4.4 • 1.9K Ratings
🗓️ 26 September 2024
⏱️ 25 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
It’s important to take a moment to pause and take a long, slow exhale as we navigate life. In our podcast series, "Breathe Away Anxiety," we explore ancient breathing techniques alongside cutting-edge research that reveals the powerful effects of slow, controlled breathing on our mental and physical well-being. We also share Happiness Break meditations to guide you through these science-backed methods, helping you reduce anxiety and cultivate calm in your everyday life.
We explore cyclic sighing, a simple breathing technique that can help lift your mood and lower anxiety.
Summary: Cyclic sighing is a breathing exercise that involves inhaling through your nose, filling your lungs, and then slowly exhaling through your mouth. The idea is to inhale briefly but deeply, and then exhale for longer. Research suggests that the slow exhale is what's most relaxing. We hear from pro-surfer Sarah Gerhardt about and Stanford scientist David Spiegel.
Transcript: https://tinyurl.com/3u7vsrr5
Time: 5 minutes
Guest: Sarah Gerhardt is a pro-surfer chemistry professor based out of Santa Cruz, California
Guest: Dr. David Spiegel is Willson Professor and Associate Chair of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine. He is also the co-founder of the clinically backed self-hypnosis app Reveri.
Read Dr. Spiegel’s cyclic sighing study here: https://tinyurl.com/mrxbkyr2
Related Science of Happiness episodes:
How To Tune Out The Noise: https://tinyurl.com/4hhekjuh
Related Happiness Break episodes:
A Mindful Breath Meditation, With Dacher Keltner: https://tinyurl.com/mr9d22kr
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0:00.0 | I started out growing up on the beaches in part in Hawaii and being left to |
0:10.3 | myself to figure out how to get out of the water and I survived so that's good. |
0:15.0 | When I wanted to start surfing bigger waves I did encounter the problem of not being able to hold my breath |
0:22.0 | and of getting almost in that panic state. |
0:27.0 | So it was really important to do breath hold training. |
0:32.0 | So I needed to train my body to not |
0:34.0 | freak out to not go into that like if you hold your breath for a long time your |
0:38.4 | hands can start to tingle, you know your vision starts to get you know kind of black from the outside there can be a lot of anxiety you know like we have a natural response to breathe when our CO2 levels get high but that'sable. So I can train myself to be comfortable in the |
0:57.1 | chaos and the discomfort. But I realize that I have a lot of breathing practices for movement. |
1:05.5 | So I have breathing practices when I swim. |
1:07.5 | I have breathing practices before I go surf big waves. |
1:10.5 | I just didn't have a practice for late for an appointment. I'm in my car and in traffic. |
1:17.0 | Or I didn't have a practice for like when I'm sitting here and I'm nervous talking to you. |
1:21.0 | So I have all these amazing breath work practices that are really |
1:25.1 | important for the things that I like to do physically, but I'd like to incorporate |
1:29.2 | practices for just sitting here. Welcome to the science of happiness. |
1:34.0 | I'm |
1:35.0 | ... |
1:37.0 | ... |
1:38.0 | Welcome to the Science of Happiness, I'm Dacker Kilner. This week is our first |
1:46.6 | episode in a series on science-backed ways to breathe away anxiety. We're starting with a controlled breathing technique |
1:55.0 | called cyclic sighing. It's a simple and powerful way to reduce anxiety and |
... |
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