Hey Patrick,

Good question! I don't really remember being very regimented in my 
approach. I'm sure I just breathed through my mouth when I felt I wasn't 
getting enough oxygen. However, I do remember something about this feeling 
of suffocation being addressed in Nestor's book. (I think he was talking 
about experimenting with nose breathing while running.) I'm sure that your 
reading of the book will make some things clearer. I remember trusting the 
science about the structure of our nostrils being more conducive to the 
exchange of oxygen. In this way, I felt I was able to push a little more 
each time I experienced the feeling of not getting enough oxygen. As I 
said, it took me some time to adapt, but I'm pleased I persisted. 

There's also a fascinating exploration in *Breathe* of how our facial 
structure has changed since the advent of softer foods as a result of the 
Industrial Revolution, and why breathing through our nostrils no longer 
seems quite so natural. 

Oh, and Chris, I also experimented with taping my mouth shut during sleep, 
but invariably I would awake with my tongue taped to my ear!

Cheers, John


On Sunday, March 15, 2026 at 6:24:30 PM UTC-7 Patrick Moore wrote:

> John and Chris: Question: when one starts out from habitual mount 
> breathing — I mean as a cyclist, where it seems absolutely necessary to 
> breathe through your mouth to keep up with the oxygenation required by your 
> exertion: how do you make the change from this sort of mouth breathing to 
> nose breathing? This when, if you try to breathe through your nose as you 
> are moderately powering up a hill or against a headwind, you very quickly — 
> within 30 seconds — feel as if you are going to suffocate? I experienced 
> this exact situation this mornin on the way to church, riding NE against a 
> strong NW headwind.
>
> Is the technique for the transition simply to back off and ride at such 
> low levels of exertion (translated into basic English:* slowly*)  that, 
> in the early stages, you can get by by nose breathing?
>
> On Sat, Mar 14, 2026 at 7:03 PM John Rinker <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hey Patrick, 
>>
>> I read James Nestor's book Breathe about 3 years ago and switched to nose 
>> breathing as a result. Of course, I have no 'scientific' evidence to 
>> present (I believe he has already done that), but I can say that it has 
>> improved the rate at which I breathe and the recovery time to return to 
>> normal breathing. There is a long, steep hill that is the final approach to 
>> my home, so all my rides end with an approximate 15-minute climb up this. 
>> It took me a good 4-5 months to fully make the transition to breathing 
>> solely through my nose from the bottom to the top of this climb, but since 
>> I feel my breathing is slower, more even, less strained, and offers quicker 
>> recovery at the top. Of course, this is only anecdotal, but I see no 
>> compelling reason to switch back to slack-jawed mouth breathing. 
>>
>> The book is worth a read.
>>
>> Cheers, John
>>
>> On Saturday, March 14, 2026 at 3:33:00 PM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:
>>
>>> I seem to recall Grant writing about this in an old RR. At any rate, I 
>>> stumbled across this by chance.
>>>
>>> https://youtu.be/QgD-bUD99gA
>>>
>>> Real or hooey? The authority interviewed seems plausible and has a good 
>>> web presence, and there seems to be a deep body of research.
>>>
>>> Thoughts?
>>>
>>> -- 
>>>
>>> Patrick Moore
>>> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>>>
>>> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>> Executive resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, letters, and other writing 
>>> services
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>> *When thou didst not, savage, k**now thine own meaning,*
>>>
>>> *But wouldst gabble like a** thing most brutish,*
>>>
>>> *I endowed thy purposes w**ith words that made them known.*
>>>
>> -- 
>>
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>
> -- 
>
> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Executive resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, letters, and other writing 
> services
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *When thou didst not, savage, k**now thine own meaning,*
>
> *But wouldst gabble like a** thing most brutish,*
>
> *I endowed thy purposes w**ith words that made them known.*
>

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