of it. So a, where you can really, that's when you actually oxygenate the most of the body and the cells, I guess, I'm not sure if that language is correct, but you're opening up pathways and creating more energy in the body when you breathe that way, as opposed to through the mouth. I've been studying a lot of your videos on Instagram and the different work that you've been doing.
Starting point is 00:05:36 And you've had you've interviewed so many different doctors and scientists and researchers on sleep apnea, on human performance from breathing. I feel like a couple of things happened when I was a kid. I always breathed with my mouth open. And I have one theory. Maybe you can correct me if this is true or not. One theory that my teeth, although genetics play a factor in it, my teeth became very crooked because I always had my mouth open at night breathing and during the day and working out. Is that theory true or is it more genetic that my mouth is, you know,
Starting point is 00:06:14 messed up with my teeth? It's all those things, but oral posture plays such a huge role in this. And this is something that people are just starting to realize right now. If you look at our ancestors, they all had perfectly straight teeth. They had very wide faces, these very broad jaws. If you don't believe me, go look at a skull anything older than around 500 years old. I've looked at hundreds of these things. They have big, wide jaws, big mouths. Huge. And these are the mouths, the jaws that you
Starting point is 00:06:46 see in models nowadays. So about 90% of us have this retro gnathic growth, which means our faces are growing backwards, which is one of the reasons why our teeth are crooked, which is another reason why we have smaller airways, smaller mouth, smaller airway breathing problems so we've known this again for decades and decades and i had a hard time believing this until i went to the labs until i was standing in this room surrounded by ancient skulls from people from asia africa europe south america all over the world all smiling back with perfectly straight teeth gosh Gosh. My God, what have we done? You know, it's interesting you say this. I, when I was 16, yeah, 16, I had eight teeth removed because I was supposed to get braces.
Starting point is 00:07:35 And they said that my mouth was so small that it was clustering the teeth. And that's why I looked like Edward Scissorhands in my mouth, right? And so I had these eight teeth removed. And then I decided not to get braces, which is probably the dumb thing. 20 years goes by, my teeth receded back. My top teeth receded back so that the only teeth that ever touched for the last 20 years
Starting point is 00:07:56 were my front two teeth. My back teeth have never felt each other touch until about four months ago because I finally got Invisalign about a year ago and I've been expanding my mouth and my teeth out. And it's crazy. The more research I'm doing, I feel like I just did this to myself because of my breathing patterns, especially at night because my mouth was just always open and relaxed as opposed to shut. That was one theory I wanted to have clarified from you. Another theory, I listened to a doctor of dentistry tell me that almost all disease comes through the mouth that we pick up. Almost all of it comes through the mouth, from ingesting, from breathing, all these different things. the mouth from ingesting, from breathing, all these different things. And the reason why people that breathe through the nose are usually healthier is because they're not breathing in the viruses or
Starting point is 00:08:49 the disease that we might carry with the filtration system through the nose that catches it a lot more. Is that accurate as well? So the first part of that, looking at the mouth and teeth. So why do we get our teeth straightened? We get our teeth straightened because they grow in crooked. Why do they grow in crooked? Because they have a smaller playing field. They have a smaller mouth to grow in straight. So the Western approach to this, and this wasn't always this way,
Starting point is 00:09:15 is let's remove more teeth from a mouth that's already crowded. And what's going to happen? The mouth is going to get smaller. So as this mouth gets smaller and smaller and smaller, your airway goes from this to this. So all of these orthodontists, and I probably talked to 20 of them, right, have said that there is this big wave coming. And we're going to look at what we've done 10 years from now and be horrified.
Starting point is 00:09:45 Wow. Because the physics are there. Small mouth, smaller, smaller airway. It's not too hard to get your head around. But the question is, what do we do about it? We acknowledge this problem. And your story, I've heard this 100 times from different people. I've had extractions.
Starting point is 00:10:03 I've had braces. I've had headgear. My mouth is messed up. My breathing was messed up. You hear this from everyone. And it was pretty shocking to me to, to realize that breathing could be affected so significantly. Isn't it interesting that we focus a lot on what we eat, how we sleep. We focus on hydration, nutrition, working out, but we can go a long time without eating or drinking something, but we can't go a long time without breathing the right way. And yet we hardly ever focus on the art of practicing how to breathe. Isn't it amazing that a lot of challenges we're faced with as
Starting point is 00:10:45 humans, whether it be our teeth, our breathways, inflammation, the ability to exert energy in workouts or whatever it may be, are all affected from our ability to breathe or a lack of understanding how to breathe. Are we supposed to breathe through our chest? Are we supposed to breathe through more of our diaphragm? When do we breathe? How do our ancestors know this instinctively and we don't? Our ancestors didn't need to know this, just like they didn't need to know the latest CrossFit exercise to stay fit, just like they didn't need to know what foods to eat to be healthy because they were living in a very different world than our own.
Starting point is 00:11:22 Our ancestors weren't doing push-ups or burpees, right? They didn't need to because they were walking for four hours a day. They didn't need to avoid sugars or high-carb foods because they were eating everything natural and raw. So when it comes to breathing, we have this amazing organ called our nose, which dictates so much of how the air should be coming in and how we should be using it. It's harder to breathe through your nose, right? It takes more time. It pressurizes it. That's all good because that allows your lungs to absorb more oxygen. You get 20% more oxygen
Starting point is 00:11:57 breathing through your nose than you do equivalent breaths through your mouth. Why is that? So because of how long it takes because of the pressure and because of uh significant release of nitric oxide which is in our sinus cavities nitrous oxide and it's not um it's not nitrous it's nitric oxide so don't go out and and uh you know uh get those little things that fill up balloons or whipped cream and do them very high. You want nitric oxide, which is the stuff that is released when people take Viagra or other sexual performing drugs. So enhancing drugs. So breathing through your nose could make you more aroused.
Starting point is 00:12:39 I wouldn't go so far as to say that. but I will say arousal comes with a relaxation, a parasympathetic response. An orgasm is associated with a sympathetic response. We calm ourselves parasympathetically with slow breaths. We arouse ourselves with breath. So you could see how whenever you you happen to be coupling with with whomever, your breath is following the arc of the experience in a lot of ways. And that that's not by accident, those those two things are, are very uniquely combined there. You've been studying this for a while now. And were doing like deep dive studies as well before that and water and things like that. This seems like this is something that's been fascinating you to research and understand.
Starting point is 00:13:33 What have been the three biggest findings that you've realized that were kind of shocking or just big eye openers that you realized you were doing the complete opposite of or it's been impacting you in such a negative way that you've now changed in your daily lifestyle? I think the first one is breathing too much. A lot of us think that by breathing more, we are getting more oxygen to our hungry cells in our bodies. False. We're doing the opposite. And I'll show you what I mean by that. Right now, if you take 10 to 20 big breaths you're gonna feel some lightness in your head you're gonna feel some tingling in your fingers if you keep breathing that way your extremities will get a little cooler that's not from an increase of oxygen but from a lack of circulation in those areas so by breathing slowly you actually can increase circulation and delivering deliver more oxygen to these areas. Really? So if I'm in a cold state, I go outside, I'm, you know, I'm from Ohio and it's wintertime and it's cold.
Starting point is 00:14:36 And usually we're like shivering. You're saying we should be actually slowing our breath in that cold state to allow us to get more oxygen or what does that mean it it depends what you're wearing it depends how cold it is it depends on who you are what what your fat content is in your body but having said that there are numerous breathing techniques that allow people to sit in the snow for hours at a time and not get frostbite and not get hypothermia and scientists are still wondering how the hell do they do it you can see videos of these monks they put them in harvard medical school researcher put these guys in a cold room put a wet sheet over them they breathed in this way and they dried the sheet so within about they dried the sheet that's right and you can this is all available
Starting point is 00:15:25 on youtube it's available in a study published in nature which is the most esteemed scientific journal out there and there's obviously lots of studies with wim hof where i know you've connected with i was in poland with wim i took a trip with the 13 guys that i sent there earlier this year and got to experience this firsthand with him and experiencing it as well. So what types of, so that's one thing that's, you know, this fast breathing is not the way you should go in general, depending on all these factors, but more slow breathing to help you kind of get the oxygen through your extremities. What's the next thing? When you're working out, a good thing to do is to practice breathing less.
Starting point is 00:16:09 So there's slow breathing and there's less breathing. And these are two different things because if you're breathing slow, but you're taking in a larger volume, that is still breathing at your metabolic rate. But by decreasing your breathing, something called hypoventilation training, which is getting huge right now, you can mimic the effects of altitude training. No way. Yes, you can release more EPO, build more red blood cells, and all of these things. That's what Lance got busted for, shooting up EPO.
Starting point is 00:16:41 But you can do this naturally. And they've been doing so many studies in this. Xavier Warrens in Paris has been doing studies in this and various Olympians have adopted this breathing technique. It's not fun because the one need in life is to breathe. So I've done it. Not fun, but it is amazing to feel your body compensating. Instead of having your fingers cold, just everything is hot because you've just got blood pumping throughout your body. So pretty interesting stuff. About a month ago, I committed to doing my first marathon. So I've been doing longer runs, which is not fun for me. And I've been a, I would say a high level
Starting point is 00:17:24 performing athlete most of my life from playing professional football back in the day to playing on the USA men's national handball team currently for the last 10 years. And just as an active person doing a lot of different sports, it's really hard to slow your breathing down when you are sprinting, when you're running fast, long distances, when you're doing a CrossFit type of workout, is it healthy to, to slow your breathing down when you are sprinting, when you're running fast, long distances, when you're doing a CrossFit type of workout? Is it healthy to slow it down when your body, your heart rate is pumping so fast? And it didn't say I need to breathe? Is it good to say, okay, let me restrict it right now breathe slower when it feels like your heart is going to pump out of your chest? What you want to be doing is be breathing all the time within
Starting point is 00:18:05 your metabolic need. So you don't want to be over breathing, you don't want to be under breathing. But so many of us are conditioned to over breathe all the time. That's what I'm saying. Breathing less can be very beneficial to want to be is efficient, especially in athletics, especially in performance. Why do you want to go expend more energy to do something when you could expend less energy to work at that same level, which means you can push it harder, you can run faster, you can run further. And they've done studies with with people who have been running marathons, and looked at their heart rates, mouth breathing versus nasal breathing. And one guy, when he was nasal breathing, you know, 26 miles, heart rate was the same the whole time
Starting point is 00:18:51 because he was pivoting into his parasympathetic state. This is the state in which your body is allowed to use oxygen most efficiently. You know, as Westerners, we're just like cram it in, cram it in, throw out what we don't want, cram it in. You know that it's most efficient and it's best for your body to be working right in line with its coherence. So right in line with its needs. You wouldn't get in a sports car and just rev it at every stop sign and just completely pin the RPMs everywhere you go. The motor is going to wear out, right? Our body is the same thing. Is there ever a time as an athlete pushing the limits
Starting point is 00:19:30 that's good to breathe through your mouth? You would have to talk to my buddy, Brian McKenzie, who deals with elite athletes all the time. I think once you get to a certain threshold, to a certain stage, I'm talking top tier athletes here, right? Then you can start exploring that in your zone five, your zone four. But what he's told me and what four of the breathing therapists have told me is never work out harder than you can breathe
Starting point is 00:19:57 correctly. So this doesn't mean when you're, you know, about ready to dunk on someone and it's the finals in the nba you can't open your mouth just slamming on someone that's fine what i'm focusing on is habitual like 90 of the time you should be breathing to your nose even when you're pushing your boundaries as an athlete and you feel like you can't get the oxygen are you saying that if you're training properly the body should start to adapt and be able to that's exactly what i'm saying and there's 40 years of research with dr john duyard who has proven that you get more oxygen breathing through your nose so why do you want if if and and breathing deeply if you think about breath okay you take in a breath,
Starting point is 00:20:46 it's going to go into your mouth, it's going to go into your throat, it's going to go into your bronchi here, but it takes a while to actually get to your lungs. So why would you want to breathe a bunch of very short, shallow breaths? You're not using that air. So 50% of it is going into your body and out without ever being by breathing slower and deeper, you can increase your efficiency by 35% over breathing shallow. So and this is something I was hooked up with a Stanford experiment with pulse with the pulse oximeter on a bike and pushing it as hard as I could, breathing through my nose at a rate of six breaths per minute, which is about a quarter. And I said, I have to be, my O2 has to be just
Starting point is 00:21:31 sinking now. It stayed the same the whole time. Six breaths a minute. This was all through the nose. We were trying to find the breaking point of when I was losing oxygen. But what dictates that need to breathe is not oxygen. It is carbon dioxide. So in the muscles, or in the blood, what is that? It's in the it's in the blood. Yes. CO2 is is what we off gas. I'm blowing off CO2 there, right? So if you were to exhale, and to hold your breath, you're going to feel that nagging need to breathe. It's not oxygen. That's increasing levels of CO2. So once you acknowledge that and understand that an increase of CO2 can actually be very beneficial, it changes your relationship with how you breathe. So we want to increase CO2 in the body because more CO2 will mean we need to breathe less.
Starting point is 00:22:28 More CO2 will allow oxygen to disassociate from red blood cells more easily. To be clear, people with emphysema, people with COVID, you don't need any more CO2. I'm talking about healthy people who don't have underlying conditions. healthy, healthy people who don't have underlying conditions. An increase of CO2, including for asthmatics and panic sufferers, has been found to be profoundly beneficial because most of us breathe too much, which guess what happens? We offload too much CO2. And without that CO2, our bodies have to work harder to get oxygen. This is so complicated. Sorry, you have to go through this process. But especially for a journalist, I never went to medical school, had to learn this stuff.
Starting point is 00:23:13 But we've known it for 120 years. It's just few people are paying attention to it. You know, when I do the Wim Hof method, and when I'm with Wim, and he's like, okay, let's do a few rounds. And then breathe all the air out so there's no air in your lungs. And then you can do more pushups than you've ever done before with no, I guess, air stored in the lungs, but it's oxygenated throughout the body. What are your thoughts on techniques like that for performance? I think they're fantastic. And I think the science is very clear on that, whether or not it's Wim Hof method. And by the way, Wim, it makes no claims that he invented this stuff, right? These breathing techniques have been around for thousands and thousands of years. And it's no coincidence that Wim Hof method does the exact same thing as Sudarshan Kriya, which does the exact same thing as pranayamas. They all have you really breathe,
Starting point is 00:24:10 hold your breath or breathe really slowly. And they go through these cycles. So what you're doing there is you are offloading CO2, you are uploading oxygen. When you hold your breath, that CO2 goes up, that oxygen releases into all your cells and you start all over again. into all your cells and you start all over again. So I found, I tried to do WIMS breathing, TUMO, whatever you want to call it, you know, four, five times a week. I'm a huge fan of it. I see big benefits of it.
Starting point is 00:24:38 And with breath work and athletes, trust me on this, in the next five years, it's already happening. There is going to be an explosion of focus on breathing. There used to be, we forgot about it for 40 years. And here we are again. If someone's only got five minutes a day, what's the best breathing strategy routine to just give them a boost or get them more intentional and grounded for the day? What would that be for you? Is it a set of cycles? Is it a set of cycles is it a deep breathing is it a calm breathing what what would you recommend everyone's different what they need is different so this is why these
Starting point is 00:25:12 blanket prescriptions for entire populations don't really work too well except for a subsect of people but there is a certain foundation of breathing it doesn't matter if you're an asthmatic if you have anxiety if you're an athletehmatic. If you have anxiety, if you're an athlete, you can all benefit from. So these steps are breathe through your nose all the time. I don't care if your nose is clogged. If it's clogged, find a way of clearing it, you have to breathe through your nose people. The second one is to breathe slowly, to breathe less, of course, and to exhale fully. A lot of us are
Starting point is 00:25:44 conditioned this is very typical western mindset to put more and more in more and more air on top of air in order to get a full breath of air you need to get the old breath out and you need to focus on your exhales and exhalations so a simple thing and just because something's simple doesn't mean it's effective look at nutrition. The most simple nutrition is the most effective. After 50 years of trying to find ways of hacking out, I'm going to pull this vitamin out and put it in this powder.
Starting point is 00:26:15 We're back at square one. Oh, hopefully. Just eat vegetables. We've been saying this for a long time. Breathing is the same. If there's one piece of advice I would give to people beyond that nasal part is try to breathe in to a count of about five or six, relax yourself, don't challenge yourself, breathe out to that same count. If you want to relax yourself even more, extend the exhale. Nature is simple, yet subtle. And your body will respond to this. And if you
Starting point is 00:26:44 have heart rate variability monitor, if you have a pulse ox, look at what happens to your heart rate, look at what happens to your heart rate variability, when you slow down the breaths, and you breathe in a rhythm, this affects how we think it affects the emotional centers in the brain. So it affects the entire body, because of course it does. It's breathing. It's our most basic biological need. Why do you think we have adopted this other style once we, when we knew this 40, 60 years ago, hundreds of years ago, we've, we've known this. Is it just a change in society or something else? Well, some of it is anatomical. So we, our faces have fundamentally changed as we were just
Starting point is 00:27:26 talking about earlier. That's part of it. So even if you focus on healthy breathing at night, you have sleep apnea, you have snoring because our faces have changed. Some of it is environmental. If you think of what happened in the Victorian era, people started wearing corsets, okay? Really tight vests, really tight belts. What happens when you do that? You can't take a deep breath. You can't breathe. Add to that pollution, add to that allergens,
Starting point is 00:27:53 add to that stress, add to that working in an office where you're in a chair like this and you're stressed out and you can't take a deep breath even if you want to. And you've got this perfect cocktail of illness. And if you don't believe me, go look at what's happened to people in the past 50 years from BMI to asthma to COPD. I mean, things are out of control. And it's so common now that people just think, oh, yeah, I snore.
Starting point is 00:28:22 My wife has sleep apnea. I sleep in another room. There's nothing normal about this. What's the best way to reverse sleep apnea? It really depends where your sleep apnea is. Nasopharynx, oropharynx, hypopharynx. For a lot of people, this is an issue from, and I'm not saying everyone, I would never say that some people absolutely need surgery. But so we have this muscle tube, it's our throat and all these soft tissues at the back of our mouth. When you just eat soft foods, which is 95% of the diet today, even what's considered healthy, yogurt, oatmeal, avocados, all this stuff is soft. All of those areas get flabby just like anything else would be a workout in your mouth yeah you need to work them out so there's this whole new branch of
Starting point is 00:29:12 science called myofunctional therapy where they have these kids and adults do exercises with their tongues this is an extremely powerful muscle? And if it's not working out, it's going to get flabby. Did you have a lot of sleep apnea yourself? Not too much. I was snoring for a little while years and years ago. I'm surprised because I've, you know, I've had extractions. I've had all the other problems, but I had numerous respiratory issues. I was working out all the time eating all the right food i was surfing i was boxing i was sleeping eight hours kept getting pneumonia kept getting bronchitis really wheezing and was told like people just like yeah you're getting old dude
Starting point is 00:29:56 this is how it is i said i don't quite believe that so once i really learned about what's happened to our airways um basically everyone, and once you understand what's happened, you can figure out ways of fixing it. So for people with mild or moderate sleep apnea, and anyone can look up these studies online, these oral pharyngeal exercises, I'm not going to do them now because they look pretty weird, but they have had a significant effect on snoring and sleep apnea. Work out for your mouth. Why not? It's free, right? What are they called? Oral what? Oral pharyngeal exercises. And I'm happy to send you a few links. Yeah, I got to check this out. Is
Starting point is 00:30:37 there a benefit with practicing breathing through one nostril and another nostril for the brain for memory for health is this a thing it is and if anyone is not driving i guess you could do this driving um but you can just take a finger or thumb or whatever you want and just block your right nostril and breathe in through your left nostril so there's been and breathe in and out through your left nostril there's about 20 years of studies showing that when you breathe through this channel you were you will lower blood pressure your heart rate will lower and you will stimulate more of the right quote unquote creative side of your brain now the right nostril inhaling through that has the opposite
Starting point is 00:31:26 effect. It stimulates you, blood pressure goes up, heart rate goes up. So there's this thing in yoga called alternate nostril breathing, right? That has you use these different channels to elicit different moods or put you into different states. How often should you be practicing this? Is this like a one minute a day type of thing? Is this every hour on the hour? You do this for a few seconds. What do you think is the best process? You shouldn't have to be practicing it at all.
Starting point is 00:31:55 And I say that because going back to that, we shouldn't be focused, have to focus on our diet or exercise, but the modern era is requiring us to. And what I mean by that in regards to your nose is your nostrils are covered with erectile tissue and this erectile tissue inflames and grows flaccid just like the erectile tissue, you know, where, so our noses throughout the day, when I learned this down at Stanfordford it just blew my mind one nostril will naturally open for about a half an hour to three or four hours and then gently close and the other
Starting point is 00:32:31 one will naturally open all day all day long this is happening to us it's going back sometimes they're both open and then they both so your body like when you have a little congestion sometimes it's on one side and it's like, it comes out the other nose like five hours later. You're like, what's going on? This is the cycle in our noses that our bodies naturally do. And if you think about how breathing air through these different nostrils affects our physiology,
Starting point is 00:32:59 affects us mentally, what a fantastic thing that our bodies are turning on the the throttle putting on the brakes crazy back and forth so if you're breathing through your mouth like that this guy you get none of this zero wow it's kind of like nature's night and day like one nostril maybe or like when the waves come in and when they go back it's like allowing nature to happen inside of your nasal cavity which affects the rest of your body and the mind i'm assuming this is fascinating do you know how often that is is that like every few hours it changes what's the rhythm it's about every 30 minutes to three or four hours it switches and once you know this
Starting point is 00:33:45 you could right now my right is more um obstructed than my left my left is a lot more open ancient yogis believe that all humans shared these same patterns and they did a study a couple decades ago where they looked at people and had them gauge how they were breathing throughout their noses and when the moon was at its strongest during a full moon and during a new moon everyone was synchronized no way what do you mean like one nose is clogged during for everyone or a new moon or something yes well this is crazy more more studies need to be done of course this is one study but this is why i included this this stuff sounded insane to me but there it is on the
Starting point is 00:34:38 national institute of health um library so this is fascinating so how long have you been practicing this new way of breathing for yourself personally so people think that since i wrote this book about breathing i'm now just the bad breather i'm just i got it locked in i'm no i am a science journalist and tried to take an objective view of this yeah i picked up a few tricks from the experts in the field, which I have felt completely transformed from. But I am not the guru to be disseminating, you know, you have this problem, breathe this way. That's there are other people that do this so well. Having said that, again, this stuff is easy. This isn't requiring you to go keto. It's not requiring you to go vegan. It's not requiring you to run 10 miles a day. We carry our breath with us all day
Starting point is 00:35:32 long. And we can focus that breath. And you will see instant benefits from doing this science is very clear. Have you seen through the research and the science, people applying this new way of breathing, or I guess, old way of breathing, that people are able to do things like cure asthma or other respiratory problems through a healthier breathing technique. Have you seen this? So I've talked to dozens and dozens and dozens of these people, people who had had asthma for 50 years who have been on bronchodilators oral steroids if you stay on oral steroids for too long it starts impacting your bones um which is why increased risks of osteoporosis autoimmune diseases i mean it worsening asthma it's bad news and again this is no no controversy about this but what do you do You can't get off this stuff because then you'll die of an asthma attack. So this story was written about in the New York Times about how someone,
Starting point is 00:36:31 he was a violin maker in Vermont, just started breathing in this different way, breathing within his metabolic needs instead of over-breathing. Asthmatics over-breathe all the time. They breathe through their mouth he was able to get rid of oral steroids that he'd been on for decades and he was going from 20 pumps of a bronchodilator to i think two a day and i read this in the new york times so this is not a sketchy journal and i said what is going on here so i spent months and months talking to the top researchers in this field and a lot of people think that asthma, oh, I inherited it. There's nothing. It's an incurable disease. I can't do anything about
Starting point is 00:37:10 it. I have to stay on these drugs. That is not true. If you look at the scientific literature, and if you look at these people who have done NIH studies into asthma and breathing and what a huge impact it's going to have, I want to be perfectly clear. I'm not a doctor. I'm not a breathing therapist. Okay. I'm not saying go ditch your Bronco dilators. No, I'm saying that you should, if you have asthma, it would be worth your time to explore how breathing can help benefit you, how it can help blunt the symptoms, but don't do anything per this advice. I just put that big label on there. Of course. And what would you say are some best practices from your research
Starting point is 00:37:51 when our nasal passages are congested? How do we, we can't breathe through your nose for five days for whatever reason. What's the strategy there? Have you, have you heard anyone share that? So some people, their noses are so messed up, they need surgical interventions. Absolutely. But for the majority of us, including me, I was a perfect candidate for surgery, right? broken this nose about four times basketball surfing, like, I'm a complete mess. But I wanted to see what my body could do. And I was able to restore so much of that damage
Starting point is 00:38:25 through breathing to open up these passageways. So a nice trick if you are congested is to exhale and you hold your breath and you hold your nostrils and you move your head back and forth. You move your head up and down until you feel a significant need to breathe. Then you calmly exhale through your nose and inhale again and then wait about 45 seconds to a minute and do that same thing over
Starting point is 00:38:57 again so what you're doing is you're increasing that magical molecule carbon carbon dioxide, which is a vasodilator, which helps to open your nose. So there's a lot of YouTube tutorials on this, and it's free. So first close your nose, then exhale, or exhale, then close your nose? You can exhale, then close your nose. Get all the air out of first, then close your nose, go up and down side to side then exhale more or then inhale you can inhale through your nose from that inhale through your nose it's still congested just be very calm about this don't just calmly inhale and try that again patrick mckeown
Starting point is 00:39:41 um who's been doing this stuff for 20 years has a lot of free tutorials on youtube he seems pretty fascinating with his research yeah oh this guy is someone who had severe asthma severe health problems was getting no help from anyone figured out how to breathe now has zero symptoms of asthma and is teaching thousands of asthmatics what he did. He was a business guy, right? He had no intention of doing this in his life, took a hard left turn into this world. So he's scientific. He's a great practitioner. He healed himself through it. So it's worth listening to him. For those who struggle with extreme anxiety or panic attacks, it seems like more and more people are dealing with anxiety and panic attacks. What's the easiest way to calm down using breathing that
Starting point is 00:40:32 you've discovered? Slow your breathing down. So there was a study about 10 years ago, an IH study by Alicia Murrett down at Southern Methodist University. She went to Harvard and Stanford, and she gathered a bunch of different people who were suffering from panic. And she just had them slow down their breathing and increase their CO2 levels. I know I keep saying CO2, but this is the stuff, people. And something like 96% of these people, a year after the study concluded said they were much improved or very much improved.
Starting point is 00:41:11 The majority of them stopped having panic attacks because what happens when we're panicked? Okay, I'm sitting here with you. Oh, I feel claustrophobic. claustrophobic. The more you breathe like that, the more you're going to exacerbate and hasten that attack. So when you feel it coming on, you don't stop and take a deep breath. You stop and take a slow and light breath into your lungs, right? And control your body and control your breathing. And this has such a profound effect on people. And again, that study, it was published top scientific journal,
Starting point is 00:41:54 it's available for everyone. It just, I find it so bizarre. And I should mention that my father-in-law is a pulmonologist, my brother-in-law is an ER doc. I'm a huge fan of Western medicine, but it's so bizarre that people with panic, people with asthma, no one's looking at how they're breathing, right? They're, they're given these, these pills and powders and, and put on their way. And the science is, is very clear on this stuff. It can have a really
Starting point is 00:42:20 profound effect. Does the mind or thoughts when we're in a panic or stressed or fight or flight moment, does the mind or thoughts influence the breathing or is the breathing influence the mind? Great question. It goes both ways. So what you're thinking is going to influence how you're breathing. But the wonderful thing is sometimes you can't take control of those thoughts, right? You get nervous, you can't turn that off. But you can take control of your breathing. And 80% of the messages are coming from the body to the brain, not from the brain to the body. So just by allowing yourself, think whatever you want to think, but slow down your breathing to the way that you would be breathing when you're calm and you will start shooting calming messages into your brain and just take
Starting point is 00:43:11 control of those, those States. And this is something that Huberman has been studying for years down at Stanford, right? With the, with the phrenic nerves and the way that the diaphragm moves, how that diaphragm moves is going to affect the signals that your brain is going to get, going to get and it's going to affect how you're going to be processing things. How the diaphragm moves. So the diaphragm is this amazing muscle that sits underneath the lungs.
Starting point is 00:43:38 The lungs don't inflate and deflate themselves, right? They need something to do it. So we have this crazy muscle. It looks like a parachute or an umbrella that when we breathe in, that diaphragm goes down. And when we breathe out, that diaphragm goes up. So this rhythmic motion of this diaphragm, the diaphragm works as a pump. Some researchers have said the heart is a secondary pump. The diaphragm is the main pump. So when your diaphragm is going like this, it is sending panic signals to your brain. This is like red alert, things are bad. But if your diaphragm is going like this, this is sending calming
Starting point is 00:44:19 signals, right? So it's almost like you could be stressed out in your mind but the moments or moments you start to slow your breathing it's going to send signal back to your mind that everything's better you don't need to stress as much so you if you can control your body you'll control your mind so guess what navy seals do before they go in for some black ops mission, really intense stuff. They start breathing in a box pattern. Four in, hold four, exhale four, hold four. Four in, hold four, imagine a box. If you look at what's happening there, you're in for four, but you are holding or exhaling for three quarters of the time. So the longer you hold and the longer you exhale, the more you're going to be eliciting that parasympathetic, that calming response. So these guys aren't going to sleep, right?
Starting point is 00:45:10 They're trying to focus themselves to be the biggest badasses on the planet, right? To go take care of business in an efficient way. They can't have their brains just all over the place. What? What are you saying? Panic. They can't panic. They're dead. So this is are you saying? Panic. They can't panic. They're dead. So this is a technique that anyone can use. I mean, the vast majority of us aren't going to be
Starting point is 00:45:31 in that scenario, but we can breathe the way that they breathe and that so many other people do to focus our thoughts, to take advantage of our breathing, to take over certain states, anxiety or anger. Can you explain why the diaphragm is sometimes referred to as the second heart? So the diaphragm, again, is this huge pump. It's almost like the heart is a sump pump, right? It's just doing all the other work, just the additional work. But the diaphragm is enormous. And as you're breathing in and out, it is pumping blood, okay? It is helping to pump blood, but it does something else. A lot of people view breathing as just a biochemical act, right? Getting oxygen in, getting CO2 out. It is a biomechanical act. So when the diaphragm goes down, it also softly massages the organs, which helps us leach out
Starting point is 00:46:27 more lymph fluid. So it is the pump for lymph fluid. So everything in the body should be moving. You know, you can think about it like a pond gets scummy, right? And a lot of stuff starts growing it because it's still water. That's not what happens with a river and our bodies want to act like a river. Things, things are static for too long. Does not like that. That's where problems occur. What's better for the body and your health chest breathing or lower belly breathing? Like where's the diaphragm sitting? Is it in between the two? Is it a mixture of both? So a lot of us are chest breathing throughout the day. And when we chest breathe, this is associated with a sympathetic or fight or flight response. What happens when you get scared? But instead, people are doing this all day. So when you breathe
Starting point is 00:47:21 like that, a sympathetic response, it's amazing. This is what has kept our species alive. It focuses us. It shifts blood from less important organs to the heart and the skeletal muscles so we can like fight or we can run. But it's meant only to be in that state for short amounts of time. So if we stay in the sympathetic chest breathing state for too long, we are cutting off other organs and a bunch of problems can happen in those organs because of that. I won't go down the laundry list. Just trust me on this. So to answer your question, you want to breathe lightly, fluidly, and deeply. This does not mean you have to just go for it every breath and push out your stomach. It means you should be breathing through your nose. Nasal breathings are deeper.
Starting point is 00:48:13 These go to the lower lobes. At the bottom of the lungs is where we have the largest perfusion of blood. That's where oxygen exchange can happen much more efficiently. Light, slow, and deep. That's how we should can happen much more efficiently. So light, slow, and deep. That's how we should be breathing. And less. Ordinarily, you would say breathe in line with your metabolic needs. But I'm saying for the vast majority, less is that's your metabolic. Gotcha.
Starting point is 00:48:38 And is it true that our lungs get smaller as we age? And if so, can breathing practices prevent this from allowing us to have more expansive lungs? So what happens from ages around 30 to 50, you're going to lose about 15 to 16% of your lung capacity. Oh man, after 50, it just goes down very, very quickly. That sucks. Well, there's good news behind this. I'm going to depress you, then I'm going to inspire you. So the problem is our ribs get a lot less flexible. Our intercostals get less flexible. But what's great about this is you can reverse that damage. Guess what yoga does? I'm going to have you reach your arm like this, breathe into this
Starting point is 00:49:26 lung and be flexible. And now breathe into this lung. So yoga is essentially just allowing us not only to maintain our lung capacity, but increase it. I've worked with free divers who have doubled their lung capacity. So doubled? Average adult male, six liters. This guy had 12 liters. So I think he had, he was abnormally large. I won't say quite doubled, maybe 40, 70% larger. So it's not uncommon to increase your lung capacity 30% by including these exercises, by breathing properly.
Starting point is 00:50:04 And especially when we get older, this is so important. We don't wanna go down that entropy, right? And we at least wanna sustain it. If we can increase it, great. What's the benefit to increasing our lung capacity? It's the same benefit of having a larger gas tank in a car, right? So if you're driving cross country,
Starting point is 00:50:24 do you want to stop and fill up every hour or do you want to stop and fill up every six hours right so by having larger lungs allows you to take fewer breaths and to get more oxygen with those breaths it's about being efficient so when we're breathing slower and when we're breathing deeply into our lungs at our metabolic need, our heart can work so much more softly, we aren't overworking it. When we're breathing twice the amount into our chest. Just feel your heart rate when you do that the heart hates this. Why do you want to overwork your heart? It should just be doing what it needs to do, not compensating for your bad habits. And that's what this larger lung capacity, this softer, lower breathing allows you to do.
Starting point is 00:51:14 Is there anything that you've learned and that doctors or scientists are saying is essential for us as human beings to practice that you don't practice? For instance, I know sugar is horrible. I know it's the root of all evil in the body and developing cancers and all these things, but I love sugar. You know, I'm better at it. The more I know how horrible it is for me, I'm better at balancing that, but I still love the sugar. You know, is there anything that you're like these things I should never do, but I still do it because it's just a bad habit. Well, you're talking to a guy who just had a big old chunk of
Starting point is 00:51:49 chocolate before. Good thing you don't have it. Good thing you're not with me right now, because I'd be sharing that with you. I'm with you on that. You know, it's I think it's a little ironic. And a lot of wellness circles, people are so stressed out about doing the right thing all the time that they're miserable. To me, the point of wellness is to live a happier and longer life. So why do you want to spend all your time beating yourself up for eating a piece of chocolate or drinking a beer? So I think in moderation is key. These breathing practices like Wim Hof Method, Sudarshan Kriya, they've been found to be so effective for people with autoimmune problems, asthma, anxiety, depression. But just breathing those slow and easy breaths, there's so many benefits to that. And psychologists and psychiatrists have used this for people with anxiety and depression as well.
Starting point is 00:52:47 So having said that, as long as you have this foundation of healthy breathing, just like with diet, as long as you have a foundation where you're eating a lot of vegetables, right? You're not eating a lot of highly processed carbs or not too much sugar. You can have a piece of cake. You can drink a beer. You can have a piece of cake, you can drink a beer, you can have a glass of wine, that's all fine. The same thing with breathing. If you're laughing really hard and you're breathing out of your mouth, who would tell you that's a bad thing, right? I'm talking about the habits, habitual breathing, the 90% of the day, even 80% of the day. If you adhere to healthy habits there, it's going to have a
Starting point is 00:53:25 downstream positive effect on your health. And the science, the studies, the data has really shown us that. I was just trying to practice this as listening to you. Is there a way to communicate and speak, but also breathe through your nose? Like while you're having a long speech for an hour on stage, do we practice breathing through the nose or out of the nose while you're speaking? I'm not even sure. Is that possible? There is, but it's so awkward. And I'll tell you what I mean by that. When I was talking to these breathing therapists, some of these people on the phone, they would say this very fluid sentence and they would keep talking and they're still talking. They're still talking. Then they would go silent and go,
Starting point is 00:54:03 and now I'm going to talk some more and talk some more. So it's not natural. Yeah. If I did that on a radio interview or with you, it would be a frickin disaster. So as you can see, I'm breathing through my mouth, right? I'm trying to breathe through my nose when I'm listening. But these aren't healthy breathing habits, but I'm aware of it so that when I'm off this call, I can go and close my mouth and breathe through my nose the rest of the time. So to answer your question, there is a proper way of doing this, but good luck with your friends. Yeah, right. Unless you're all breathing experts and you're part of the same language. And I've talked to circles of the conversations are really trippy it's like a point across it's like come on is there any evidence thus far if training your breathing helps to fight or reduce symptoms for viruses
Starting point is 00:54:59 flu covid anything that could be affecting the immune system and weakening it in a certain way. I just talked to David, Dr. Haskam about this, who has been studying how different habits can help defend our bodies better against COVID. I don't think he's too pumped for this herd immunity thing. He said, our best line of defense is ourselves. And so they have looked at how breathing plays this role in inflammation. So inflammation is behind, show me the top 10 killers in the world. And I guarantee inflammation is behind 90%, even 95% of them. So how we breathe affects inflammation in the body. If we are stressed out right now and you know how we did that heavy breathing exercise and you felt some numbness in your fingers, that is inflammation. That is blood not getting to
Starting point is 00:55:54 these areas. So our arteries are becoming inflamed. So it's harder for blood to push through these places. That's what it is. So breathing absolutely plays a role in this. And I should also note that there's been a ton of research looking into nasal breathing and how that is your first line of defense against COVID. No way. Not only does the nose filter out pathogens and bacteria and viruses but dr lewis ignaro who won the noble prize in the 90s has found that that release of nitric oxide interacts directly with viruses to kill them so no way yes breathing out through the nose is that what that does breathing through the nose? Is that what that does? Breathing through your nose at the whole time.
Starting point is 00:56:45 Okay. In and out. So not only is this filtering because we have nasal hairs, we have cilia, we have all these other structures, but the release of this nitric oxide, the first round of SARS, which was like 14 years ago, they would expose mammalian cells to nitric oxide and those cells would live so much longer and it's no coincidence there are 11 clinical trials right now looking into giving patients guess what nitric oxide to help them defeat covid and to to blunt the symptoms of covid after it happens we produce nitric oxide in our noses so we don't produce it in our mouth. We produce it throughout our bodies, but we get a much larger perfusion through our noses.
Starting point is 00:57:30 Our mouth specifically is not producing any nitric oxide. So if you hum and if you hum on occasion, you increase your nitric oxide 15 fold. Wait, so humming, why? Just because you have your mouth closed and you're breathing through your nose? It releases more nitric oxide, the vibrations of it. So they found this out 10 years ago, 12 years ago. And there's even been this one small study where this guy had chronic sinusitis and he
Starting point is 00:58:02 hummed at a prescribed time four times a day and he was able to clear his nose i'm not saying i'm not saying this is going to work for everyone but i'm saying that the science is there if you look at what nitric oxide interacts directly with pathogens to kill them okay that's our whole job it's it it's a basso dilator. It's part of what it does. Remember? Wow. So they release it. I mean, they're getting it out of their body. They're getting it, releasing it inside. They're releasing more nitric oxide within. It stimulates the release of more nitric oxide. Inside the blood. That's right. That's right. You're not breathing out nitric oxide. You're breathing out carbon, right?
Starting point is 00:58:46 You breathe out carbon dioxide. That's right. It's really hard to hum and inhale. They were looking at humming and exhalation. And it's also important to note that nitric oxide has a bioavailability of about two to six seconds. So you have to constantly keep producing it, which is why you need to constantly, it really helps to constantly be breathing through your nose. Not just, I'm going to breathe through my nose for five minutes and fight off COVID. No, this is something you have to do all the time. If you want to make your body a very violent place for viruses to live in, I would argue start with breathing through your nose, take your vitamin D and C. Let's say we have our mouth shut 90% of the time, right?
Starting point is 00:59:35 Hopefully more throughout the day. You're sleeping with your mouth shut. You know, it's interesting. When I started to sleep without my mouth shut, I stopped snoring. You can't snore with your mouth shut. You can't snore with your mouth shut. You can't go. I mean, I guess you could, but it's like your body just learns how to breathe through the nose as opposed to just your tongue flapping around in the back of your mouth, I guess. Right. I mean, you, you can snore when you have issues with your, with your nasal pharynx. People can,
Starting point is 01:00:01 some people can do that, but for a lot of people simply shutting their mouth at night can open the airway and you you you won't snore that's it you just shut your mouth and you stop snoring most of the time moms have been saying this crap for for 300 years you know sit up straight and shut your mouth maybe they were right i know right it's interesting when i went to india four years ago to study this we were practicing a meditation breathing you know cycle and they were telling us the science behind each one of the reasons why we would hum for a period of time why it was all breathing through the nose while you breathe in uh let's say for two seconds and you always breathe out for four seconds or you double the breath on the in the exhale and they were
Starting point is 01:00:50 saying this is what we've been doing in this practice for thousands of years in india but they were finding the science that then backs the reasons why each thing is valuable and they were saying to me that when you hum it releases more more, what is it, nitric oxide? Is that what it's called? That's it, yeah. And it helps release that, which defends against disease, all these different things. So it's fascinating that people have been doing this for thousands of years, and now the science is catching up to it all. Well, think about prayers, right?
Starting point is 01:01:21 There was a study done about 20 years ago where they looked at the Catholic prayer cycle of the rosary, Ave Maria, and they looked at O Money, Pod Me Home, one of the most famous Buddhist prayers, right? Each of these prayers requires you to recite a phrase that takes about six seconds. So you're only exhaling when you're reciting, when you're vocalizing, always on the exhale. And then it was about a six second break to inhale. So, so many prayers, sata, nama, the same exact thing. All of these prayers in these different cultures had the same respiratory rate tied into it. And it turns out that that respiratory rate, you don't need to pray to do this.
Starting point is 01:02:03 You can, and that's great. But just breathing at that rate will increase oxygen to your brain. It will slow your heart rate. It will increase circulation. And the systems of your body will enter the state of coherence. And you can see this with heart rate variability. All those lines that are disjointed suddenly become these beautiful sine waves. And this is your body really working at peak efficiency. So if you look at humming too, guess what happens when you go, all of these prayers, not all of them, many prayers in different cultures, incorporate elements of humming, which all do the same thing.
Starting point is 01:02:42 Chanting, humming. Yeah. I guess you're saying that this, when you breathe your nose, it, it, it creates, it releases more nitric oxide in the blood. You have to keep doing it. It's not like it's there. You do it for five minutes and it's there all day. You have to continually do this to keep releasing. Is that right? That's correct. But if you're, for instance, let's say you're exposed to someone and they're coughing and they look sick, this would be a good time to be breathing through the nose to be humming, right? To get away from them. Because if this nitric oxide only lasts so long, it's that time when the virus comes in, which can come into your body and make you sick. So that would be the time you would really want that extra plug of nitric oxide. Boost. And so your body isn't releasing it
Starting point is 01:03:30 when you breathe through your mouth, but it releases it when you breathe through your nose. Nitric oxide is released in various areas of the body, but it is not released in your mouth specifically. So you get a far, you get six times more nitric oxide breathing through your nose. And if you're doing it throughout the whole day through your nose, you're constantly boosting your immune system. I'm assuming you're constantly optimizing, relax, relaxation, you're
Starting point is 01:03:56 less stressed by doing all this, right? Everything you're saying it affects your nervous system function, it affects your brain, it affects your biochemistry. I mean, I can go on and on. How much of a change have you made in your personal life since researching and studying this? Do you feel like you're 50% of the way there? Are you 80%? What's your personally, your lifestyle like? Well, I wanted to address, it's pretty easy to tell people how to breathe well. It's another thing to teach them why they need to breathe well or what it's doing to their bodies. So that's what I really tried to focus on in the book because I was frustrated when I first started this research years ago, finding all these yoga books with 400 breathing techniques with these
Starting point is 01:04:42 crazy names. It's's like cool where where do i start what's it doing so so the how is really the easy part but what i wanted to tackle um beyond the breathing practices is how to enlarge my airway how to stop from wheezing how to stop getting bronchitis and pneumonia so when when you mean a larger airway, you mean your mouth, you mean your throat? What does that mean? I'm talking the the oral pharynx in the back. So the throat, all those soft tissues, but I was just curious to see if you can expand your mouth. So we've we've done a very good job in our culture of making small mouths smaller. You're a great example.
Starting point is 01:05:27 I'm a great example. Now I'm expanding it through braces to widen it. And not to cut you off, the fascinating thing is they were originally going to make it smaller by closing the gaps. And I'm like kind of blessed because for 20 years I just had eight teeth. Well, I really had four teeth missing and they took up my wisdom as well. And I'm kind of blessed because I didn't get braces. If I would have gotten braces right away, they would have closed my mouth and pushed the teeth back to make it straight. And my orthodontist was like, if we do this, your tongue is going to be pressed against your teeth. You're going to be speaking, might be messed up.
Starting point is 01:06:08 You're going to be, you have no airway. He's like, we need to expand the mouth and put implants in. I was like, why did I get my teeth taken out if I'm going to put fake ones back in there? But it's kind of a blessing where, okay, now we've been expanding it. And I'm hopeful that this will be impacting my health for many years to come because of it. Well, you just think of the physics here. So by you having a larger mouth, by having more room, there's more room for the tongue to naturally lie up on the upper palate. OK, instead of sticking out the sides like it does with my right, because my mouth was shrunk up.
Starting point is 01:06:43 You're going to have more room to breathe. So of course you are. And the fact that I think it's just so bizarre that for so many years, we've been shrinking mouths. And now we're like, maybe that's not the best idea. Maybe we should enlarge them. So they're getting us going in and going out. So I did the same thing where I had seen so many case studies of people who had used this device, they just wore it at night, which gently opened up the upper palate. So there is a if you have a clean thumb, you can put it on the roof of your mouth. And there is a crack, there's a suture, okay, that crack can open at virtually any age and widen naturally. This is how when we're born as babies,
Starting point is 01:07:26 our heads are this big and then they double in size. You can feel all these cracks on your head right now. Okay. Those open up. Um, and I wore this device to help expand my upper palate and I gained about 15 to 20%, um, increases in my airway you did in in in one year I took a cat scan too and you saw the mouth expanded the mouth there was much more gentle movement in the mouth the mouth probably expanded you know millimeters four mil. Yeah. But just from having that, this also stimulated some chewing stress. So it worked out these back tissues and the back tissues just opened up. And subjectively, I can say I've never been breathing more, more freely. I didn't know I could breathe this way. So a lot of people don't need their mouths expanded unless they went through
Starting point is 01:08:25 what we went through, but they can do these oral pharyngeal exercises, um, which can have a significant, significant improvements on your airway health. What is this? The thing you wear, is it just thing you press on there all night or it is. And, and, you know, I've gotten like hundreds of emails of people saying, I want to do this. This is going to solve my asthma. I want to do this. This is going to solve my cancer. Everyone's different, man.
Starting point is 01:08:49 And this worked for me. I'm not saying it's going to work for you, but I will say working out your tongue, there is no bad side effects to that. Okay. What's one tongue exercise we can do? Oh, they look grotesque. Give me one. Give me one.
Starting point is 01:09:03 All right. One. At least me one. Give me one. All right. One. All right. At least crazy one. So, so first of all, this was a retainer I put on the top of my top of my mouth. Yeah. That stimulated chewing stress and very gently opened up the, the roof of my mouth because it had been so small for so long. So oral pharyngeal exercises. Here's the easiest one. You see how I'm going to get around this. It's just closing your mouth. You want your tongue to always be on the roof of your mouth. You don't want it to be down below sloshing around on your teeth. All the time in
Starting point is 01:09:39 general? Yes. Really? So you want to be holding it up there almost gently. It should naturally be doing that. The front teeth should almost be touching. If the front teeth are lightly touching, that's fine. So you're going to notice when your mouth is closed and the tongue is at the roof of the mouth, the tongue goes up, the airway opens. If you open your mouth, the tongue rocks back and the airway gets smaller. So if you are constantly having shutting your mouth, I can't quite demonstrate shutting my mouth while I'm talking to you. So that is the number one thing you can do. After that, you can do something that a myofunctional therapist just taught me. You're going to get it now are you happy it's called the cave and this is doing this so i am putting the the tongue on the roof of my mouth and i'm sucking it up there yeah and
Starting point is 01:10:34 and don't overdo it start with a few seconds and you can do that throughout the day and another one you can do what does that do what does the cave do do you putting that on the front of your teeth or more on the top of the roof right where the front of the tongue should just be touching the back of your teeth so this is strengthening the tongue right it's getting it more more elastic and strengthening five seconds at a time 20 seconds you can do you can hold it for for 30 seconds if you'd like but another one, this is also known as mewing even though it's just oral pharyngeal exercises is using the back of the tongue and putting it to the back of your palate and sort of moving your tongue forward so that the tip of your tongue reaches the back of your teeth like that. So from the back of your throat almost as
Starting point is 01:11:27 far back as it can go and then pushing it forward on the top of your mouth like you will feel the muscles right here when you do this and when you're doing this you are tensing those soft tissues you're just working them out and there's some other tricks i'll forward you the paper from yes guest journal which is an esteemed journal. This is where this stuff was published and very effective for snoring and sleep. For some people with snoring and sleep apnea. Do you speak Spanish any chance, James? Un poquito.
Starting point is 01:11:58 For 20 years, I've wanted to learn Spanish. And one of my theories on why I think it's more challenging than it probably needs to be, it's because I've never been able to learn how to roll my R's. And part of me is wondering, is it because I have a smaller mouth? Is it because I just, I can't use my tongue the right way? Is it because, I don't know, has this ever come up where people can roll their R's in a certain way with a language, whether it's Spanish or another language, based on breathing, strengthening the tongue, you know, working it out? Is this something that you've seen? idea. Just from an anatomical perspective, it makes sense to me if your tongue is not aligned with your lower jaw, if your tongue is flopping around, if you see teeth imprints on your tongue when you hold it up, then your mouth is too small for your tongue and makes you more apt to have
Starting point is 01:12:59 airway issues. How that relates to languages like Italian or or spanish or portuguese i'm not sure but but a great it's a good that's a good thing for you to research next and let me know if you find any research book how to roll your r's yeah are you able to do that just curious do you know how to roll the r's i sound terrible when I do it, but I try and you always get this sort of snicker of sympathy, which sort of allows you to get away with a bunch of stuff. So I'm a terrible Spanish speaker, but I'm in California, right? And I grew up in Southern California. So we were just down there all the time. With the mask wearing in the global pandemic, is there a way to develop
Starting point is 01:13:47 better breathing techniques to help people breathe better in masks? So what people are reacting to when they have a mask on is they're not reacting to a lack of oxygen. You see these people walking around saying, oh, I'm anxious. I panic. I can't breathe, I'm not getting oxygen. That is almost always never the case. What they're reacting to is that increase of carbon dioxide. So when you have a mask on, you are breathing slowly, and there is a little backdraft of CO2. And CO2 is the thing that makes us need to breathe, just as we talked about earlier. It's funny hearing people and even hearing people on the street who say, there's no way I'm getting enough oxygen.
Starting point is 01:14:32 I'm not wearing this thing. All you need to do is buy one of these. It's about 15 bucks on Amazon, or you can buy it at your local store, whatever. This is a pulse oximeter. And you put your finger in here, and it shows you your blood sats. Okay. There's been numerous studies that have shown no matter what mask you're wearing, I'm sure there might be some 20 ply mask that might make it really hard to breathe, but all the masks that most people are wearing right now, this is not an oxygen problem. It's an increase of CO2. As we mentioned earlier, It's an increase of CO2.
Starting point is 01:15:05 As we mentioned earlier, having more CO2 in your body, as long as you have healthy levels of oxygen, can be very beneficial. We're just not used to it, so we think it's unhealthy. It can be beneficial. Yeah, that's interesting. And are you finding it comfortable when you're breathing through a mask? Is it not bothering you? What's your personal take on how you're doing it through the nose?
Starting point is 01:15:26 I take this as an opportunity to focus even more on my breaths and to breathe slowly. If you don't want to smell your garlic breath, if you just eaten some pizza for lunch or whatever, then why would you want to keep breathing 20 times a minute? Why not breathe six times a minute really slow down your breathing and allow your body to calm down and function better so san francisco was one of the first cities to shut down everyone's wearing masks here and uh i actually don't mind the the mask i'm a weirdo because i've checked myself i've checked my blood sats my oxygen's just fine it's that increase of co2 and knowing
Starting point is 01:16:06 that there is extra vasodilation more circulation with an increase of co2 um i look at this as a as a as a benefit in some ways yeah is it possible to reverse aging if we learn to breathe better can we become younger can we live longer because of our breathing techniques or strategies and way of being? You're gonna be skinny, you're gonna look great. You're gonna get that leading part in a movie, everyone, all you got to do is free. No, really? It is one around. Is there science around it for living longer, though?
Starting point is 01:16:39 Absolutely, there is if lung capacity look at lung capacity. So we had talked about this before. One of the leading markers of death, okay, is when you lose respiratory health and when you lose lung capacity, even more than genetic. So lung size. When they shrink and you can't breathe, how are you going to survive? Lung size is a very accurate marker for lifespan. Wow. This was a study they did about 30 years ago. Part of a longitudinal study that's been going on for 70 years. And they found that lung size and respiratory health. And it's amazing. Like you can't do anything about your genetics, right? But you can do
Starting point is 01:17:24 something about your breathing and you can do something about your lung capacity. You can really focus on that and show some substantial differences. What is the, is there studies or research around how many years you could potentially extend based on the size and capacity of your lungs? There's not because everyone's different everyone's a different age but but i this was a pretty interesting study i found it didn't make it into the book my editor said this is just too weird but one researcher looked at people who had had double lung transplants and those people who had their original size or smaller significantly longer. So those references are available for free on my site. If you don't
Starting point is 01:18:16 believe me, that's amazing. So, okay. So if you want to live longer, increase the capacity to breathe deeper and bigger lungs. Don't go out and get a lung transplant if you don't have to, people. We have this incredible machine called the human body that really responds to the inputs we put into it. So you can hone this thing if you just spend a little bit of time, a little bit of focus. And I just want to, I realized I was being a smart before. Breathing isn't going to do everything for you, right? Either is eating well, either is exercising, but it has to be considered with these other
Starting point is 01:18:55 things. It has to. A lot of us know that eating crap food is going to make you feel crappy. It's going to shorten your life. It's going to make you more susceptible to disease. Same thing with exercise. Who's talking about breathing? Well, hopefully more people. Our ancestors were for thousands of years, but I see that wave starting to really come up now. And, and a lot of scientists and researchers are very excited about exploring this further.
Starting point is 01:19:19 Is it expanding the rib cage that we need to do or more making it more flexible so we can breathe in and out deeper? What is the thing we need to do? Your muscles like flexibility. Your mental capacity likes to be flexible. Your respiratory system likes to be flexible. Your ribs want to be flexible. Your intercostals want to be flexible. So if you look at these free divers these
Starting point is 01:19:45 are people with these enormous rib cages right but they can also exhale all that air out right gosh i mean that's super expansive here's here's how you can tell if you're engaging your diaphragm when you're breathing because sometimes this is confused with just belly breathing you see these people they're just like i'm breathing healthy, they're just like, I'm breathing healthy. And they're just sticking their belly out. Take your hands like this and place them just above your hip bones, right? And take a breath in through your nose. And you want your hands to move out, okay? You don't want them to move forward.
Starting point is 01:20:21 You want them to move outward laterally. You don't want them to move forward. You want them to move outward laterally. And when you breathe that way, just real calmly, that shows that you're allowing that diaphragm to go down and gently push outwards, okay? So that's a healthy breathing. A lot of people are just focused on the stomach, but you're just using stomach muscles there.
Starting point is 01:20:43 You want your body, just as I said before, everything in the body wants to be moving softly. Like your blood wants to be coursing softly through your veins. Limp fluid wants to be moving. Muscles want to be flexible and they want to be moving. And I would consider the diaphragm the most important muscle in the entire body.
Starting point is 01:21:03 Because if it goes out or if you are losing function there, everything's going to go to your health is going to go to. Okay. I've got two final questions for you that I ask everyone at the end of my interviews before I ask them, I want to make sure people get the book breath, the new science of a lost art.
Starting point is 01:21:24 They can check it out on your website on amazon everywhere and um best website for you is mrjamesnester.com you're also on social media mrjamesnester on instagram you've got a lot of great little short bits there on instagram that i really like watching uh so make sure you get the book. And one of my final questions is called the three truths question. So I want you to imagine a hypothetical situation that because you've mastered the art of breathing, you've extended your life for as long as you want to live. And it's the last day for you though.
Starting point is 01:22:00 It's got the last day of your life. It could be a hundred years from now, whenever it is, but you've accomplished everything you've set out your life to be. For whatever reason, you've got to take all your body of work with you, all of your content and books, interviews, they got to go with you. So no one has access to your written audio or video words anymore, but you get to leave behind three things, know to be true the three big lessons you would leave and share with us what i like to call three truths what would you say are those three truths for you that you would share let's say never underestimate the capabilities of your body okay if someone
Starting point is 01:22:39 tells you something is impossible go prove that it not. And I think the third one is ambition is the last refuge of failure. And what I mean by that is to sit around and try to do something and hem and haw. That's not the way to do it. You just do it. Then you don't have to have ambition. You're already on the train. You're already moving forward love that those are powerful truths james i want to acknowledge you for a moment before i ask the final question for for taking a deep dive into something that i think is affecting billions of people around the world that don't have the tools and the science of understanding this i'm i'm very grateful that you're popularizing this in a mainstream, especially in America,
Starting point is 01:23:27 so that we can understand it more for those who maybe haven't been trained in other philosophies where they learned this growing up. And I think it's a lot of the causes of pain, stress, anxiety, mental disease can be solved or helped through understanding these practices in a major way. So I acknowledge you for studying this, for researching it, for finding practical ways for us to apply it in our lives. Very powerful, the work you're doing. And I appreciate your work. Final question for you. What is your definition of greatness? Flexibility. There you go. I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a rundown of
Starting point is 01:24:12 today's show with all the important links. And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me, as well as ad free listening experience, make sure to subscribe to our greatness plus channel on Apple podcast. If you enjoyed this, please share it with a friend over on social media or text a friend. Leave us a review over on Apple Podcast and let me know what you learned over on our social media channels at Lewis Howes. I really love hearing the feedback from you and it helps us continue to make the show
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