
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Human beings possess two distinct respiratory systems: a voluntary one controlled by the conscious mind and an automatic one managed by the brainstem. Research indicates that while deliberate practices like meditation or prayer can optimize breathing to a healthy six breaths per minute, the body often reverts to rapid, shallow patterns during sleep. This discrepancy exists because the brain’s unconscious baseline is shaped by long-term habits and chronic stress rather than immediate intent. Experts suggest that modern lifestyles have normalized excessive breathing, which can negatively impact cardiovascular health and sleep quality. True physiological transformation requires consistent, long-term practice to eventually re-pattern the deep neural centers responsible for automatic breathing. Ultimately, achieving a healthier resting breath is a gradual process of retraining the nervous system's fundamental settings.
By MarkWhiteLotus3
22 ratings
Human beings possess two distinct respiratory systems: a voluntary one controlled by the conscious mind and an automatic one managed by the brainstem. Research indicates that while deliberate practices like meditation or prayer can optimize breathing to a healthy six breaths per minute, the body often reverts to rapid, shallow patterns during sleep. This discrepancy exists because the brain’s unconscious baseline is shaped by long-term habits and chronic stress rather than immediate intent. Experts suggest that modern lifestyles have normalized excessive breathing, which can negatively impact cardiovascular health and sleep quality. True physiological transformation requires consistent, long-term practice to eventually re-pattern the deep neural centers responsible for automatic breathing. Ultimately, achieving a healthier resting breath is a gradual process of retraining the nervous system's fundamental settings.