James Nestor is a best-selling author and science journalist known for his focus on breathing and breathwork. The new edition of his book “Breath: the New Science of a Lost Art” is available now.
James joins Theo to talk about the link between mouth breathing and braces, why he thinks the rise in ADHD cases has been misdiagnosed, and how some breathing exercises can lead to profound emotional experiences.
James Nestor: https://www.instagram.com/mrjamesnestor/
“Breath: the New Science of a Lost Art”: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/547761/breath-by-james-nestor/
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Hey everybody, it's Theo Vaughn here and I got a question.
When it comes to soda, are you really picking a zero sugar cola that you actually prefer or are you just settling for what you've always had?
That's the question.
And I'll say this, when it comes to taste, I find that nothing beats Pepsi Zero Sugar.
But you don't just have to take my word for it.
That would be ridiculous.
Pepsi has been doing blind taste tests for years.
No labels, no brand names, just taste.
And last year, they brought back the Pepsi challenge and the results were clear.
66% of people agreed and said that Pepsi Zero Sugar tastes better than Coca-Cola Zero Sugar.
In fact, Pepsi Zero Sugar won in every market they tested.
So if you're grabbing a zero sugar soda, go with the one people keep choosing when taste is the only thing that matters.
Go out and try Pepsi Zero Sugar today.
Let your taste decide.
Just a reminder, guys, you can now watch video versions of our episodes on Spotify as well.
Today's guest is a best-selling author and scientific journalist.
He's known for his expertise on breathing and breath work.
He just published a new edition of his book, Breath, the New Science of a Lost Art.
I'm going to learn a lot, and so are you.
Today's guest is Mr. James Nestor.
James Nestor.
Good to see you today, brother.
Thanks for having me.
You bet.
You have a new, a revised edition of your New York Times bestseller, Breath, the new science of a lost art.
That's it.
And you believe that how we breathe can change every aspect of our lives?
I don't believe this.
I know this.
And not every aspect, but many aspects, many aspects that people would not suspect.
So it can change our athletic performance, vastly improve it.
It can allow us to sleep better.
It can allow us to think better, have better sex if you're into that kind of thing.
A whole bunch of other measurable improvements to our lives, and nobody's really thinking about it.
Yeah, I guess it's something that we just don't think about very often.
You know, it's just, it's odd because it's happening all the time, but it's not on the front of our brains.
We don't think about it because we've evolved not to think about, which is great.
I mean, if we had to think about every single breath we were taking all the time, how awful that would be.
But it works in the background.
And the problem is we develop really bad habits and those habits start working on the background.
And we don't notice that those negative breathing habits are affecting how often we get headaches, how tired we are, the amount of cavities that we're getting, on and on and on.
And so people just don't think about it because they don't need to.
But if they would start to and start taking conscious control of this, we know it has vast improvements.
Is that why you call it a lost art?
It's a lost art.
Yeah, because ancient cultures, you look back in ancient Hindu cultures, ancient Chinese cultures, even ancient Native American cultures, they all celebrated breathing as a medicine.
This was something they really focused on.
It was as essential as the food you were eating or the amount of exercise you were getting.
Yeah, because it really is a diet for your lungs.
It's a diet.
We get most of our energy from air, not from food and not from drink, from air.
I can prove this.
If you hold your breath for six minutes, you're going to go unconscious, right?
Your body's going to start to shut down.
But you can go without food for how long?
40 days, something?
You can go without water for maybe a week and a half or so.
But if you go without breathing for a few minutes, you're gone.
Yeah.
Wow, yeah, you don't even think about that, how crucial it is, how crucial of a supplement it is to every moment of our lives.
I know you have so many amazing practices that you've taught people, and I want to learn some of those.
Take me a little bit through the history of breathing.
Like, what were some of the first cultures that really focused on breath work?
So around 2,500 years ago, ancient Hindus were doing this, and they believed that if you breathed in certain way, then you could get more prana, more life force into your body.
So they developed all of these crazy ways to breathe that we still do today in some classes.
The ancient Chinese, at the same time, their practice of Qigong can be translated to breath work.
That's what it means, or energy work.
And so these Qigong exercises were built on taking all the energy that's outside of us deep within us, right?
And concentrating it and using that energy to better our health.
So these things have been around for thousands and thousands of years and probably well before that.
But that's the first written document, right, that established how to breathe in certain ways to have certain benefits.
Then it seems like it should be something that should be taught in our schools then, that it should be just as basic as learning to spell or to read.
It's like, because that's like your lungs reading the universe.
It's like your body reading the universe moment to moment.
Yeah, there's a lot of things that should be taught at our schools, right?
Nutrition, exercise, like staying away from electronic devices at night.
But I would put breathe, we talk a lot about that, right?
At least this is in the public consciousness right now.
Right.
So we're having these discussions.
Nobody's talking about breathing.
And even though kids, you can look at a kid and about there's a 50% chance they are breathing through their mouths.
There's around a 90% chance they are breathing dysfunctionally.
And so if you're breathing this way, it's going to affect your ability to focus.
It's going to affect your oral health.
We've also found if you're breathing dysfunctionally at night, you have something called sleep disorder breathing.
It affects how tall you're going to grow.
It affects your facial structure.
All of these things.
And I don't hear anybody talking about this.
I thought that there would, you know, I was so idiotic when this first, when this book first came out, I was talking about medical schools.
I was blasting this message all around.
I was like, oh, I'm really going to make some change here.
I was completely ignorant.
Nothing's changed.
So people have to take this information and do it for themselves because I don't trust governments to really get this information out the way it should be distributed and accepted and understood.
Yeah, well, they just finished remodeling the food pyramid, you know?
So I think it's like, you know, it takes a while for them to change shape, apparently.
You said oral hygiene.
And you mentioned cavities earlier.
Take me through that.
Yeah.
So I was reading, a lot of my job is spending time in these really creepy medical libraries, right?
And looking through old literature to see what we were saying way back when to see if it's right today.
And so many different dentists and different people in medicine 100 years ago, 120 years ago, were saying the number one cause of cavities wasn't sugar.
It wasn't carbohydrates.
It was mouth breathing.
Wow.
And I said, huh, I guess those guys were just old.
They were stupid, right?
But now the majority of dentists I talk to who study the airway say the number one cause of cavities is mouth breathing.
If you look at 50% of kids are mouth breathing.
That's a high range, but around half of kids are mouth breathing, especially at night.
Most kids are mouth breathing at night.
To think that this could be the number one cause of their cavities, this is information I would think parents would want to know about.
It would be on billboards, you would think.
I mean, that's huge.
And the money that they would save them by taking care of their kids' breathing practices, what's causing kids to mouth breathe that much?
So we're born as perfect breathers, right?
A healthy baby.
Look at a healthy baby.
It's a beautiful thing.
Every breath, their stomach's moving out.
They exhale.
The stomach comes in again.
They're breathing in and out of their nose because healthy babies learn how to do this because they're breastfeeding so often.
If you're going to be feeding and breathing, that's the only way to do it, right?
Right.
You have something in your mouth, you have to breathe through your nose.
Breathing, breathing in and out of your nose.
So we lose this at around the age of five to six when we start going to school and start sitting down and spend 90% of our time indoors.
That environment is not conducive to breathing.
It's against our evolution.
It's against what we have become adapted to be doing.
So one of the first things that happens is our breathing starts going into the mouth because we tend to have allergies, right?
Usually happens when a kid gets sick and they get congested.
So we have a mouth.
It's cool.
You can breathe out of your mouth whenever you want.
But that becomes the default.
This is mouth breathing is supposed to be an emergency pathway, not the default.
And then the kid just remains a mouth breather on and on and on throughout their youth.
I was one of these kids.
And they've found that if you mouth breathe for long enough, it changes your facial shape and it doesn't allow your mouth to grow as wide as it should.
And then I guess if like cranially or the shape of our mouths aren't growing fully, then it would affect the way that our teeth are.
Yeah.
So if your mouth is open all the time, right, you have this upper palate here that tends to grow, grow up.
I'm a great example, which is like completely malocclusion, which is why I had teeth pulled and braces and headgear and all that crap.
So when the mouth is too small, teeth have nowhere to grow.
So they grow in crooked.
That's why we have crooked teeth.
Wow.
People say, oh, it's a tooth problem.
It's a mouth problem.
And if you have a mouth that's too small for your teeth, what's going to happen to the airway?
It's harder to breathe.
Meanwhile, that upper palate of your mouth keeps growing up and it takes away real estate from your sinus passages, which makes it harder to breathe through your nose.
So all these things happen at once.
This is not some crazy hypothesis or whatever.
This is documented research.
This is data.
If you don't believe me, go look at an ancient skull from a thousand years ago, 2,000 years ago, 10,000 years ago.
They all have perfectly straight teeth.
All of our ancestors had straight teeth.
That's a great point.
You never see one of those like archaeological digs and they dig everybody up and they're all wearing braces.
You have braces, crooked teeth, mouth breathers.
And the big headgear.
Yeah.
You would be look at this guy right here.
This is just a random skull.
First one we pulled up.
Beautiful grill.
Yeah, beautiful.
And check out his.
I mean, not only are his teeth straight, but look at the jaw size.
So this is an enormous airway that this guy has.
Big Macs only in there.
It would be hard for him to suffer from snoring and sleep apnea, even some forms of sleep apnea, unless he was morbidly obese, which he wasn't because our ancestors weren't morbidly obese.
And so what could a parent do, right?
A parent that's their kid is getting to that five, six-year-old age, what could they do in order to keep their child breathing through their nose or to help encourage that?
The smartest thing to do is to look at your child sleeping.
And it doesn't matter if this kid is three months old or a year, year and a half, two, three, whatever.
If you can hear them breathing, there's a big problem.
That means the child is struggling to breathe.
And if a baby is sleeping 12 hours a night, right, that's how a good baby, that's how often they're sleeping and how much they're sleeping.
If they're struggling during that time, it is going to have downstream effects on their brain development, on their physical development, on so many other aspects of their health.
And we know this.
These are facts.
So first of all, listen.
If you can hear the breathing, huge red flag.
Another thing you can do is you can creep up to the bed or the cradle or whatever and see if they are breathing in and out through the mouth.
That's a problem and you have to figure it out.
So I can't offer a blanket prescription because every kid is different, but I would highly suggest parents go see a pediatric dentist with experience in airway health.
They can assess the kid's issue and they can fix it.
And what I've found is if you fix it early enough and allow that mouth to grow the size it's supposed to be growing, guess what happens?
No braces, teeth growing straight, no other breathing problems, nasal breather, better facial profile.
The musculature and the skeleture develop properly and you have a healthier kid.
So if you front load some of that work early, you don't have to worry about any of that stuff that I had to go through and so many other people had to go through later on.
Yeah, some people have to get the real, you know, they'll get the big braces.
They'll get, I had a dude, they had like braces that were hooked even to his suspenders.
It seemed like it was like, this kid is, they're pulling him up and down.
You think about what those things do too.
And this is something I never thought about it before because I always thought like science research is always moving forward.
We're getting better and better and better.
But what they used to do for kids 100 years ago, 120 years ago, is with a kid with a mouth that was so small that the teeth were growing and crooked and they had airway problems, what would you do?
You would expand the mouth, right?
Bigger mouth, teeth growing straight.
You can breathe better.
But when I was growing up around the 1940s, they industrialized dentistry.
And what they did was the same treatment for everybody.
Bring you in there.
We're going to start pulling teeth and then we're going to take those remaining teeth and we're going to crane them.
It's like foot binding, like that old Chinese practice of foot binding, right?
We're going to crane them in.
So as the rest of the head and face is growing, the mouth gets smaller and smaller and smaller.
That's a great point.
If you have braces on a young, youngish child, it's holding their teeth in one space while the rest of their face is growing.
That's exactly what's happened.
And that's why you have so many people with these retronathic profiles.
I'm a perfect example of baby mouths.
My brother never had braces, right?
And he has a completely different profile than me.
He has a completely different mouth than I do.
Oh, he can probably get through a salad in six minutes.
He can chomp away.
Me, I'm taking a long time, 30, 40 minutes, pissing off everyone around me, but that's just how it is.
So, you know, you can't go back in time.
I can't do anything about this now.
But what you can do is educate people now so their kids don't have to go through the braces and headgear tied to your suspenders or your pants or whatever.
You don't have to do that.
Like, this is a choice.
Yeah, this kid was very dangerous.
I remember if he sneezed, he would moon everybody.
Like, what's wrong with our species that that's what we've come to?
And if you look at 200 years ago, no one was getting that.
If you look at indigenous cultures right now, people say, oh, this is just human evolution.
Our mouths are growing smaller.
Look at the Hasda, right, in Africa, who have never had anything industrialized.
They eat a lot of meat.
They drink cow's blood.
This is their main thing.
Their teeth are perfect and their facial profile is perfect.
And their mouths are wide.
Indigenous Wisdom Lost00:03:14
Bring that up.
When did we start to put braces in the children's mouths?
It's pretty fascinating.
Thank you so much for coming today because you never think about this stuff.
But once you're saying that to me, that now you have a growing human and you have their teeth that are confined.
It almost seems baffling that you would do that.
It almost seemed, I mean, it's so restrictive.
And also the nervous conditions it must create inside of your body, the stress it must put on your gums and then the rest of your face, your brain is right there.
And you think of at any time to get this procedure, it's like the worst time to do it is when you're a teenager.
You're so screwed up already as a teenager.
Then you have to go to school like that guy, you know, with all this headgear.
So I don't know why they did it.
I mean, I think it was economical because you can just bring kids in, you do the same thing over and over and over and over.
You also have to think about like, I had my wisdom teeth removed.
I don't know if this was just something, you never question it.
It was just something they did.
Why?
No other species has to have wisdom teeth.
None of our ancestors, if that were true, that our ancestors were getting impacted molars and dying of infections or whatever, we wouldn't be here today.
Yeah.
The practice of using braces to straighten teeth began in the early 19th century.
French dentist Christophe Delabar invented the first modern braces in 1819, a flat metal strip tied to teeth with thread to gradually align them.
The term braces emerged in the early 1900s, coinciding with improvements like Edward Engels brackets and wires.
Wow.
Oh, that's fascinating.
You see that all of these inventions came about at the exact time that industrialized food came into cultures.
And this is why our mouths are so small, because we stopped chewing.
And so right at the time, you always talk about, at least back in the day, people would talk about like British people and their teeth, right?
This was some terrible joke people used to make.
Oh, but yeah, we still make it.
You still make it.
The kids today are still doing this.
But it turns out that England was one of the first countries to adopt an industrialized diet.
So their teeth went to hell right off the bat.
50% of a population, 5-0% will have crooked teeth after adopting an industrialized diet in a single generation.
Unbelievable.
People say that evolution, oh, it takes 100,000 years.
Like it takes a million years for things to change.
It happens in one generation.
Well, if you even look at some of these primordial humans, like you're talking about, or primordial might not be the word, but if you look into some of these early human skulls, yeah, you can easily see the difference.
And that's fascinating about the group in Africa.
Yeah.
It's like, it's like they're running around complaining about cavities.
No, they're not complaining about heart disease.
They're not complaining about diabetes.
Like none of these things exist.
So all of the modern diseases, not all of them, most of them, because there are some genetic diseases, most of the diseases we're contending with today are diseases of civilization.
These are diseases that have been brought upon us by industrialization.
And again, this isn't some crazy conspiracy theory.
This is standard knowledge.
And if you talk to somebody who studies these things in evolution and biosciences, then this is what they say.
Breathing Through Signals00:10:28
And I'm a journalist.
I had no idea about any of this.
I'm a journalist.
I went out and talked to people, and that's how I learned this.
And people have a problem with what I'm saying.
Go back to the source.
These people are at Harvard.
They're at Stanford.
They're at Yale.
Well, what you're saying makes perfect sense to me.
It doesn't sound like it's like, you know, you're like you're trying to convince me of some astronomical idea.
I mean, once you sound it out and you put it in front of me, it gets clear as day for me.
In different interviews, I've seen you speak a lot about different breathwork exercises.
What is a simple breathwork exercise that I could start with that would help me overall?
It will bore you to tears if I tell you what it is.
And that's the problem with so much of this stuff, is it's so simple that anyone can do it at any time.
People are like, hey, I want the secret, man.
I want the medicinal stuff that you discovered in a cave in the Himalayas.
I wish it were that easy.
So I can give you a very simple one that's probably been the most studied out of any of these.
Most of us tend to breathe too much.
We tend to breathe up into our chests.
We tend to breathe through our mouths.
And when we breathe this way, we send stress signals to our brain.
And so we stay in this state of sympathetic stress all day long.
So, that increases your risk of diabetes, all of these other heinous problems, autoimmune issues.
It's inflammation you're causing yourself for sure.
Constant inflammation, right?
Constant, constant stress.
So, what you have to do is go back to the way that you were supposed to be breathing, to the way that nature intended you to breathe.
And so, a very simple practice that a lot of people start off with is you can place the palm of your hand just below your belly button, right?
And you're going to breathe in through your nose and you want to feel your belly expand.
And as you breathe out, you want to feel it come back in.
You breathe out through my nose.
I'm sorry, through your nose, in and out through your nose.
So, as you breathe back out, you should feel the belly contract.
So, you can actually do this around 90% of people can't.
They aren't comfortable enough with their guts to do this.
So, if you do that at around five seconds in, five seconds out through the nose.
Okay, you want to take me through it?
I can.
Yeah.
Don't mind yourself.
Yeah, yeah.
Just keep your hand there and make sure when you're inhaling that that hand is coming out a little bit.
So, you're just going to start in a couple seconds.
You're exhaling now: three, two, one, and in, two, three, four, five, and out, two, three, four, five, and in, two, three, four, five, and out, two, three, four, five.
And you just keep with that rhythm.
What you're doing is you are sending your brain and body signals that you are relaxed, that you are safe.
When your body gets these signals, it can help restore itself and recover itself so much more quickly.
If you have high blood pressure, there's a good chance your blood pressure is going to go down, the stress hormones are going to decrease.
This is the way we're supposed to naturally be in that state.
We're not supposed to be hunched over with our shoulders tense.
Sometimes, you know, when you're in a stressful situation, about to fight someone, you have to defend yourself.
Stress is an amazing thing.
But most of the time, our bodies are built, they need time to recover and to heal all the damage that we inflict on them.
And this is called coherent breathing because it puts these different systems of your body into the state of coherence.
Wow.
Wow.
And that's really how I feel right now.
I almost feel like I got a little high.
Yeah, you just wait.
There's some other stuff we can do that will definitely get you up.
Yeah.
Pack open a 12 pack of that magic air, baby.
You know, that's what I need.
You're getting proper blood flow to your brain.
So they've found that you'll make better decisions.
You can regulate your emotions so much more efficiently.
It's great for heart health, blood pressure.
And again, this isn't like some woo-woo thing.
You don't need to go out and buy a pill.
You don't need to subscribe to anything.
This is something that is available to everybody.
So people who think these breathing practices are, oh, I don't like yoga.
You know, I don't like jewelry or turquoise or whatever.
This is a biological function that you can do wherever.
If you're driving right now, you can try to breathe at around five seconds in, five seconds out.
And you can feel what happens.
Like, I feel calmer right now.
And I even smiled a second ago.
It just came into my face.
Saw that.
You know, you did?
That's cool.
Yeah.
For one second.
Yeah.
But for me, that's a lot.
That's a lot of a day where I'm just naturally feeling good.
And I'll tell you this, even momentarily after, and even it started to make me want to just keep doing it as opposed to like, am I breathing in my nose?
Am I breathing in my mouth, just not consciously?
It started to like, I almost want to do it again and again because it feels good.
Well, here's the trick with these things.
Like, we don't need another box to check every day.
You know, we got to, oh, did I get my protein?
Did I sleep my eight hours?
Did I walk 20 minutes?
All of that.
What you want to do is to practice these techniques enough, right, that this becomes your new default.
This becomes your unconscious breathing.
That can take a couple of months to do.
They found some researchers here were helping 9-11 victims, you know, 20 years ago.
When was it?
20, 24 years ago.
And they had this terrible condition called ground glass lungs because they inhaled all of these pollutants, right, when the towers went down.
And nothing worked for them.
Pharmaceutical drugs didn't work.
Nothing worked.
Except this practice was more effective than anything else because it allowed air to circulate properly in the lungs and allowed them to expel all the crap in their lungs.
So not only mentally are you sharper, are you calmer?
Is your nervous system downregulated to a healthy spot?
But also physically, it can help your lungs be healthier.
Can you bring that up, Nick?
Wow, this is so interesting.
Ground glass lungs refers to a radiological finding on CT cans on CT scans showing hazy opacities.
Is that the right way to say that?
Opacities.
Opacities, thank you.
In the lungs, often linked to inflammation or fibrosis from inhaling toxic dust at ground zero after the 9-11 attacks.
The massive collapse of the World Trade Center has released a plume of pulverized concrete, asbestos, glass fibers, heavy metals, and jet fuel combustion byproducts that coated lower Manhattan.
Responders and nearby residents who breathe the dust develop persistent lung damage, including ground glass opacities.
Wow.
The dust contained over 2,500 contaminants, 50% construction debris, 40% glass fibers, 9% cellulose and asbestos, silica, lead, mercury.
Oh my God.
The witch's brew was highly alkaline and caustic, equivalent to Drano in pH.
Wow.
So the guy who started doing this, Richard Brown, is right down the street from us here.
He's at Columbia, and he's the one that was dealing with all these people from 9-11 who had PTSD who had ground glass lungs.
And he published this too, you know, of how effective it was.
So that when COVID came around, this was the go-to, breathing this way for so many people.
I've had COVID like three times, four times, right?
And this did more for me than anything.
That's subjective.
There wasn't a control version of me.
But this is something I've heard from hundreds and hundreds of people is if you don't lay on your back, you get COVID, you're coughing, right?
You feel like crap.
If you lay on your stomach and breathe at this rate, around five to six seconds in, five to six seconds out, right?
It can really help.
And it's free and available for everyone.
So why wouldn't you do it?
There's no negative side effects to feeling better and getting more crap out of your lungs.
There's still something, though, and even when you say, like, it's so funny, some of the most simplest things, we want something.
It's like we want to, well, I need to buy this or no, but I'll go get that or I'll do a five-hour energy.
Like we always want something else.
Isn't that kind of interesting that that's how we operate?
I think it's a lot of people are apprehensive by things that are free and easy, right?
You think about what's happened to nutrition, which is insane.
If you look at our ancestors or the people that are actually living to be 110 years old, they don't know what a calorie is.
They're not dividing fats and proteins.
They're not taking supplements, right?
But they're eating in line with what the seasons provide for them in their backyards.
So I think that breathing's the same.
There's so many people that are trying to overcomplicate this thing by saying you need to breathe these five different techniques in the morning, then do the same thing at night, and then you need to subscribe to my service where I'm going to dole out other techniques.
I'm going to mail you a jar of my breath or something.
Yeah, people do.
So I think by keeping it simple and going back to, we got so sick because we moved away from nature.
And the way to get healthy is to move back into that state in which our bodies understand the world and understand the inputs.
We're not used to this world.
We haven't been around it long enough to truly adapt.
And it's changed so fast, too.
I think that's part of it.
It's changing so fast.
Yeah.
And I think you're right.
The people who are leading a lot of our influences, it's very industrialized, which I think has had a lot of negative effects.
But I think we are at kind of like a renaissance right now where people are really focusing on this type of thing.
So I'm so grateful that we're having this conversation right now.
It's February, everyone, and that's when the truth shows up.
January had the vibes.
Breathwork Experience00:16:53
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That's right.
Shopify.com/slash T-H-E-O.
Best of luck.
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Was there anything else on that World Trade Glass?
That's unbelievable to me.
And can you write down the name of that author too, Zach?
Inhaling the dust led to WTC lung injury with firefighters losing up to 12 years of lung function.
70% of workers showed respiratory decline by 2004.
A Mount Sinai analysis found asbestos fibers and carbon nanotubes and responders' lungs.
Wow, that's fascinating.
What would be like a more difficult breathing exercise?
If we had an hour, I could get you extremely high with something, but we don't.
So we're going to have to do some quick stuff here.
Okay.
If you are driving, if you are near water, do not do this.
Okay.
Use common sense.
I just want to make that super clear.
I want to say that too.
Do not do it.
Okay.
Do not do it.
This is just for demonstration purpose only, right?
You're sitting in a chair.
We're here.
It's cool.
You can try this.
This is a pranayama technique.
Okay.
That when I am really jet lagged, which is most of my waking hours, I've noticed when I need energy, when I need instant clarity, you can do this.
It's a little weird.
You wouldn't want to do it in public, but here we are.
And I think you want to get a little weird.
So, why not?
Let's do it.
Okay.
Let's do it.
So the concept here is we are going to be breathing an inhale through the nose.
Then you're going to be holding without exhaling.
Then you're going to be breathing in again.
Then you're going to be holding.
Then you're going to be breathing in.
You see where this is going.
You're going to keep doing that until you reach the very top of your breath, until you cannot fit any more air in your lungs.
Okay.
Then you're going to squeeze as hard as you can.
You're going to squeeze your fists, squeeze your toes, squeeze your butt, squeeze your stomach, squeeze, squeeze everything, and try to bring it inward towards the center of your abdomen.
More, All the way up, all the way up, all the way up.
Squeeze everything.
Hold your breath.
Squeeze everything.
Squeeze everything.
Keep squeezing.
Squeeze harder.
Let's go.
Keep squeezing.
Keep squeezing.
Let it go.
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Breathe in.
All the way up.
Squeeze everything.
Keep holding your breath.
We're going to do it longer now.
Keep squeezing.
Keep holding.
Keep squeezing.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Lift everything towards your stomach and let it out.
We're going to do one more.
Okay.
Ready?
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Hold.
Breathe in.
Breathe in all the way up and squeeze.
Hold your breath.
Hold your breath.
Squeeze everything towards your stomach.
Keep going.
You got five more seconds.
Five, four, three, two, one.
let it go.
I can feel my heart racing.
How do you feel different?
I feel pretty chill overall.
Yeah.
I mean, I wouldn't take a breathalyzer right now, probably.
I definitely feel a little bit buzzed up.
So what you did.
I feel relaxed.
Good.
What you did right there, this is a very short version.
It's better to have a longer amount of time.
Can go through the whole process.
It doesn't make for very good podcasts or radio.
So we're not going to sit and listen to you be silent for 20 minutes breathing.
But the point of this is you're purposely stressing your body out.
You're taking control of your nervous system and you're cranking it up to 11 and you're compounding all of that stress.
Then you're releasing it.
So you're letting your body know and your brain know that you're in control of that stress.
You turn it on, you turn it off.
You turn it on, you turn it off.
What most of us do throughout the day is we have this chronic low-grade stress.
It's always there.
It's buzzing around.
We never let it go, right?
So we never blow it out, but we never truly relax.
And this is one of the main reasons so many of us are so sick.
Again, this is not some crazy hypothesis.
Well, stress is inflammation.
It's chronic inflammation.
Chronic stress is one of the leading causes of so many issues.
So if you spend a few minutes a day, you don't have to do the weird stuff, right?
There's other things you can do in public.
No one realizes you're doing this.
It's your own private little secret that you can do.
And just to have that pressure release throughout the day, a lot of people use yoga or exercise or weightlifting.
All of those things are awesome.
They work great, but it's not always available to you.
Your breathing is always available to you.
Amen.
You can do that anytime.
Yeah, I mean, I just, even just you reminding me to breathe in and out through my nose, that simple reminder, it just feels good.
It just feels better.
It's just like, yeah, no one's reminded me of that probably ever in my life.
You know, it just doesn't happen.
I have to pee really fast.
I'm going to tell you about the experience that I had as a breathwork person.
That also happens with some of these breathwork devices.
I should have warned him.
Yeah, I just feel happier.
I just feel a little bit happier even just going through this.
So yeah, thanks for the reminders.
It's funny.
I almost want to keep doing it.
It's almost like having a sip of coffee.
It's like I want to keep doing it because it feels good.
I took a breathwork session one time with actually a comedian, this girl, Blair Sochi, who's very funny.
And she also on the side does breathwork exercises with people.
And she took me through this experience one time.
I was laying down.
I can't remember exactly what it was.
I feel like it was some of what we just did, but it was for about maybe 30 minutes.
And at the end, I like just tears were, I mean, I had like one of the biggest, like, just kind of emotional releases that I've had outside of an experience with drugs like an ayahuasca or something like that or mushrooms.
It was super profound.
There's a lot of videos out there of people having profound experiences after breath work.
Videos of people were just really breaking down after breath work.
Have you, I'm sure you've seen a lot of this.
I've seen a lot of it online, but I've also seen a lot of it in person.
And the question from a journalist standpoint that I have is: how much of this is the breath work?
And how much of it is these people trying to show off that they're really having a bigger breakdown than the person next to them?
Oh, and it's so funny because people get competitive.
You get in those spaces or you see a video and then you feel like you have to go replicate that.
That's fast.
I agree with that.
This is one that, oh, Zach just pulled one.
Yeah, you want to play this one?
Here's one that...
Oh, that one seems...
What video is this?
Oh, keep going.
Oh, that's it?
That's all you need.
Okay, that one.
You really want to see what comes next after that?
No, no, no.
I'm not allowed.
We have blockers on this computer.
So, yeah, I can't be watching stuff like that.
What are some of the experiences that you've seen with people that are experiencing serious breath work?
Sorry, I thought that was going to be better than that.
Well, I have a that was pretty good.
People see that, like, pretty, pretty, yeah.
I just couldn't tell if that was super real or not.
I couldn't tell what was actually going on.
Maybe you had just put that in my head too, because that does happen a lot.
Um, but my own experience from my own, it was like, yeah, it was just tears flowing out of me, just such a release, yeah, just such a release.
And I could, it felt like it came out of the fabric of my existence.
That's what was really fascinating.
What have you seen regarding like trauma release and breath work?
Well, we all have these repressed emotions, you know, especially dudes.
Like, we got to hold it back the whole time.
And once you loosen up enough, once once you're breathing, I ain't gay.
I'm going to play football or whatever.
Yeah.
You know, but that's what's allowed us to survive.
You have to be able to kick in that mode.
Otherwise, you can't run from a tiger, you know, or fight off a warring tribe.
So that's part of our evolution.
We're not meant to stay in it all day long, though.
We're meant to, when we're chilling out, we're meant to be truly relaxed.
And we don't.
So sometimes in these breath work sessions, just like in ayahuasca or other drug sessions or when you're hallucinating for some other reason, you tend to loosen up, right?
And all the stuff comes out.
So I've seen a whole bunch of stuff.
Has it blown your mind almost sometimes?
Well, the critical part of me is what's the physiology behind this?
What's actually happening?
And so that's a great question.
Yeah, when you're doing the breathing exercise and then the trauma release occurs, what is happening?
So I can tell you what we know.
We know that when you over breathe, a lot of these, my hunch is that breath work you did is probably pretty intense.
Yeah.
Right.
Okay.
Yeah, it was fast.
It was like a lot of in-out, in-out, in-out, in-out.
So when we're over-breathing like that, we're actually inhibiting blood flow to the brain.
And if we overbreathe long enough, we can inhibit around 40% of the blood flow to the brain.
So the brain, in some ways, thinks it's dying.
Ah, so it's a DMT release of some sort.
People say that.
It's never been measured.
I tried to measure that for this book, and I was told by the researchers they could not measure it because it's so, so minute.
That kind of makes sense.
When people say, oh, this is my DMT breathing, that's not based on it's good marketing, but it's not based on any measurements.
So this is a way of like tricking your brain that something very wrong is going on.
And if you stay there for long enough, it starts to short circuit in some ways that can be beneficial.
You start thinking differently, right?
You start hallucinating.
I don't know if you were hallucinating, but that's very common.
And all of these safeguards that you have built up, especially around your nervous system and emotion, tend to release in certain ways.
So we know it absolutely affects your physiology.
I had the one bit of research, actually, there were many in the book that did not make it in is I went to a lab at University of California, San Francisco and breathed for an hour, just crazy hyperventilation, as they had a catheter out and were recording my blood pH.
And they had to stop it because, according to their measurements, my blood was so alkaline, which means I was blowing off so much CO2 that I should have been in an emergency room.
Damn.
This guy is just like, this is the weirdest thing.
You should not be doing this.
This is unhealthy.
And yet I felt great, right?
Because our bodies are meant to be flexible.
So we know something physiological is happening.
On the other end, you know, are people claim that they're able to revert to their caveman cells or revert to different animals?
I think that some of that is where it gets a little showy.
I was in one like two-hour long session where you're just hyperventilating for two hours and some woman.
Yeah, prove it if you're an animal.
Get out there and eat some birds.
No, this guy was doing it.
Like he, he went, he was, he was, I shouldn't laugh.
He was having his, he was having his own release.
Respect that.
That's a beautiful thing.
But some woman turned into a baby.
And I think this other guy was like, well, I'm going to, I'm going to turn into a wolf.
And he was prowling the room and snorting at people.
And they had to tackle him, hold him down.
Really?
So I wanted to think in my, you know, I was watching this.
Probably a South Carolina fan.
I mean, I don't know that information.
This isn't California.
Anything goes.
So, you know, it's like, yeah, if some guy is breathing, if I'm in a breath workplace and some guy's over there huffing and puffing, and then he's like, I'm going to blow your house down or whatever.
If he starts getting weird like that, like three little pig in me or whatever, dude, I'm calling the cops, bro.
Just because we're in a breath work seminar doesn't mean you can be wolfing around and pissing in the corner or whatever.
No, and what was interesting to me, I said, well, what if this is real?
What if this guy's really, then full respect?
Like he's, he's reached a pinnacle I will never reach.
At the same time, this is after like five minutes where there's not a lot going on.
So part of me was thinking, yeah, he's just a Raider.
Probably.
Yeah.
He's probably a little showiness.
You know, I don't know what's better than a wolf.
Like, I don't know who was going to come after him to try to one up his wolfdom.
He picked a good animal.
Yeah.
I do remember though, my, also, my extremities got very tight.
Yeah.
What is that?
When I did the breath and I had that release, I remember, yeah, just, and I felt so great after because it was just such a release.
It felt like almost the sediment, like, say, if you looked through archaeologically, like through the ground and you saw like this sedimentary rock, stuff that was really packed down in there, that's what it felt like.
So there was like fissures in that inside of me.
But I do remember my muscles and everything got extremely tight after a lot of the breathing.
That's 100% real, right?
That's not psychosomatic.
What happens is a lot of people in breath work, at least I was told that they told me, like, because I kept feeling this, my hands like turn into claws.
Yes.
You're like, what the hell is this?
Maybe we know.
And so they kept saying like you're reverting back to your primitive self.
I was like, okay, but what's actually happening measurably to our bodies?
Overs Breathing & Calcium Loss00:09:08
And what I found is this is a phenomenon that is called tetany.
And what happens when you over breathe this amount, you start to lose calcium.
Okay.
Calcium gets bound to album.
And once that happens, you need calcium for proper nerve and muscle function.
So we don't have enough calcium in order to function properly.
And so things start to shut down.
So at these really intense sessions, you can't open your fit.
As hard as you try, you can't.
They turn into these claws, which is really creepy.
If you don't know that this is happening, it's like you're in some cult situation where everyone's reverting to some lower level of hell and developing these claws.
But this is a phenomenon that is measurable.
Tetany, it's called?
It's called tetany.
The same thing happens to your toes.
Tetaning?
T-E-T-A-N-Y.
That's just interesting.
I never even heard of that, but I've had that thing happen to me a couple of times in breathing.
Tetany is a medical condition involving sustained involuntary muscle contractions or spasms due to hyper excitability of nerves or muscles.
It often stems from electrolyte imbalances like low calcium, low magnesium, or alkalosis.
Huh.
To do this on occasion is fine, right?
But if you are constantly overbreathing, which is a problem that so many people suffer from, they wonder why their fingers are constantly numb or cold, why their toes are cold, right?
Why they are like this.
They're causing this permanent imbalance of these electrolytes in their bodies.
And the body can compensate because it's going to keep you alive, but that doesn't mean it's going to keep you healthy.
I just remember those.
That's such a visceral thing.
Try to just remember that once you did that with your hands, it brought me so many memories.
How do some of your breath work ideas compare to like a guy like Wim Hoff?
Like take me, because he's a very popular figure in the breathing space, right?
And he just is such a captivating figure, too.
And the fact that he's in the cold and he's battling something that, you know, we all want to battle something.
So we all feel invigorated by his journey.
And yeah, how did some of your practices compare to some of Wim Hoff's practices?
Well, most of what I studied and researched and write about is this normal breathing.
It's so unsexy, right?
Just breathe normal.
I want to be a super breather.
But what you realize is the vast majority of people are breathing dysfunctionally.
And so what I'm trying to bring awareness to and to have people do first before they go and do crazy breath work stuff is to learn normal breathing because you're never going to be able to get a ton out of breath work practices unless your foundation is solid.
It's like you want to run a marathon.
Would you just stand up and run a marathon or would you try to train a little bit and get a proper foundation, get the right biomechanics?
So that's what most of the book is about is because so many people are breathing dysfunctionally that they have all of these underlying issues that are tied to it and they don't realize it.
Why are they getting migraines all the time?
Why is their blood pressure so high?
Why are they getting all these cavities?
Why does their kid have symptoms of ADHD?
All of this stuff is tied to your breathing.
So once you get that solid foundation, you become a nasal breather.
You're able to do what you were doing.
You're able to become comfortable enough with your own waist that you can relax your gut as you take a breath in and as you exhale, it comes back, right?
You can breathe these slow, low, deep breaths.
You are not mouth breathing at night.
You are not snoring.
After all those boxes are checked, then let's bring it on.
Let's go up that next rung of potential.
This is what yoga was designed to do.
It was never intended for sick people.
It was intended for people that were normal, that were healthy, to bump you up that next rung of the ladder.
And so that's what Wim does, right?
Wim's an amazing dude.
I can't imagine a better spokesperson for breath work.
I mean, if there was ever a cult leader, he should start as it kind of is a cult almost.
Yeah, but like the yeah, there's definitely something about him that's super exciting.
He, I think he's done more to bring breath work to more people on the planet than anyone else.
Yeah, you need that advertising.
You need, and you need someone that is that inspired and genuine, not someone that's trying to always sell you stuff.
Like Wim wants to help people.
Wim wants to see what the limits of the human body are.
Wim, when you meet him, he's real.
And so many other people in breath work have hopped on the train to try.
You haven't met him.
No.
Okay.
No, the guy is magnetic.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, you can feel it through the screen.
You know, you can feel it when you watch him.
And you need an advertising piece for things like that.
Like, you need something like a shiny figure that's out there so that people can also then come and absorb your information.
I mean, look at this, dude.
Because, dude, you know how many thick white dudes are just hiding in their freezers in the garage right now, all because of Wim Hoff, you know, and forgetting to close the lid and the meat's going bad.
But people were not doing this until, so we knew all about these benefits, but the people training you how to breathe properly was a respiratory therapist, you know, in a hospital.
And a lot of dudes don't gravitate towards that.
You know, Wim is hiking up Everest barefoot with his shirt off and hanging out in ice for an hour at a time.
People are like, that guy's cool.
I want to be like him.
Yes, it's exciting.
And he's also the other side of this is not only is he able to bring people from a state where they're normal to become better than normal, is some research is going on right now about people with autoimmune diseases with that,
that ice combined with breath work can help lower all of those stress hormones and help people who are caught in these vicious cycles of chronic inflammation and some people with multiple sclerosis, you know, people with eczema and more.
And this is something that's free.
You got to buy a freezer, right?
Put some ice in it.
But beyond that, it's a pretty low amount of cash you need to spend up front in order to do these things.
If you can't afford an ice bath, take a cold shower, right?
A lot of the same benefits.
Who are some other known figures or who are some known figures throughout history that it's documented that they've practiced breath work and it was a big part of their lives?
Do you have it?
Do you know any?
There's so many.
And if you look at ancient literature, there were all these Swamis, there were all these Buddhist monks, there were all these repochets that were supposedly doing things that were impossible according to our understanding of biology and medicine right now until you bring them into a lab.
And so in the 70s, they started doing this.
One guy was Swami Rama.
This guy grew up in the mountains of the Himalayas, been meditating.
Swami Rama, bring him up.
Sorry, I interrupted you.
No, that's cool.
The mountains of the Himalayas go on.
Yeah, yeah, since he was four years old, he was trained to be a monk.
And they brought him into this place called the Menager Clinic.
And a Navy physicist tested to see what he could do, things that are supposed to be impossible.
And he was able to flutter his heart rate on command at 300 beats per minute on command.
What's our regular heart rate?
If you're healthy, 50.
You need 300 per minute.
Mine's probably 70, 60, 70.
300 beats was supposed to be impossible.
Shit, he's a damn Valentine's day at that point.
So he was able to change the temperature on the palm of his hand 11 degrees from one side to the other.
One side was all flush and red, and the other was like gray and purple.
And in another test, and this was reported in the New York Times, he was able to enter states of deep sleep while still being conscious and repeating everything that happened in the room around him.
All of this is supposed to be impossible.
He proved it, and it also establishes credence to all these other stories of these ancient monks doing this stuff.
Wow.
And he said the foundation of all of this was breathing.
You have to start with that.
Then you have to learn to meditate.
Then you can do all this other stuff.
But it starts with that.
Yeah, I wonder how would you even be able to do something like that?
You focus on your breath, you meditate.
And I can tell you, I've seen people do things that are much crazier than that.
Like I've seen people do a lot of things that I don't feel at liberty to discuss because people are going to think I'm insane until I get these guys into a lab.
And that's what I'm working on right now.
But that looks like child's play compared to the things that I've seen people do when you focus on your breathing, when you use your natural body to do these things that we've been doing for thousands of years that in the last couple hundred years we've completely forgotten about.
Wow.
Better Help for Relationships00:03:20
You got to come back then.
You'll have to come back after that for sure.
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Thank you.
Like, are there any presidents that focus on breath work?
Even look that up, Nick.
I bet Carter would be the only one that would have been cool enough to do that because he was in all in the health.
He put some solar panels up on the White House and Organic Garden.
You know, I doubt, I doubt he would ever admit to it.
You know, Jimmy Carter put solar panels up on the White House.
Breath Work Benefits00:05:48
Yeah, that's, I believe you can fact check that one.
That's pretty dope.
And then Reagan took them down.
That's so hilarious.
It'd be great to see a history of just all the ridiculous things that have been put up each time and then taken down.
Yes, President Jimmy Carter installed 32 solar thermal panels on the roof of the White House West Wing on June 20th, 1979.
They operated until 1996 when the Reagan administration removed them during roof repairs and stored them in a Virginia warehouse.
The painters later went to Unity College in Maine for cafeteria use and influenced later White House solar efforts under Bush.
Wow.
That's pretty cool.
It'd be a nice thing to just be able to buy and even an auction one of those.
Yeah, I've heard there's a lot of, there's like a lot of celebrities that are fans of yours.
Devin Booker, who else was I reading?
Pink, the musician, Sidney Sweeney.
Who's probably got a set of lungs on her, I bet.
What is that like?
Have you had celebrities reach out to you?
Has there been like an interesting occurrence where one of them wanted you to come up, like a private session sort of thing?
Yeah, that's happened a few times, and they've been just so disappointed because they want like the secret thing.
They're like, oh, I bet you got into some weird stuff.
I'm famous.
You need to tell me the secret.
And I tell them what the secret is, just what I told you.
And they're like, oh, that's it.
So it's about doing the work, right?
It's one thing to tell people these things.
You can't just like read it once, do it once, and move on, right?
It's like a diet.
You think you're going to eat one little salad throughout the day and then be eating french fries for the rest of the day and thinking, oh, I ate my salad.
I'm good to go.
We're breathing all the time, right?
And so you should be breathing in a way that is conducive to your body and your health.
That helps you all the time.
Well, it makes certain.
Yeah.
And so it's the most unsexy thing to talk about is normal breathing.
But I'm here to tell you: if you really want to help yourself become a normal breather, you can do some of that breath work.
But I promise you, once you become a normal breather, then you do that breath work.
It will take you places you've never dreamed about.
Let's go, huh?
A little lung narnia, homie.
I'm ready.
I'm ready for that.
There's this kind of phenomenon where it's like sometimes when I finally sit and take a breath, it feels like I haven't breathed or breathed or whatever for months sometimes, you know, or for weeks.
You know, you know, that feeling of like, oh, I finally got a breath.
And if some of you, you're like, what's happened in our lives that's made it that we've gotten so far away from our breathing?
Well, I think you can force yourself into pausing and resetting your breathing.
And you can force yourself through yawning or sighing.
So when you are not aware of your breath and when you are just caught in these negative unconscious habits, it gets so bad that your body needs a reset.
And so what does it do?
It's an unintentional sigh.
Wow.
It forces you to be like, override the system.
Let's start over.
Do a little better this time.
It's like, you know, trying out for acting, you know, trying out for a play or whatever.
It's like, okay, or doing a different take in a recording.
It's like your lungs are reminding you, hey, brother, we're down here.
But you can take advantage of that.
It doesn't always have to be unintentional.
You can make it an intentional sigh.
So you can set an alarm, just a little bell to go off on your phone three times a day, five times a day, 10 times a day.
That bell goes off, and it's just a moment.
You don't have to stop what you're doing to be like, I'm going to check in on my breathing.
Takes a second to just go, I'm going to do an intentional sigh.
So when that bell goes off, follow me with this one.
It's easier than that last thing we just did.
I promise you.
Bell goes off.
Just stop what you're doing.
Take an inhale.
Hold.
Take an inhale.
Hold.
Take an inhale.
Let it out calmly now.
Let it out calmly.
Do it again.
Take an inhale softly.
Hold.
Take an inhale softer.
Hold.
Take an inhale softer.
Let it out softly, softly.
I don't want to hear you letting it out on this one.
Now take an inhale.
Hold.
Take an inhale.
Inhale.
Silent exhale.
You've just reset your respiratory patterns, right?
And I think you can.
We're back.
You have a, I mean, how long did that take?
15 seconds?
15 seconds.
You can do this on a flight.
You can do it on the train.
You can do it in your car.
And it allows you to start again.
So what I've found is a lot of people have asked, they said, where do I start?
Set those alarms.
Do 10 of them a day.
Check in on this.
And if you do enough of these, if you go back to breathing, after you've reset it, go back to breathing that five seconds in, five seconds out.
Don't exaggerate it.
Real soft.
I shouldn't be able to watch you breathing, right?
It's really subtle, really soft.
This will become your default.
And if this becomes your default, I am telling you, it changes a lot of things.
You're going to start cooking.
You could start hooking.
You could start sleeping.
No, cooking.
I mean, you're going to cook.
You're going to be rolling.
I thought you said hooking.
Breathing Through Nose Techniques00:15:22
Oh, no.
This could get you out on the street.
So, children, he said cooking.
Cooking.
I just saw it.
Figurative and literal language.
You could go to the kitchen, make something healthy.
Yeah.
Or just get your cooking in your body.
You're making something healthy in your own life.
Do not do that and go out hooking.
No, do not go out hooking.
Take me through some other ailments that breath work can help us with or that focusing on our breathing can help eliminate or solve or can help fight.
And then, yeah, how about ADHD?
Take me down some of that journey because I've heard you talk about it a lot.
Yeah.
So this is something I learned after the book was published years ago.
And I kept hearing this from people in the airway space, from different doctors and different dentists.
They said, no one's paying attention to this.
I didn't discover it.
I spent five years researching, writing the book.
I didn't discover.
I thought I covered everything.
I didn't.
So I was able to revise the hardcover for the paperback, which is which is out.
And I include this version.
So this is in the new revision.
Yeah, it's in the new revision because, and it's something I try to talk about every single talk I do.
I'm going to talk about this because it's so important and nobody's talking about it.
And I'm so tired of getting these letters from parents.
I do these talks, right?
And there's these line of parents afterwards.
And they're yelling at me and they're crying because their kid isn't getting any help.
They're like, you need to help me.
I was like, I'm a freaking journalist, right?
I'm not a doctor, but they're not getting the help from their doctor.
So this is what I've learned.
I'm a filter.
I don't do this research, but I talk to the leading experts in the field.
I spend a lot of time doing this.
They have told me this, that ADHD is diagnosed as a neurological problem, right?
It's a problem with the brain.
And it's treated as a problem of the brain, right?
So we can give kids uppers to wake them up in the day, Riddling, whatever.
It absolutely works.
You can give them downers at night to go to sleep, right?
And 10% of the population in the U.S. has ADHD environment.
60% are on these pharmaceutical drugs.
And these drugs absolutely work.
But what these guys are saying and the story that's starting to come out is for so many kids with ADHD, it's not a neurological problem that has caused this.
It's a breathing problem at night.
It is a plumbing problem, not an electrical problem.
They said that the vast majority of kids with ADHD suffer from something called sleep disordered breathing.
What this is, is when you're sleeping, you're choking on yourself, you're snoring, struggling the entire time.
You don't enter those stages of deep restorative sleep.
This affects human growth hormones.
So again, it affects how you're going to grow.
It also affects your brain development, your ability to think clearly the next day.
So these kids wake up exhausted.
Everything around them drives them crazy, right?
I mean, think of how you are when you're jet lagged after a flight that's 12 hours long, right?
You're anxious, but like bright lights bother you.
They have told me that for so many kids, this is the core issue.
We've been diagnosing it and we've been treating it wrong, which is why these kids necessarily aren't getting better.
They're on these drugs forever.
So the number one thing you should do, especially for young kids, is to check their breathing at night.
And if they are snoring or have sleep apnea, that could very well significantly be contributing to their symptoms of ADHD.
And I can say anecdotally, I can say this because I cannot tell you how many letters parents have sent me.
They are so pissed off now because their little Johnny for five years was on 20 different drugs, right?
Nothing was working.
He's 12 years old, still wetting his bed.
They taught the kid how to breathe in and out through the nose.
They got rid of the snoring, the sleep apnea.
And the vast majority of little Johnny's problems go away within two weeks.
Wow.
Sometimes within a single night, I just got a letter.
Within a single night, this kid who was wetting his bed from day one, couldn't stop it, is now not wetting his bed.
And so a lot of this is caused by that chronic stress at night.
And another reason why people wake up and pee three times throughout the night is we aren't releasing the proper sleep hormones that shut that down, right?
And so there's another thing I just heard today.
We just got a letter today that some old grandma was like, I have to wake up and pee twice.
And she's like, since I learned how to breathe through my nose, I no longer snore.
She's like, I don't have to do that anymore.
And you could say, oh, these are anecdotes.
These are neat stories, but we know the mechanism.
That's one piss effect.
Well, I love it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love it.
Who wants to do that?
Wake up at 2:30 a.m.
Especially with that age.
If you trip on something, you're done.
You know, a trip to the bathroom in the dark at 74?
Yeah.
What are we?
You're fucking Lewis and Clark.
I mean, at any age, it sucks.
Yeah.
We can acknowledge that.
But yeah, if you're older and you're fragile and your bones are brittle, you're getting bad.
There are grills out there.
It's bad news.
You're trying to figure it out.
So when you sleep, what about snoring?
What about snoring?
So what is snoring?
What is snoring?
And is that, because you see a lot of people that get like sleep apnea masks, you know, like a lot of thick, rich white dudes like laying in bed at night, trying to just really hide from their wives, probably from intimacy, but also just pretending they're bane or whatever in their fancy houses or whatever.
But what's really going on with snoring?
What's really going on with sleep apnea?
So snoring has been so normalized, right?
That around 50% of the population does it on occasion and something like 20 or 30% might do it chronically.
Depends on how you measure that.
But it's not normal, right?
There is no part of that that is normal because if you are struggling during sleep, during the time that we're supposed to be, lights out, shut down, the body needs to repair everything in order for you to function properly and not get chronically sick the next day, the next week, the next few years, right?
We have to have restorative sleep.
And this is a known thing, right?
Everyone's talking about sleep now.
Yeah, for sure.
If you're snoring, you're not allowing that to happen.
So in the back of the throat, those soft tissues, right?
Most snoring, not all of it, is through the mouth.
Some people snore through their noses.
What I have learned from a lot of people that have helped people who have chronic snoring issues is there are a lot of things you can do at home to fix this.
There's surgeries, which absolutely works.
Sometimes with sleep apnea, it's the tongue, other issues.
But the first thing is chronic congestion.
Because what we know is during allergy season, snoring and sleep apnea go through the roof.
That's not an accident.
That's because your nose gets clogged, right?
And you're breathing through the mouth.
Another thing is during the day, we are breathing so heavily, like over breathing all day long that we carry that over tonight.
So what these people do, there's a bunch of different things.
You can put little tape on your mouth.
You can sleep on your side.
But one of the main things they do is to train you to breathe very lightly during the day.
Just that breathing that we were doing.
For instance, if I were to ask you to breathe heavily through your mouth right now and make a snoring sound, how hard is that?
Okay, you can do this without a very, very rich snoring sound.
There it is.
Now breathe very slowly in and out through the nose and try to make that same sound very slowly with your mouth closed and try to make that sound.
A lot of people say this is a mechanical thing.
You're over breathing.
I can't do it.
There's too much air flowing in.
And so you make that snoring sound.
Sleep apnea is a different thing.
That's when you choke on yourself.
It can be from your tongue.
Most of the time, the tongue is falling back or there's constriction.
If you are morbidly obese, very obese, you can get this lateral compression against the throat, right?
And there's some things that happen in the nose.
People are given CPAPs as a cure for it.
It cures nothing.
CPAPs can actually make your sleep apnea worse over time.
And around 50% of people given CPAPs within a few months aren't going to use them anyway, but they're too embarrassed to give them back to their doctor.
So to be clear, if you have sleep apnea, these things are an amazing band-aid to get you over that hump.
You can't be choking at night, but it's not fixing the core issue.
The core issue for so many people is that mouth that is too small for your face.
It's an airway that is not properly developed.
The back of our airways is covered in this flesh, right?
That flesh needs to be firm, right?
We exercise everything else in our bodies, right?
Our muscles, our biceps, our legs, but we're not exercising our airway.
So you can do this with exercises, with myofunctional therapy, very stupid name for an amazing therapy that allows people to stiffen those tissues to allow you to take that easy breath without any constriction so that you don't snore.
I guess I don't, I mean, I've been told I snore, but I think it's just sometimes.
It's just kind of occasional.
But I certainly understand how like just starting to breathe through your nose and just have like a pattern that your body can rely on would make everything less stressful, you know?
What about mouth tape?
You hear about mouth tape a lot.
Is that just so we do know around 60 to 65% of us sleep with an open mouth.
We do know if you're breathing through an open mouth at night, it makes you more susceptible to snoring and milder sleep apnea.
We know this, okay?
We know that if you convert to nasal breathing, we know anecdotally, at least, that a lot of people claim that they're snoring a lot less, that they're sleeping a lot better.
I did a very small experiment at Stanford in which we compared mouth breathing over 10 days to nasal breathing at night.
When I was mouth breathing, I don't snore.
When I was mouth breathing, I snored throughout the night.
I also had sleep apnea.
The moment I went to use a little sleep tape to breathe through my nose, it all went away.
I've heard this hundreds and hundreds of times because of those mechanics.
When air is coming in slower, when it's coming in pressurized, it's a lot harder to make that Doesn't work for everyone.
And so you see these advertisers on Instagram or whatever saying everybody needs mouth tape.
If you're part of the 40% that sleeps with a closed mouth, you don't need mouth tape.
For other people, it's something you might want to explore.
I'm not here to push this on anyone.
I can say it's absolutely changed my sleep.
I track my sleep.
I have proof that it works.
I can also say that thousands of other people have found the same thing.
Is it hard to use?
I've never used it.
It's very, very easy to use.
And I'm so addicted to it.
This is how neurotic I become that I have a hard time sleeping without it, which is why I travel with it when I'm camping.
I bring my little piece of tape.
I brought a little piece of tape today.
I had a feeling you were going to ask me about this.
Yeah.
In the morning, I had my little roll of tape by me.
I said, I know I'm going to forget this.
So I'm going to put it on the back of my watch.
So the mouth tape thing, there's all these different brands that weren't around until a couple of years ago.
And they're all saying, mine's the best.
You can only use this, blah, blah, blah.
Don't listen to any of that, right?
So any micropore tape, surgical tape.
This is the technology I'm going to show you.
This is how sophisticated this technology is.
This is micropore tape you can buy at any drugstore.
What I do for my mouth tape, I'm done.
I can talk to you.
I can cough, right?
If I had a straw, I could take a sip of water.
Doesn't look so hot.
But what this is doing is it is reminding me throughout the night to breathe through my nose.
The point is not to do a hostage situation.
I have found, and a lot of other people have found, it's just a reminder.
And if you snore, and there's a way you can test this, I'll tell you about it.
If you get acclimated to wearing this in the day, this is so important, is wear for 10 minutes answering email, doing the dishes, sitting around watching TV, increase that time throughout a couple of weeks, and then move on to trying it at night.
Just as a reminder.
This little piece of tape, we have heard stories about, including asthma, autoimmune issues.
Again, this is not, these were not studied in an official randomized clinical trial, but it's still important that now with all these wearables, people can track everything.
They have their own data and they see what works.
But this is it.
And it's free and it's available for everybody.
Wow, that simple.
And so that's just been some basically 3M medical tape.
It's, I use, I'm not, I don't get paid by any of these brands to say any of this stuff.
The stuff that I found is pretty good is the 3M micropore sensitive skin tape.
But you can use any other kind of surgical tape.
Surgical tape is made to be put on skin and off of skin.
What you don't want to use is stuff that has a really thick adhesive because you don't want chapped lips.
And also important when you take it off, use your tongue.
Do not do this.
If you rip it off after a couple of days, your lips are going to be chapped.
You're never going to want to do it.
If you use your tongue to take it off, no hands, use your tongue, then you're not going to have a problem.
I've used this stuff for consistently for like seven years, and I cannot tell you what a difference this made for my sleep.
I didn't think I was a mouth breather at night until I tested it, until I saw the difference.
Just as you saw, you're like, oh, I'm just going to take a few breaths for 15 seconds.
You're like, wow, I feel so much better.
Try to do this at night if you're a mouth breather.
And you're going to wake up the next morning and be like, oh my God, I have so much more energy.
I have so much more clarity.
Wow.
I want to try that.
Yeah, because I've heard about it.
And I guess it also just trains you to breathe through your nose more.
Trains you to breathe through your nose.
And that's especially important at night.
And then in the morning, you're already habituated to breathing through your nose.
Yeah, does that roll over to the daytime or your brain, you just start getting used to it?
Is it really good practice for breathing through your nose?
I was a mouth breather my whole life when I was surfing, when I was doing exercising, doing martial arts, whatever.
I was breathing through my mouth.
Nobody told me to do otherwise, right?
Once I converted, even started doing it during exercise, I had so much more energy.
My recovery time was cut in half by just doing this.
So I started at the nighttime, right?
And then it was so much easier to do in the daytime because your nose gets used to it.
Fill Your Room With Plants00:15:18
It's like, oh, I can't be congested now, right?
This is the primary way in which you're breathing.
And for a lot of people, things clear up pretty soon.
For some people, if structural issues, deviated septum, problems with their turbinates, whatever, you need surgery.
You need other, more deeper interventions.
But for a lot of people, it's just a habit you need to create.
Yeah.
Having some new habits for yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is so good to have a nice, just like a just a reminder.
And especially right now in my life, because one of the big things for me is just I just feel over.
Yeah, you just feel overwhelmed a lot.
What about nasal strips?
People use those a lot.
I use those sometimes.
They're great.
Helps me.
They're amazing.
Right now, if you take your fingers, right, and go like this, is that easier for you to breathe this way?
So nice.
Then you are a good candidate for nasal strips, right?
So many people have issues with their nostrils.
Nostrils aren't big enough or they flutter when you take an inhale in.
And this is called the Coddles maneuver.
Some guy had to name it after himself, of course.
But nasal strips will open up your nostrils to the way they were supposed to have been.
God, I like that.
Around 30% more airflow.
And this is why they're marketed to people who suffer from snoring.
There's a brand called Mute.
I've tried them.
I don't, again, I don't get any money from any of this.
I thought they were okay.
They go in your nose.
I didn't like that feeling.
It's like this corkscrew thing that goes in your nose, but they're called mute because they mute you at night from snoring because they allow all that airflow up through your nose.
Oh, and so our nose is supposed to have more intake because we're supposed to, because we're supposed to breathe through it more.
We're not supposed to be this congested.
No other animal is this congested.
You see a bear out there that's just like, oh, I have seasonal allergies and asthma.
I can't get up today.
Oh, yeah.
Do you see a bear just out there mouth breathing all the time?
You're like, look at this friggin', look at this bastard over here.
Yeah, and I wonder if we breathe in, if we start breathing more in through our noses or if we breathe in through our noses, do we take more or less breaths in a day than if we do in our mouths?
We take far fewer, and that's good because we're taking fewer, but we're taking deeper breaths.
Most of us are over breathing, which is a really bad habit because you offload this gas called carbon dioxide, right?
Which causes this vasoconstriction, which causes blood flow problems.
So by taking fewer, richer, deeper breaths, we're able to get more oxygen, more energy for less effort.
And that's exactly what we want.
And our noses are also our first line of defense.
So you've got nose hair, right?
Most people do.
And there's also all of these other pathways that air has to follow through as it makes it into our lungs.
Those are there for a reason.
They help filter out bacteria, viruses, pollutants, dust, and everything else.
So when we're breathing through the mouth, all the crap in the air is going directly to my lungs, which causes inflammation and which causes congestion, right?
It causes other issues.
I heard you talk about how there's more CO2 in a lot of the air we breathe.
Like we get stuck in places like planes, office buildings, even schools, and we're stuck breathing kind of recycled air, I guess.
Yeah, this is something I didn't really pay attention to when I was doing the first edition of the book, which is something I learned a lot about during that time and wanted to put in a bunch of new pages about the science that I discovered.
So I heard this about three, four years ago that in indoor environments, carbon dioxide levels are through the roof.
We always hear about outdoor environments, CO2 is going up every year, which is true.
It's like 422 parts per million outside.
Everyone's talking about the outside.
No one's talking about the inside.
And the reason why they measure CO2 inside is if we're all sitting here, right, and the CO2 levels keep going up in here, that's not from a coal plant or exhaust from a car.
It's from our exhalations.
So when you're measuring CO2, you're measuring how many other people's exhalations are in the room.
So at a CO2 level of around 2,000 parts per million, which is found in a lot of schools and offices, about one in every 40 breaths or so is someone else's exhalation.
No.
Right?
Yeah.
And if you get up to like 4,000, 5,000, it's one in every 10 breaths is someone else's exhalation.
So I started cruising around.
I travel a lot like you do.
I'm always on airplanes and hotels and all that stuff.
And I always feel like crap in these hotels.
If you've noticed, new hotels, they've glued up all the windows.
Back in the day, you're too young to know this, but back in the day, you used to be able to open a window.
Maybe not all the way.
You used to be able to take your own life.
Yeah.
Well, I think back in the old day in the 50s, you want to take your own life?
There it is.
That's your problem, not our problem.
Lawyers got involved.
So that ruined everything.
At least you could open it this much, right?
To get fresh.
Now you don't have that choice.
So I would wake up in these hotels and be having not had anything to drink the night before, I would feel totally hungover.
My head would hurt.
I was like, I wonder how much of this has to do with the air quality, how much CO2 is in the environment.
Because if we're in an environment with high levels of CO2, anything north of 1500 parts per million, we have increased chance of having headaches, lethargy.
It can cause a bunch of other issues like hypertension, which is high blood pressure, kidney calcification if you're in it for long enough, which are kidney stones, like really rank stuff.
This has been measured around the world.
It's not controversial.
So I've been traveling with this thing, this little monitor, and it tells me how much the CO2 is.
I just want to see it.
Really?
So do you have to breath?
Is it a breathalyzer?
No, no, it's just, it's recording the amount of CO2 in this room right now.
Okay.
And I kid you not, this is some of the best quality air that I've seen.
Usually, this shows like 2,000 parts per million, which has been shown 1,500 parts per million.
And one Harvard study showed that a 55-0% decrease in test scores at 1,500 parts per million because your body is struggling.
It's placing you in that state of stress.
Most airlines I've recorded are one study I read from Harvard said that 1,500 parts per million, that's about three, three, four times higher than what the air is in the outside, right?
The amount of concentration of carbon dioxide can create a 50% decrease in some cognitive tests.
Wow.
So test scores.
If you think about what we're doing to kids, we're placing them in a classroom for eight hours at a time with air quality of 2,500 parts per million.
So well north of that 1,500 parts per million.
And that could change place to place for sure.
It changes all the time.
In areas that have nice climate, right?
You have these things called windows.
You could just open it.
You have a door, you have opened up.
But a lot of new schools right now, just like new hotels, new offices, you cannot open the windows.
And what I've found is these offices and hotels do this to save money because it costs a lot of money to either heat up air or cool it down.
So instead, they just recycle the same stale air, everyone's exhalations from room to room to room.
And I can prove this now because I cruise around with one of these things and I've got a small army of 20 other people collecting data.
And we're going to put all this data available for free that people can start seeing what the air quality is in these hotels and airplanes.
That's fascinating.
Yeah.
And when you think about where we spend most of our lives, especially since we're more indoor creatures, a lot of us are these days.
Gosh, we're just in our own little air tomb kind of.
Yeah.
I mean, 90% of our time we spend indoors.
And if that time spent indoors is not with fresh air, right?
Your body is always going to be playing catch up.
I don't want to get too neurotic here.
Some people get crazy, but this is, it's a biological thing.
And we know that our ancestors always had access to fresh air.
And it's also measurable.
We can see what happens to the brain.
We can see what happens to the body.
We're in an old hotel right now, an old classic, right?
There's windows you can open here.
What a difference that makes.
Fresh air.
When you talk about an open window and just the energy that it does to a room, too, it's so nice.
It's not only the psychosomatic effect, it's a chemical effect on your blood pH, right?
To be able to have fresh air.
And I think that this is something that is easily fixable.
Like there's some airlines that have great air.
There's others that consistently have terrible air.
There's some hotels that have great air.
There's others.
So you know it's a fixable problem.
Have you noticed an airline that does or one that stands out to you?
Yes.
Yes.
All that will be released when it's time because I want to get confirmation from other people.
Well, dang, I don't want to die between now and then because I'm- We'll have a little talk off camera.
I'll tell you what to fly and what not to fly.
What about this?
I've always had this thought.
If you have a lot of plants in your home, does that make it better for you in a room?
Like, is it is like the cycle between plants and humans and your lungs and air, is it that quick enough?
Absolutely.
So fill your room with plants.
Snake plants are great.
Not only do they create more oxygen really efficiently, but they can remove pollutants as well.
And who doesn't want to be in a room with a bunch of plants?
It's such a cool look right from the get-go, but it's so beneficial.
And also to have that energy.
You know, there's the ineffable thing.
It's like you're around a bunch of living things.
It's a good feeling.
Bring up a snake plant.
I want to see one.
I think my old assistant just sent me a snake plant that came in the mail the other day.
I just put some, yep, she sure did.
I got this tall box and it had a plant in it.
But yeah, it was a snake plant.
So those are like those leaves, it's amazing.
Those are like big air filters, right?
Because that's what leaves are.
They suck in CO2 and they give off oxygen.
That's what forests do.
It's like nature's lungs kind of.
It's nature's lungs.
And it was this perfect balance.
Look at that lady.
She got a big one, huh?
That's a black one.
Yeah, her air is fresh.
I mean, and look at how fresh her pants are.
Yeah, yeah, huh?
She likes it a little mixed below the waist, you could tell down there.
Could I even put plants in my car?
Like, is it that close of enough thing?
You could be one of those people that puts Legos on the outside of your car and plants on the inside.
Like, there's no judgment here.
No, I'm just saying.
You can have an art car.
That's okay.
I think a small plant like that isn't going to do much.
It might look cool.
So why not do it?
Yeah.
You know what, what some companies are doing, like algae is really efficient at sucking up CO2 and giving off oxygen.
So some companies, algae, they're selling these big tubes of algae that you feed.
So you have, I don't know if that looks as cool as a snake plant, but to me, it's kind of, it's a nice talking point at dinner parties.
Yeah, it's super interesting.
Algae.
I mean, that's what happens to the ocean is the world's lungs, right?
That's where we get, what, half of our oxygen.
I think it's even more than that is from the ocean.
From algae.
Yes.
Yes.
Wow.
I didn't know that at all.
Isn't that funny, though, if you look at that, they're just mimicking leaves of a large tree of a large plant.
You know, it's an artificial plant, which is cool.
It is cool, but it's definitely like, hey, just get some plants.
Just get some plants.
But you can't, you know, to charge an airport 20 grand for that thing or for 200 for plants.
No one's making a lot of cash from that.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a good point.
They always find a way to take something that we already have, redo it, and make it like more fancy and then sell it back to you.
And really, it's just the same thing.
Germany uses algae tubes on buildings to produce biofuel, generating energy and absorbing CO2 at the same time.
Wow, that's pretty interesting.
They use that to make biodiesel, that you can run that oil that they extract from that in a diesel car.
I have a 40-year-old Mercedes old 300D that you can run it off of vegetable oil, use vegetable oil.
No way.
Yes, I've been doing this for years.
It's a real thing.
So they're kind of, they have a twofer right there.
They're removing CO2, making new oxygen, and they're also creating fuel.
Yeah, in Germany, buildings are going green, literally, with the use of algae-filled tubes mounted on their exteriors.
These transparent tubes house fast-growing microalgae that absorb carbon dioxide from the air and use sunlight to grow, all while producing valuable biomass.
The living facade serves two purposes.
It helps cool the building by providing shade and generates biofuel.
The system is known as the bioreactor facade.
The algae not only capture CO2 emissions, but also produce oxygen, making them natural air purifiers.
What plants produce the most oxygen?
I believe it's algae.
I think Irish ivy snake plants are also really good.
They're all going to do it, but at different levels of efficiency.
I'm curious what the researchers here find.
Erica palm and snake plant top the list for indoor plants that produce the most oxygen.
These plants excel at photosynthesis and air purification, releasing significant oxygen while absorbing toxins like benzene and formaldehyde.
Let me see, other high pothos, P-O-T-H-O-S reduces CO2, effectively, and filters pollutants at night.
Spider plant purifies air of carbon monoxide and formaldehyde while boosting oxygen.
Aloe vera releases oxygen nocturnally and removes toxins like benzene.
It's kind of cool.
You go to sleep and your plants are out there helping you out.
Night, little soldiers.
Yeah, I mean, you got four billion years of evolution here to build systems.
Yeah.
It is crazy.
It's so crazy how it's like we do all these steps to get back to to just try to get back to baseline.
Yep.
And that's papos right there.
Oh yeah, I've seen those before.
I think my mom has moms have a lot of those.
Yeah, you just forget.
I forget about most people don't, but I forget about nature so much, unfortunately.
I don't forget about it.
I long for it, I think.
I just work a lot, mostly indoors, you know?
Oh, I wanted to ask you about asthma.
I feel like growing up, like we all had a friend with asthma or being lazy, that's what our P teacher called it.
But what do you do?
Any advice for parents that have children with asthma or for people suffering with asthma about how they could adjust their breathing techniques or is that not associated?
Sure.
So asthma is treated now with bronchodilators and oral steroids.
Breathing Techniques for Athletes00:04:53
This is what they give people with asthma.
And they both work really, really well.
But again, they're not addressing the core issue.
What's the core issue of asthma?
Like sudden inflammation of the airway, right?
To where you can't breathe.
And this constriction and this paranoia.
What we have learned irrefutably, this is what we've learned, is that people with asthma almost always have a very low tolerance for carbon dioxide.
And another way I'll say this is they can hardly hold their breath.
You ask an asthmatic to hold their breath, they go, wow.
So they have habituated themselves, not all asthmatics, but a lot of them have habituated themselves to be mouth breathers, to be constantly over breathing.
So when they sense that they are unable to breathe and that CO2 goes up, because that's what happens when you hold your breath, that CO2 goes up, it sets off alarm bells in their brain that this is an emergency.
They're having an attack.
So then they over breathe more, which constricts everything more, makes it harder for them to breathe, makes it harder for them to get oxygen.
And then they overbreathe more and then they have an attack.
So what we've known for over 70 years is that one of the most effective ways of reducing symptoms of asthma is to learn to breathe slower, is to learn to breathe through the nose,
and is to learn when you feel an attack, instead of hyperventilating and exacerbating that attack, to take control of it, to start to breathe slow, to hold your breath for two seconds, two, three seconds, to let it go, to slightly and calmly build that carbon dioxide, which will keep your airways open.
There is a Russian doctor called Buteiko who studied this and researched it for decades, 70, 80 years ago.
This is still taught all over the place.
And I have heard from so many people, and there's about two dozen studies showing how effective just learning how to breathe slower and how intimately your breathing habits are tied to your symptoms of asthma.
Yeah, I never struggle with it.
But yeah, when you see people that struggle with it, yeah, I know that's, yeah, I know a lot of people deal with that.
Oh, before you leave, you always hear the theory, or you always hear the saying, in through your nose, out through your mouth.
Is that true?
It depends.
If you're working out, sometimes that's really effective.
When I'm talking about mouth breathing, just so people aren't confused, I'm not talking about if you willingly want to take a breath through your mouth.
You're doing some breath work.
You want to breathe through your mouth.
You're LeBron and you're dunking on some dude and you want to take a mouth breath.
All that's good because that's something you're consciously doing.
I'm talking about the unconscious stuff.
I'm talking about the stuff at night.
So in through the nose, out through your mouth can be effective in some stages of athletic performance.
For most zone one, two, and three, in through the nose, out through the nose is going to be so much more beneficial.
And this is the one thing elite trainers are really getting into now.
The number one thing they have their athletes do, it doesn't matter if they're an Olympian or a fighter or a cyclist, is they look at their breathing and they teach them how to breathe slower and lower.
If you think about it, if you're able to conserve more energy by taking fewer breaths and getting more oxygen, what can you do with that energy?
You can beat your opponent, right?
And that's why they're interested in it.
But not only for competitive athletes, for everybody can benefit from this.
So it's safe to say, though, look, we can go ahead and change it then.
It's in through your nose, out through your nose.
Absolutely.
Well, depending on what you're doing, right?
So you need context around this.
It is the vast majority of the time for 80, 85% of athletic endurance sports.
It's in through the nose, out through the nose.
Yes.
Amen.
I like that.
yeah yeah yeah um for people that have smoked most of their lives and are changing that now are there breathing techniques that they can do or anything specific Or is it just in through the nose, out through the nose?
I don't know.
I don't think it's been well studied.
I would suggest if in through the nose, out through the nose for that five to six seconds in, five to six seconds out, if that can help people with ground glass lungs the way it can, the way we know it can, it could probably be very beneficial for smokers.
But I don't know any data that would support that.
But again, you're going to get other benefits, you know, beyond the potential benefit of removing more toxins from your lungs.
Breathing Techniques for Smokers00:00:46
Yeah.
You know, oh, if you got 9-11 lung or you got dang, I'm sure they can handle parliament lungs or whatever.
You know?
James Nesser, thanks so much for joining us today, man.
Thanks a lot for having me.
Yeah, I appreciate it and I appreciate your patience.
You guys can all go grab his New York Times bestseller.
The revised edition is out now.
It's out now.
Yeah.
Just released about last week.
Breath, the new science of a lost art.
Thank you so much, brother.
Yep.
Now I'm just floating on the breeze and I feel I'm falling like these leaves.
I must be cornerstone.
Oh, but when I reach that ground, I'll share this peace of mind I found.