Read The Tao of Natural Breathing Online
Authors: Dennis Lewis
24
Andre van Lysebeth,
Pranayama: The Yoga of Breathing
(London: Unwin Paperbacks, 1983), p. 28.
25
Robert Ornstein and David Sobel,
The Healing Brain: Breakthrough Discoveries About How the Brain Keeps Us Healthy
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987), p. 207.
26
For more information on ions, see Fred Soyka with Alan Edmonds,
The Ion Effect: How Air Electricity Rules Your Life and Health
(New York: Bantam Books, 1977).
27
See
The Primordial Breath,
Volume 2, trans. Jane Huang (Torrance, Calif.: Original Books, 1990), p. 13, for a clear description of this very esoteric practice. I will not go into this practice since it is extremely advanced and I have little experience with it. I will, however, discuss in later chapters an associated practice, introduced to me by Mantak Chia, of breathing into and swallowing the saliva.
28
Mantak Chia and Maneewan Chia,
Awaken Healing Light of the Tao
(Huntington, N.Y.: Healing Tao Books, 1993), p. 41.
29
Awaken Healing Light,
pp. 41 ff.
30
Awaken Healing Light,
pp. 185-86.
31
Lao Tzu,
Tao Te Ching,
trans. Victor H. Mair (New York: Bantam Books, 1990), p. 69.
32
Taoist reverse breathing often occurs spontaneously for anyone making great physical effort, especially in sports, martial arts, and so on, since it can help to generate outward force through the various limbs. To intentionally activate this form of breathing is quite difficult, however, and can, if done prematurely, cause a great deal of tension and have ill effects on the organism. Before trying reverse breathing it is best to have worked with abdominal breathing for at least several months.
33
Tzu Kuo Shih,
Qi Gong Therapy: The Chinese Art of Healing with Energy
(Barrytown, N.Y.: Station Hill Press, 1994), p. 35.
34
Robert B. Livingston, in
Gentle Bridges: Conversations with the Dalai Lama on the Sciences of the Mind,
eds. Jeremy W. Hayward and Francisco J. Varela (Boston: Shambhala, 1992), p. 174.
35
See pp. 47-54 of
Qi Gong Therapy
for a further discussion of some of the physiological results of respiratory exercises.
36
Chuang Tzu,
Basic Writings,
trans. Burton Watson (New York: Columbia University Press, 1964), p. 74.
37
Alexander Lowen,
The Spirituality of the Body: Bioenergetics for Grace and Harmony
(New York: Macmillan, 1990), pp. 37-38.
38
Pranayama,
p. 31-32.
39
The Complete Works of Lao Tzu,
p. 12.
40
Basic Writings,
p. 138.
41
Tarthang Tulku,
Time, Space, and Knowledge: A New Vision of Reality
(Emeryville, Calif.: Dharma Publishing, 1977), p. 5.
42
The Perceptible Breath,
p. 32.
43
From an article by Magda Proskauer, “The Therapeutic Value of Certain Breathing Techniques,” in Charles Garfield, ed.,
Rediscovery of the Body: A Psychosomatic View of Life and Death
(New York: A Laurel Original, 1977), pp. 59-60.
44
Recent biomedical research, such as that reported in Moyers’s
Healing and the Mind,
makes it clear that what we think and feel can have an immediate positive or negative impact on our whole body, including our immune system. Of course, Taoism and other traditions have been aware of the influence of our thoughts and feelings on our health for thousands of years.
45
Norman Cousins,
Anatomy of an Illness
(New York: Bantam Books, 1979).
46
Mantak Chia,
Taoist Ways to Transform Stress into Vitality
(Huntington: N.Y.: Healing Tao Books, 1985), p. 33.
47
William James,
Psychology
(Greenwich, Conn.: Fawcett Publications, 1963), p. 335.
48
Moshe Feldenkrais,
The Elusive Obvious
(Cupertino, Calif.: Meta Publications, 1981), p. 61.
49
Paul Ekman and Richard J. Davidson, “Voluntary Smiling Changes Regional Brain Activity,”
Psychological Science: A Journal of the American Psychological Society,
Vol. 4, No. 5 (September 1993), p. 345.
50
Phone conversation with Candace Pert, May 9, 1995 (see also note 15).
51
Taoist Ways to Transform Stress,
p. 33.
52
For a contemporary, detailed description of scientific findings and Taoist beliefs regarding saliva, see the Winter 1993 issue of
The Healing Tao Journal,
Healing Tao Books, P.O. Box 1194, Huntington, NY 11743.
53
In Search of the Miraculous,
p. 181.
54
The Healing Brain,
p. 202.
55
From an article entitled “The Body’s Guards” in
Living Right
(Winter 1995), p. 23.
56
Master Mantak Chia writes extensively about the microcosmic orbit in his 1993 book
Awaken Healing Light,
and offers readers many practical techniques for opening the governor and functional channels.
57
Awaken Healing Light,
p. 170.
58
Awaken Healing Light,
p. 496.
59
See Mantak Chia’s book
Taoist Ways to Transform Stress
for the complete six healing sounds practice, including physical movements and postures.
60
My first experience with bellows breathing was highly instructive, since I had not yet understood how to breathe naturally. It took place during a spiritual retreat. On the first day, advanced breathing exercises were given to all of us, even beginners. To be sure, everyone at the retreat was told that these exercises should not be done from the ego or the will, but rather from a state of relaxation and exploration. But being instructed how to do something is not the same as being able to experience it. When we were asked, for example, to do bellows breathing (called
bastrika
in the various Indian traditions), the result for many people, including myself, was almost comical—frantic, spasmodic movements of various muscles all over the body, movements that seemed more willful than skillful for most of us there. Even many of the more senior students had trouble carrying out the exercise in a harmonious way. As I looked both at myself and those around me, I observed tense faces, necks, shoulders, chests, and arms—psychophysical manifestations of the “upward pull” referred to by Durckheim (see the Introduction)—as many of us tried to do these exercises without the inner relaxation, sensory awareness, and muscle control that are necessary. What was amazing to me was that no one came around to help or correct us. The upward pull became even more evident when the teacher asked us to do bellows breathing, first through one nostril and then through the other. As we continued these pranayama exercises over the course of the retreat, with little visible transformation of these tensions, I began to feel that the teacher had generously overestimated the ability of many of his students to put his teaching into practice. Today, I would simply say that he had not prepared his students properly to be able to carry out such exercises in a beneficial way; he had not taken the time necessary to help them learn natural breathing.
61
Awaken Healing Light,
pp. 173-74.
62
He discusses ways to shield the solar plexus on pp. 245-46 of
Awaken Healing Light.
PERMISSIONS
The translation from Lao Tsu on page 9 is reprinted from
Tao Te Ching
by Lao Tsu, trans., Feng/English, Copyright © 1972 by Gia-fu Feng and Jane English. Reprinted by permission of Alfred A Knopf Inc.
The translations from Lao Tzu on pages 21 and 113 are reprinted from
The Complete Works of Lao Tzu
by Ni, Hua Ching. Reprinted by permission of Seven Star Communications, 1996.
The translation from Lao Tzu on page 84 is reprinted from
Tao Te Ching
by Lao Tzu, trans., Victor H. Mair. Reprinted by permission of Bantam Books.
The passage by Tzu Kuo Shih on page 85 is reprinted from
Qi Gong Therapy: The Chinese Art of Healing with Energy
by Tzu Kuo Shih. Reprinted by permission of Station Hill Press.
The translations from Chuang Tzu on pages 99 and 113-14 are reprinted from
Basic Writings of Chuang Tzu
edited by Burton Watson, copyright 1964 by Columbia University Press. Reprinted by permission of the publisher.
INDEX
A
abdomen, energy center in.
See also
navel
abdominal breathing
normal
reverse (Taoist)
See also
natural breathing
abdominal distention
abdominal muscles
abundance
acceptance
acid/alkaline balance
acquired chi
acupuncture
adenoids
adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
adrenal center, of microcosmic orbit
adrenal glands
adrenaline
Advaita Vedanta
aging prematurely
air
components of
movement through respiratory system
quality of
alchemy, inner
alcohol
alkaline/acid balance
alternate nostril breathing
alternate nostril congestion
alveoli
amnesia, somatic and emotional
anatomy of breathing
anger
autonomic nervous system and
health and
organs and
quality of breathing and
self-sensing and
six healing exhalations and
spacious breathing and
survival value of
venting of
anorexia
anxiety
autoimmune diseases and
autonomic nervous system and
hyperventilation and
self-sensing and
six healing exhalations and
spaciousness and
survival value of
aorta
appetite loss
arrogance
arthritis
asthma
ATP (adenosine triphosphate)
attachment
attention
awakening
defined
relaxation response and
reverse abdominal breathing and
self-sensing and
shen and
stress and
See also
awareness; self sense
attitudes.
See also
self sense
autoimmune diseases
autonomic nervous system
awareness
attitudes and
clarity and mindfulness and
relaxation and
sensory/organic
awakening
defined
tension and
See also
attention; self sense; self- sensing; spiritual growth
B
babies.
See
infants
back pain
bacteria
bad habits
balance
breathing spaces and
energy centers and
healing and
health and
microcosmic orbit centers and
psychological states and
See also
harmony
balanced breath
baraka.
See also
chi
beauty, rate of breathing and
being, doing vs..
See also
will
bellows breathing
belly
opening the
outer breath and
birth process
bladder
Blake, William
blood
circulation of
hemoglobin
pH of
blood cells
blood pressure
body
historical
listening to the
as microcosm of universe
mind and
chemistry of connection
between
chi and
parasympathetic nervous system
and
sensation of
sensing from inside.
See
self-sensing
somatic amnesia
wisdom of
See also
organs/tissues
boredom
brain
breathing into
effort and
energy center in
massaging
opening the
rate of activity of
relaxation and
respiratory center of
self-sensing and
smiling into
stimulation of
excessive or inadequate
need for
tension and
See also
nervous system; neuropeptides;
specific parts of brain
brainstem, smiling into
breathing
attitudes and
bad habits of
as buffering mechanism
chest.
See also
shallow