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Can't Sleep? Yoga Breathing Is Your Secret Weapon

Updated: Feb 16, 2019

Most of us have become accustomed to running on our stress response system on a daily basis. We stay engaged in activity well into the evening and then find it difficult to unwind. Years of this habitual pattern catches up to us and results in chronic insomnia.

Ed Harrold Life With Breath Article @ Huffington Post
Can't Sleep? Yoga Breathing Is Your Secret Weapon

Guess what is the no. 1 symptom of stress my clients are complaining about? Maybe the title of the article gave you a hint but yes, it’s lack of sleep. Falling right on the heels of this is a lack of energy and fatigue. Well, if you can’t sleep, these would certainly be a consequence.


Now here’s the real kicker. Lack of sleep also influences stress. Not only does our physical health require rest but our mental and emotional states depend on sleep to maintain psychological states and self-regulatory functioning.


Getting proper sleep is vital to our health and well-being. This is the time for our physical, mental and emotional selves to restore and repair through important biological and physiologic functions. There’s a lot happening while we’re sleeping.


All is not lost. Daily breathing exercises are a wonderful tool for improving sleep patterns and a more restorative rest. How we breathe plays a large role in balancing our Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) which is comprised of two systems regulating our stress or relaxation responses.


Most of us have become accustomed to running on our stress response system on a daily basis. We stay engaged in activity well into the evening and then find it difficult to unwind. Years of this habitual pattern catches up to us and results in chronic insomnia.

All this thinking and doing activates the stress response which release activity-based hormones. While in this system, breathing patterns change and again another cyclical dichotomy happens. Poor breathing patterns activate the stress response and stress influences poor breathing or respiratory function. Remember the old saying, “slow down, take a breath” OR “slow down and count to 10.” There’s a reason for this.


As we re-pattern our breath with yoga breathing to take less breaths per minute and ensure deep diaphragmatic breathing with each inhale and exhale, we shift from breathing that stimulates fight or flight (the release of cortisol) to rest and restore (the release of serotonin to melatonin) and support the bodies natural state of homeostasis through the relaxation response. Focusing on the breath also brings our mind into the present moment so we can evaluate the current situation more accurately instead of mindless reactivity.


Check out Can’t Sleep?  Yoga Breathing Is Your Secret Weapon article on Huffington Post>>


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