Our voice is one of our two primary vehicles of expression and creativity, the other being our body.
Read moreThe Key to Letting Go - Turns out it was inside us all along
The surrender sigh is our #1 best healing tool available to us. And it’s free... with no harmful side effects.
Read moreThe Cycle of Anxiety - A Circle Game
Our mind spins out of control. 👉 This tightens our muscles and fascia. 👉 We then notice our supposed lack of space for choice. 👉 We have the thought that we are anxious which creates a belief system, 👉 which leads to more anxiety.
Read moreHow lengthening my Exhalation fixed my Voice Problems
I was a singer right out of the womb. Then this happened.
Read moreYou are a Singer: Have You Forgotten?
We are all born singers. Everyone can sing… it is your birthright. If you believe to can’t sing, something has happened due to societal conditioning to make you believe a story that simply isn’t true.
Read moreMy Third "Near Breath Experience" - Aura on the Beach
Aura and Breath - Well. That Was Interesting.
Read moreMy Second "Near Breath Experience" - The Exhalation Miracle
in 1997, a year and a half into my two-year Yoga Center of Calgary teacher training program, myself and Sarah Wilson (no relation, but interesting) a fine yoga teacher who was also interested in breathwork, decided to work with each other. The intent was a trade of what we knew, and our approaches to breath as medicine.
Everything as going just fine. I went first, and Sarah was greatly apprciative of my discoveries regarding the lengthening the “end” of the exhalation, and it’s positive effects on anxiety and asthma.
I, up to that time, always did my work with people lying down as it is easier to find one’s diaphragm and concentration.
Sarah had me sit up, back against the wall.
She encouraged me to lengthen into the end of my exhalation as well. To this point all I had discovered about breathing was in a vacuum (ha… that’s a good choice of words). I was working on my own with very little input from anyone else. So this was the first time I had someone witnessing and supporting my work.
For which I was very grateful.
Sarah lead me farther and farther down the exhalation… one minute without breathing in, and I was becoming more and more relaxed as we continued.
And then it happened.
Apparently (said Sarah later) I was about one minute 30 seconds into my exhalation drift when I heard an audible inside-my-head ‘pop’.
And with this ‘pop’ my lung were again full of oxygen.
I hadn’t physically inhaled.
I sat in this waitful bliss for another ten seconds, and could have lasted much longer, but my brain was so excited that my thoughts punted me out of the space.
“What the hell was THAT?” I asked Sarah after explaining what had happened?
She didn’t know either. All I knew that I had somehow filled my lungs with oxygen without physically inhaling. we parted ways in wonderment.
It was many years later when I described this phenomenon to a high level swimmer that a glimmer of an answer came though. She said matter-of-factly “Oh year, I’ve heard of that… Olympic swimmers have talked about that. It happens sometime when they are deep in the zone.”
And that is it. I still to this day have not seen any studies on this “spontaneous inhalation.”
But again, not understanding what had happened, just spurred me on to greater study, and fired my interest in the respiratory system to even greater heights: I knew I was onto something.
If you are interested, here are the links to the other two posts of this series describing my three “Near Breath Experiences”.
#1. Take a Breath, David.
#3. Aura and Breathing - Well, that’s Interesting.
My First "Near Breath Experience", and How It Changed My Life
How my two experiences with breathwork changed the way I look at the respiratory system, and life.
Read moreThe Unconcious Chronic Valsalva Maneuver
Vocal issues rarely have anything to do with the voice. Muscle Tension Dysphonia (MTD), while presenting at the larynx or through patholgy, is not where the cause is to be found.
Read moreLaughter IS the Best Medicine: Here's Why
This is assuming a fully-embodied, all-out, diaphragmatically involved “belly-laugh”... if you feel it in your pelvic floor, you get bonus points. 🥰
Read moreWhy Standing Upright is the worst position for Singing
The body-mind connection is a fascinating and maddening beast.
Read moreHow You Breathe could be causing your Anxiety
Anxiety can be cause or exacerbated by the way you are breathing. Breath therapy is your answer.
Read moreWhy "Open Your Throat" should never be said to Singers
If there is one phrase I could magically take out of the teaching repertoire, it’s “Open Your Throat”.
Read morePitch Issues are not just about the ear
It seems that pitch-matching issues are not just about the ear. I believe they also have to do with repiratory issues and physical tension, and possibly even emotional trauma. At least, that’s what seems to be happening...
Read moreWhat is Yoga, anyway?
Just one yogi’s musings... Yoga can be a help to anyone at any time in thousands of different ways. Which is awesome.
Read moreHow Anxiety Works
We first have an "unhealthy" or "I don't feel safe" thought. Our body then reacts to that thought (Unconcious Valsalva Maneuver), we then notice we feel uncomfortable, which tends increase our belief that we are "not safe", which leads to more "unhealthy" or "I don't feel safe" thoughts... we are caught in "The Vicious Circle of Anxiety".
Read moreOur Society is Breathing Too Fast
Our Society is Breathing Too Fast
Read moreWhy Everyone is Holding Their Breath
We assume we have “a cold” or “asthma”, which we may not. We may simply have physical tension and anxiety, that in turn creates phlegm production, which leads to difficulty breathing...
Read moreLoosen your tummy - It's About Everything
The Six-pack is not your Core.
Read more