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Ninety-nine percent of people breathe dysfunctionally, damaging their bodies and brains. Modern habits contribute to conditions like diabetes, asthma, metabolic and autoimmune issues, anxiety, and ADHD, which experts claim are 100% related to nighttime breathing. Audible breathing during sleep is a red flag, especially for children. However, everyone can learn to breathe correctly, and the steps are free.

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The speaker repeatedly says "A-oo" in various tones and lengths.

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Scientific studies conducted around thirty years ago revealed that breathing through different nostrils affects the brain and body differently. Yogis have long claimed that right nostril breathing heats the body, increases heart rate and blood pressure, and activates the left side of the brain. Conversely, left nostril breathing calms the body, activates the right side of the brain, and lowers heart rate and blood pressure. Alternate nostril breathing can rebalance the body by controlling autonomic functions. Scientific instruments now allow measurement of the effects of nostril breathing on the brain and body.

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The vagus nerve, originating from the brainstem, innervates facial muscles, throat, respiration, digestion, and the heart. It can be stimulated orally by gargling with water or mouthwash, singing, chewing gum, sucking on hard candy, or humming. Eating more probiotics stimulates the vagus nerve in the gut, which is connected to the brain, helping the body wind down. Exposing yourself to something cold, like a cold shower or dunking your face in cold water, also stimulates the vagus nerve. Rubbing behind your ears with two fingers may also have an effect.

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Try the Mona Lisa swallow, similar to a cheesy swallow but without facial expression or movement above the hand. Use the back of the tongue without engaging facial muscles.

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Find a comfortable seated or lying position. Begin with a few deep, relaxing breaths. Bring attention to the face and mouth. Squeeze the eyes shut tightly and purse the lips.

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Speaker 1: The simplest thing they need to understand is human experience is caused from within, not from outside. Somebody can abuse you, let's say. They're just words. So I'm going to use some Indian language and abuse you Okay. With a smile on my face. I can abuse you in a language you don't understand. My abuse is not hurting you at all. It's only your reaction which is going to hurt you. In whichever language it is, whatever nonsense it is, it is only your reaction which hurts you, not my words. India India has 1,300 languages I can choose.

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Inhalation energizes us as we enter the world, while exhalation is relaxing and rejuvenating, marking our departure. When feeling stressed or overwhelmed, take a long, slow exhale to create an immediate calming effect. This can be done 1 to 10 times. If you have a few minutes before a meeting or a speaking engagement, take a deep inhale through your nose and exhale slowly over 12 to 15 seconds. You can follow along: inhale deeply, then exhale slowly, counting to 15. This practice helps you find stability, safety, and a sense of centering.

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Take an abdominal thoracic breath and on exhale you. That vibration oscillates the air and the vibration is also said to start to turbulate inside your nasal center and release nitric oxide. The ah sound: let your jaw drop; there’s a giant apple in the back of your throat, and as you make that ah sound, the back of the throat stretches, inducing relaxation. The third sound is oh: your lips create a sphere in front of your teeth, and you take an abdominal thoracic breath with short exhales. When you put all three together, you get this sound, Take an abdominal thoracic breath and Which sounds like om, but it also sounds like mom. And which actually saying the word mom, mom, mom is another way to

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Doctors hide the truth: specific frequencies can heal various body issues. For sleep trouble, try 3 Hz; for anxiety, 432 Hz; for weight loss, 280 Hz; for illness, 528 Hz; for pain, 174 Hz; for low energy, 417 Hz. These frequencies can bring relief and rejuvenation. Subscribe for more natural medicine secrets.

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Wriggling fingers in front of people's eyes while they think about their trauma can help them let go of those experiences. This eye movement technique alters brain circuitry, allowing individuals to reinterpret their current reality. As a result, they can acknowledge their past trauma as something that happened long ago, rather than something ongoing. This approach has shown remarkable effects, demonstrating the power of unconventional techniques in healing.

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Everything in the world vibrates at a certain frequency, and by finding the right frequency, you can cure various ailments. Even the vertebrae in your spine have different frequencies that are connected to different organs and functions. Instead of using actual oils, you can use the frequency of herbs and essential oils to treat ailments. There are many frequency generation apps and software available that can help with detoxing and treating conditions like cancer, parasites, drug addiction, hangovers, food poisoning, heavy metals, and parasites. By focusing on detoxing these elements, you can avoid expensive medicine and essential oils. Simply relax and find homeostasis through the right frequency. Keep evolving.

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Humming can significantly increase nitric oxide levels, up to 15 times. One study showed that a person eliminated rhinitis by humming for about 10 minutes, four times a day. This simple, free technique is accessible to everyone. Additionally, humming calms the body by stimulating the vagus nerve, which enhances vagal tone. This process not only helps relax the body but also facilitates the release of nitric oxide from tissues.

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For seven days, doing breath work from the time you hear this will become your new drug of choice. It raises dopamine, improves mood and emotional state, massages intestines, and improves intestinal motility. Breath work elevates dopamine and serotonin and floods the blood with oxygen, making you feel amazing for hours. Do it within thirty minutes of waking every day, so your circadian clock will get timed to it. When you change time zones, breath work will tell your body it's time to wake up. Do it before coffee. The speaker does three rounds of 30 breaths with a breath hold in between, then has coffee.

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I received a request from a person with a locked jaw due to a trapped disc. This can prevent proper jaw movement. Professor Stuart at the London Hospital taught me a simple method to help in such cases.

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Breath work is presented as a cheap and impactful way to increase health span and lifespan. Every emotional state is a combination of a neurotransmitter and oxygen. The difference between anger and passion is one neurotransmitter and the presence of oxygen. Without enough oxygen in the blood, one cannot experience elevated emotional states like passion, joy, arousal, or elation. No one has ever woken up laughing because the oxidative state to experience laughter isn't present upon waking. Anger, however, requires zero oxygen and can be experienced even when close to death. To achieve an elevated emotional state, one needs to put oxygen into the bloodstream to bind neurotransmitters.

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Breath connects the conscious and subconscious mind. Subconscious breathing engages the amygdala and limbic system, which tell stories. Conscious breathing activates the frontal lobe, enabling conscious cognitive choices, thought control, and better decision-making. Meditation can change the brain. A neuroscientist friend at Harvard conducted a study where non-meditators underwent a twenty-minute daily meditation program for eight weeks. Brain scans revealed that meditation shrunk the amygdala and grew gray matter (brain cells) in the frontal lobe of every participant.

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Stimulate the suprasternal notch, the indentation at the top of the sternum, for up to a minute. Use small circles, alternating with holding the position. This action stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system via the vagus nerve (cranial nerve 10). This stimulation is claimed to reduce anxiety and stress, promote sleep, lower blood pressure and pulse rate, and induce relaxation.

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You have the power to make yourself sick or cure yourself. Every ache and pain is a message from your subconscious. Back problems often stem from feeling burdened by work or relationships. Arthritis in the hands may indicate difficulty letting go. Doctors only treat symptoms, not the underlying cause. There is a greater force we can communicate with, and in the future, we won't need doctors because we can heal ourselves with our minds.

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Begin with an abdominal thoracic breath and exhale to create vibrations that help release nitric oxide, which lubricates the vasculature. Next, produce the "ah" sound, allowing your jaw to drop and stretching the back of your throat to promote relaxation. Then, make the "oh" sound by rounding your lips, taking a deep breath, and exhaling. While the video demonstrates short exhales, aim for longer ones at home. Finally, combine all three sounds into "ma," which resembles "ohm" and also echoes the word "mom." This practice can further enhance relaxation and well-being.

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Ten minutes of mindfulness may improve digestive symptoms, as thoughts can affect the gut. Diaphragmatic breathing and similar techniques can relax the communication pathways between the brain and the gut. This relaxation may lead to significant improvements in the digestive system.

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The speaker is repeatedly saying "Woah" in a surprised or amazed manner.

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Humming can increase nitric oxide production in the body by up to 15-20 times due to vibrations stimulating special mucosal cells. This was demonstrated with sophisticated instrumentation measuring nitric oxide production in the nasal cavity. The more humming, the more nitric oxide produced. Humming involves closing the mouth and exhaling through the nose, creating vibrations. This phenomenon occurs not only in humans but also in cows. Humming may also stimulate the vagus nerve, promoting a calmer state. Certain yoga practices also involve humming. To maximize the benefits, inhale through the nose after humming to draw in the produced nitric oxide. Exhale through the mouth to avoid expelling the nitric oxide.

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A double inhale, long exhale, performed one to three times, can rapidly reduce stress levels. According to the speaker, this breathing technique may be the fastest way to accomplish stress reduction.

Modern Wisdom

Hypnosis, Brain Hacking, & Mental Mastery - Dr David Spiegel
Guests: Dr David Spiegel
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Hypnosis isn’t losing control; it’s a precise brain state that teaches people to regulate mind and body. Three core mechanisms emerge: reduced activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, a node tied to attention and threat detection; increased functional connectivity between the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the insula, strengthening mind–body control; and inverse connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and the posterior cingulate, dampening the default mode network’s self-referential drift. Together they foster sharper focus, less salience-driven distraction, and better body awareness. Hypnosis is largely self-directed; induction is simple—a quick gaze upward, closed eyes, slow exhale, and a hand floating up. In hypnotizable individuals, this can happen within seconds, illustrating hypnosis as a trainable skill rather than a gimmick. Hypnotizability is a relatively stable trait, measured with a brief induction and scored, with long-term retest correlations indicating limited change. Clinically, hypnosis yields meaningful analgesia and stress reduction. In catheter-based procedures, patients’ pain dropped from about five to one, anxiety from five to zero, and opioid use halved, with faster recovery as a result of reduced distress. Remote self-hypnosis apps yield similar benefits for pain and stress, and can help chronic pain management. Hypnosis also supports smoking cessation, with randomized data showing a subset stopping after one session and many reducing cigarette use substantially; there are vivid patient stories of surprising improvements. Genetics play a role: a COMT variant modulates dopamine metabolism and appears to influence hypnotizability, while imaginative involvement and dissociative histories increase susceptibility. Personality patterns matter too—more organized, rational individuals may be less hypnotizable, whereas creative or imaginative people tend to respond more readily. Techniques range from direct inductions to using self-hypnosis to focus on body relations and breathing. Beyond pain and habit change, hypnotic work raises questions of agency, trauma, and social influence. It can reframe self-narratives, helping survivors process abuse or guilt, though concerns about coercion exist. Breath work complements hypnosis, accelerating relaxation and easing transitions into hypnotic states; cyclic sighing and paced breathing can lower anxiety and support sustained practice. The discussion also situates hypnosis alongside other altered states that suppress the default mode network, including meditation and psychedelics, highlighting a continuum of tools for attention, emotion regulation, and pain relief. In sum, hypnosis engages robust brain networks to reduce arousal, reshape perception, and expand personal agency when guided with care and integrated with other modalities.
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