These days so many of us are living under such regular, often unrelenting, stress that we stop recognizing it for what it is. One outcome of this is that after we exercise aerobically and our respiration rate and pulse have spiked, we don't reflexively know that we need to calm down and re-set our breathing back to its relaxed state. It's just as important as cooling down our muscles after a workout!
This is an important practice to counter a chronic pattern of over-breathing endemic in our society, where the body assumes an emergency stance all the time that is unnecessary and unhealthy long-term.
So here's a workout and post-exercise routine to monitor your respiration rate and volume via the pulse, since they typically correlate. People with stressful jobs like paramedics, nurses and police officers might also consider doing something like this at the end of their shifts to move their bodies into the rest-and-relax state of the nervous system.
These breathing cool-down strategies can be done while you're in the shower, getting dressed after changing, or even driving to your next destination. After some period, take your pulse again and see where it is in relation to where you started. If it's within 5 points, I'm typically satisfied but I may take it later in the day to check again.
Now sometimes I forget to take my pulse before the workout, but I know the resting rate is usually below 70, so I'll do all the other steps anyway with that as a guide. Get to know your baseline numbers.
You don't have to do this perfectly. The point is that people who don't do it at all can create a dysfunctional breathing pattern by exercising a lot, not calming their breathing, and then breathing at the same accelerated rate as when they were exercising all day afterward. It looks like heavy breathing, gasping even, while sitting at a desk or in bed! It's a setup for an around-the-clock, chronic stress-inducing, mouth-breathing habit.
Healthy breathing involves breathing the correct amount of air for the current activity you're engaged in. Breathing retraining creates new habits so you're breathing more reflexively over time at the correct rate to meet your metabolic needs in the moment.
Breathing Retraining Center offers individual and group training and coaching on self-management techniques to identify and correct poor-breathing habits. Breathing Retraining Center's educational products, courses and coaching are designed to improve breathing skills for people whose issues may be related to habits that have the potential to be improved, as a self-care/wellness activity. Breathing difficulty may be a warning sign of a life-treatening heart or lung condition, infection or other illness. Always check with your doctor about your own situation.
The Buteyko Breathing Technique and other breathing-retraining strategies we teach are an alternative approach and are not the practice of medicine, psychology or a form of psychotherapy, nor are they a substitute for seeking medical or psychological advice from an apporpriate professional health-care provider. We want to make the important distinction between using the Buteyko Breathing Technique and other breathing-retraining strategies for health and well-being and the practice of medicine, psychology or any other licensed health-care profession.
Breathing classes, coaching and other services from Breathing Retraining Center are offered by teachers who are not licensed by the State of California as physicians or other healing-arts practitioners unless so noted. We offer alternative non-medical/non-psychological techniques and our services are considered to be laternative or complementary to the healing arts that are licensed by the State of California.