Your Breath Is Your Power
When you're playing, training, or exercising, the depth, smoothness, and quickness with which you breathe can make a huge difference. Although this is a vast subject, I wanted to touch on some fundamentals about breathing in this essay.
To begin, observing children, particularly babies, and how they breathe reveals that they breathe naturally and thoroughly. They inhale deeply from their stomachs. On the inhale, the abdomen and lower diaphragm expand, filling the lungs before the exhale.
Different breathing training device techniques and breathing exercises can significantly improve this (also known as chi gong, chi kung, chi gong, qi gong, etc). Internal training can be extremely effective and beneficial to one's health, not to mention boosting one's endurance and power.
In this post, I'll discuss two other breathing techniques that you can start incorporating daily to help train and strengthen your lung capacity and, ultimately, your endurance and power (aside from re-learning to start breathing deeply again - long inhale and long exhale belly breathing, which I mentioned above).
The best part is that you can perform them anywhere, at any time (as long as you're not talking to someone or in the middle of an important meeting), such as driving, walking, sitting on a park bench, and so on.
1st Technique
So, the first technique, also known as yang chi breathing, is as follows: Take a short inhale (as deep as possible) and then exhale slowly through your mouth. Your inhalation should be one to two seconds long, and your exhale should be five to ten seconds long. Your exhale breath will linger longer as you improve at executing the breathing exercises (15 - 30 seconds and even longer, you will gradually get better control).
Technique number two
Yin chi breathing is the second technique. This is the polar opposite of the previous method. Inhale via your mouth while creating the same audible noise ('hahaha sound). When inhaling and carefully filling your lungs, make sure you are actually taking in air and not simply producing the sound.
I first learned the yin/yang breathing exercises from an amazing internal mastery program called 'Chi Power Plus,' which I purchased a few years ago. Both of the preceding exercises, as well as deep belly breathing in general, should be done daily to build skill and comfort. You can do them in groups of ten each day, for example, and at different times throughout the day.
Source Url :- https://sites.google.com/view/lungtrainers001/home
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