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The Healer Within-Breath Practice by Dr. Roger Jahnke

It is a bit unusual to us in the western world to consider the importance of
breathing techniques. After all, we are always breathing, aren't we? It
seems a little silly to put extra attention to something we do naturally.
Notice your own breathing. Isn't each breath actually very shallow? Does
your posture or position encourage or restrict your ability to take full
breaths? If you note carefully you will probably realize that you are
utilizing one quarter or less, of your lung capacity.

The presence of special breathing practices in the ancient cultures has
always been a mystery to people in the Western world. There are numerous
beneficial physiological mechanisms that are triggered when we turn our
attention to the breath and then increase it's volume. When volume, rate and
attention level are all altered, dramatic physiological, and even emotional,
changes can occur. As it turns out, unknown to science until very recently,
the action of the lungs, diaphragm and thorax are a primary pump for the
lymph fluid, a lymph heart. This mechanism may be more important to the
lymph heart than body movements. In addition, the breath is the source for
oxygen which is the key element in the body's ability to produce energy. And
the act of relaxed, full breathing moves the function of the autonomic
nervous system towards balance or homeostasis. (Please see the section on
physiology in "The Most Profound Medicine" for a complete revelation of the
mechanisms initiated by Qigong).

>From the traditions of the ancients we know that breathing practices are
important. Why would they continue to employ techniques that were
ineffective? Empirical science, the scientific method of all original
cultures, is based on trial and error. That which has value is kept and
employed. That which is found to have little or no value is dropped. In the
empirical approach, that which is kept, is "tried and true". Empirically
breath practice is "tried and true".

We also know that these practices are important through clinical experience.
Patients who have learned and used breath practice as a part of their daily
personal system of self-applied health enhancement respond more quickly to
treatment, no matter what type of physician they are seeing. Individuals who
are well are able to remain more well, adapt to greater stress and have
greater endurance when they keep breath practice in their daily self-care
ritual.

Inspiration is the rush that one feels when over taken by spiritual energy,
it is the force that impels one forward into life, and it is the divine
influence that brings forth creativity and vitality. Inspiration is, also,
"to breath in ". The breath is a link to the most profound medicine that we
carry within us. Within this nearly unconscious gesture, a breath, that we
enact 1,261,440,000 (1 and 1/4 billion) times in our life span there is a
simple yet profound healing capability.

Our first act when we emerge from the womb is to inspire. Our last act is to
dis-inspire or expire. These breaths, first in and finally out, are like
parentheses that encompass our corporal life. It is no surprise that the
breath would be so remarkably linked to the power of healing.



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