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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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For athletes with elevated cortisol, there are top-down (cognitive) and bottom-up (sensory) approaches. Bottom-up approaches to create safety and change the cortisol signal include breath work, meditation, dancing, rhythmic movements, walking, and hiking. Running may raise cortisol. Meditation is recommended, but the type should be a good fit for the individual. Resonance breathing (five-second inhale, seven-second exhale, six breaths per minute for 10-20 minutes) can balance the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems. A supplement called Cortisol Manager, containing ashwagandha and phosphatidylserine, can lower cortisol levels, especially when traveling.

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The speaker recommends the 4-7-8 breathing technique for relaxation and stress/anxiety reduction. The technique involves placing one hand on the diaphragm and one on the chest to focus on diaphragmatic breathing. Inhale for a count of four, hold the breath for seven seconds, and exhale slowly for eight seconds. The speaker encourages trying the technique.

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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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Meditation can be beneficial for stress reduction. To meditate, sit comfortably and focus on your breath, inhaling through the nose and exhaling through the mouth, for about ten minutes. Acknowledge thoughts as they arise, allowing them to stay or pass. Meditation can help the body relax, lower blood pressure, decrease anxiety and stress, and increase awareness of your internal state. Increased self-awareness can help you understand your thoughts, reduce distractions, and improve focus.

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Breathing patterns directly signal the brain stem via the vagus nerve, and specific ratios can alter brainwaves rapidly. Exhaling longer than inhaling activates the parasympathetic nervous system, inducing neuroplasticity. Controlled breathing may reduce cortisol by 25% within minutes, increase focus by 40%, and improve memory formation. The four-seven-eight breathing pattern involves inhaling for four seconds, holding for seven, and exhaling for eight. Practicing this pattern for five cycles, three times daily, is recommended, particularly before mental tasks or during stressful situations.

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Focus attention on the heart area, shifting focus to the chest or heart. Imagine breath flowing in and out through this area. Breathe more slowly and deeply than normal, perhaps to a count of five in and five out, maintaining a smooth rhythm. While continuing heart-focused breathing, attempt to re-experience a positive feeling, such as care or appreciation for someone or something. This could be a pet, nature, a place, or an accomplishment. Feel genuine love, care, or appreciation, or focus on calm and ease while maintaining heart-focused breathing.

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Take a deep breath. Focus on your voice. Try again. Good deep breath.

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The simplest form of meditation involves focusing on your breath without trying to influence it. Sit down and follow your breath with your attention as it goes in and out, even if only for a few minutes. Doing this regularly, even for a few minutes a day, will gradually improve your skill.

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We breathe an average of over 22,000 times a day, but stress can cause shallow breathing, preventing us from getting enough oxygen. Diaphragmatic breathing allows us to get the full amount of oxygen into our lungs, so that oxygen can get into our bloodstream to all the cells of our body so we can stay healthy. This can make miraculous changes when it comes to the health of your body. It can take away panic attacks and anxiety, lower blood pressure and respiration, help digestion, improve sleep, reduce stress, and enhance focus.

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Autogenic training involves exercises focusing on heaviness and warmth in the limbs, heart regulation, calm breathing, abdominal warmth, and a cool forehead. For heaviness, focus on the sensation in your limbs, repeating "my arms and legs are heavy" while visualizing the feeling. For warmth, focus on warmth in your limbs, repeating "my arms and legs are warm," imagining warmth spreading. For heart regulation, focus on your heartbeat, repeating "my heartbeat is calm and regular," visualizing a steady beat. For breathing, concentrate on each breath, mentally stating "my breathing is calm and regular." For abdominal warmth, focus on your abdominal region, repeating "my abdomen is warm," visualizing soothing warmth. Conclude by focusing on your forehead, repeating "my forehead is cool," imagining stress dissipating. Practice these exercises regularly, ideally twice a day, for best results.

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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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Corporate breath work is a practice to quickly reduce stress. The process involves a full, long, slow inhale through the diaphragm and lungs, followed by another short, sharp inhale through the nose. Both inhalations are through the nose. Then, exhale through the mouth over 8 to 10 seconds. An example is provided: Inhale through the diaphragm and then the chest, take another short, sharp inhale, and then exhale for 8 seconds.

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Breathe in through the nose for four seconds, using the diaphragm to fill the lungs. This lowers blood pressure and respiration. Hold the breath for four seconds to allow oxygen to enter the bloodstream and carbon dioxide to move to the lungs. Exhale slowly through the mouth for four seconds to release carbon dioxide. Hold again, which further slows respiration and blood pressure. Repeat the cycle by breathing in through the nose for four seconds, hold for four seconds to allow oxygen to get into the blood and cells, and exhale through the mouth for four seconds to relax. Hold again. Continue this cycle a total of five times.

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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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A double inhale through the nose, followed by a long exhale through the mouth, is a reflexive breathing pattern triggered by high carbon dioxide levels or claustrophobia. This involves two consecutive inhales through the nose, maximizing lung capacity, followed by a prolonged exhale. This breathing exercise is reported to be calming, promoting relaxation that extends to other areas of life.

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Breathing cycle: inhale through the nose for four seconds, hold for four. By breathing in, we're lowering blood pressure. As you hold it for four seconds, we're actually allowing oxygen to get into the bloodstream as well as carbon dioxide to get into the lungs so we can exhale it. Exhale out of the mouth for four seconds, blow it out slowly, then hold again for four seconds as your respiration and blood pressure slow. Breathe in four seconds from the nose, fill up the lungs, hold for four seconds. As we allow more oxygen to get into the bloods into the cells, hold for four seconds as we come down the arrow. Blow out of the mouth for four more seconds; blow all the carbon dioxide out as we go more relaxed into a deeper state. Hold again, four seconds, then repeat the cycle a total of five times.

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New research indicates that lying on the floor, or "floor time," can reduce feelings of being overwhelmed. Lying on the floor can downregulate your nervous system. To do this, sit on the floor with your legs at a 90-degree angle and lie on your back. Taking deep breaths can help with anxiety. Stay in this position for 30 seconds to a minute, or however long feels comfortable. A firm floor and the 90-degree angle of the legs help decompress the spine. This method is simple, effective, and feels good.

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The speaker highly recommends the four-seven-eight breath as the most effective stress-neutralizing practice, but emphasizes it requires regular practice to be useful when needed. While other stress management methods exist, such as progressive relaxation, hypnosis, and biofeedback, the speaker believes breath regulation is the most cost-effective approach.

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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.

Huberman Lab

How to Control Stress in Real-Time | Huberman Lab Quantal Clip
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Controlling stress in real time is possible through breathing. Inhaling speeds up heart rate, while exhaling slows it down. Longer exhales promote calmness, utilizing respiratory sinus arrhythmia and heart rate variability to manage stress effectively.

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.

This Past Weekend

Breathing Expert James Nestor | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #641
Guests: James Nestor
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The episode centers on breathing as a daily, foundational physiology that can influence a broad range of health outcomes. James Nestor argues that while breathing happens automatically, habitual patterns—like mouth breathing and shallow chest breaths—undermine sleep, oral health, cognitive function, and athletic performance. He recounts how ancient cultures treated breathing as medicine and explains that modern life conditions, including indoor environments and processed diets, have driven a shift toward dysfunctional breathing. The conversation covers how mouth breathing at night can alter facial development, reduce nasal airflow, and contribute to sleep-disordered breathing, with implications for growth, jaw structure, and long-term health. The guests discuss practical pathways to revert to nasal, diaphragmatic breathing as a default, noting studies that link improved breathing mechanics to lower blood pressure, better oxygen utilization, and heightened mental clarity. They describe a simple nasal-breathing exercise—placing a hand on the abdomen and tracing five-second inhalations and five-second exhalations—to retrain the nervous system toward a state of relaxation and coherence. The dialogue also delves into more intense breath-work practices, sharing experiences of heightened emotion and transient physiological changes, while cautioning that the most reliable benefits come from building a normal, nasal-breathing foundation first. The discussion broadens to everyday environmental factors, such as carbon-dioxide levels in schools, offices, and aircraft, underscoring how indoor air quality can affect cognitive performance and energy. Throughout, Nestor emphasizes that solutions are inexpensive, accessible, and largely about habit change—breathing in a slower, deeper, nasal pattern and tuning into one’s body signals to reduce chronic stress and inflammation. The talk weaves personal anecdotes, historical context, and clinical observations to present a picture of breathing as a key determinant of health, cognition, and daily vitality, while debunking myths that breathing improvements require expensive gear or exotic rituals. The episode concludes with a reminder that progress comes from consistency and foundational practice, setting the stage for further exploration of breath-focused approaches that are grounded in science and everyday life.

Huberman Lab

Tools for Managing Stress & Anxiety | Huberman Lab Essentials
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Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials. I'm Andrew Huberman, a professor at Stanford, and today we explore the science of emotions, particularly stress. Stress is a generalized system that helps us navigate our internal and external experiences, impacting our emotions. Understanding stress can help us control it and support others effectively. The nervous system, including the brain and body, communicates to manage stress responses. Stress can be psychological or physical, activating the sympathetic nervous system, which releases adrenaline. This response prepares the body to act but can lead to agitation. To manage stress, activating the parasympathetic nervous system is crucial. The physiological sigh—a double inhale followed by a long exhale—can quickly calm the body by regulating heart rate and reducing agitation. Stress can be categorized into short-term, medium-term, and long-term. Short-term stress can enhance immune function and cognitive focus. Medium-term stress management involves raising stress thresholds through controlled exposure to stressors. Long-term stress, however, is detrimental, leading to health issues. Effective management includes exercise, sleep, and social connections, which enhance serotonin release, promoting well-being. Non-prescription supplements like ashwagandha, theanine, and melatonin can also help manage stress. Ultimately, stress can be a useful tool when understood and managed properly, allowing for better engagement with life.

The BigDeal

How to Complete Overhaul Your Health in 2025 | Aaron Alexander
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Everybody's getting sick, getting fat, getting anxious, as if illness climbs like a hockey stick. We have access to vast health information, yet it’s mostly minutia when not tapping nature’s wisdom. Stop chasing supplements; go outside, and when indoors, act more like you would in nature, healthy. Training with Laird Hamilton and Aaron Rodgers involved pool work, breath holds, and temperature regulation, diversifying training. My specialty is bodywork and manual therapy, including Rolfing structural integration, focusing on fascia, connective tissue, hydration, and unbinding fascial layers. I unbind patterns and then integrate with movement, and I assess a person’s home and work life to engage the body for the other 85% of the day. Breath is foundational. If chronically stressed, breathing regulates sleep, muscle tension, and nervous system state. We start with rib cage work and breath, exhale to slow the heart via sinus respiratory arrhythmia, activating parasympathetic systems. A simple practice is to emphasize the exhale and slow pace; breath shapes voice, nervous system, and our ability to connect and negotiate by attuning to others. Top performers influence teams; energy matters. We discuss matching the fingerprint of another person’s nervous system to build rapport, and how someone is perceived as alpha or beta. A playful, “jester” energy can be valuable on a team. Leadership rests on trust, alignment, and safety; by attuning breath and posture, you bridge gaps and steer toward meaningful processes rather than only ROI. Sunlight is the body’s energy currency. Eyes are neurological tissue; a broad, panoramic view calms the autonomic nervous system. Dance and movement boost brain health and cognitive reserve; dancing with a partner helps protect against cognitive decline. We address knees and feet, about 40 million Americans suffer chronic knee pain, and advocate barefoot living and broad knee motion; grounded sitting can improve digestion and circulation. Sleep hinges on safety and certainty; environment matters more than pills. The idea is to change surroundings to alter neural chemistry, not the reverse. He cites Bruce Lipton’s epigenetics idea that culture around cells matters. He notes Align’s breathing program launching in January and a breathing archetype quiz at alignpodcast.com to measure practice and guide coaching progression.
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