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Breath

Mental and Emotional

  1. Creates space for clarity and a relaxed mind

  2. Feel more cantered, calm and balanced

  3. Reduces stress and anxiety

  4. Relieves depression and negative thought patterns

  5. Help alleviate addictions and eating disorders

  6. Helps sleep patterns

  7. Boosts self esteem

  8. Feel more positive and energised

  9. Let go of emotional baggage

  10. Release unhealthy patterns, belief systems, past hurts

  11. Let go of repressed and supressed emotions

  12. Clears past traumas and experiences

  13. Physical Wellbeing

  14. Increases energy

  15. Detoxification

  16. Improves metabolism and helps digestion problems such as IBS and constipation

  17. Relief muscle tension

  18. Improves well-being for many conditions and ailments such as:

    1. Respiratory issues

    2. AsthmaME

    3. Headaches

    4. Sleeplessness

    5. Low energy

    6. And much more – the list is endless!

  19. Spiritual

  20. Expands our awareness inside

  21. Creates feelings of peace

  22. Deeper connection with self and inner wisdom

  23. Deepens creative and sensual energies

  24. Deepens yoga and meditation practice

  25. Around 70% of our toxins are released from our body through our breath. Carbon dioxide is a natural waste product of your body’s metabolism. Breathing deeply helps the systems in the body to process this more efficiently. Our breath is a key indicator of physical, emotional and spiritual health and it impacts on our quality of life gets overlooked. Breath helps these blockages to be safely dispersed and integrated, encouraging a greater sense of well- being and a more balanced and harmonious state of mind. By practising Breathing frequently, the breath soon becomes less restricted, and alongside the physical benefits of freer energy flow throughout the body, people develop better mental and emotional health.

  26. Every culture in the history of the world has, in one way or another acknowledged the existence of a life-force energy in the human body. The Chinese call it chi, and the Japanese call it ki.

  27. This energy can be attained and expressed in different ways, and so again each culture interprets it slightly differently. For example, prana and chi, as well as meaning ‘energy’ also mean ‘breath’ because one can generate energy by practising breathing exercises.

  28. For thousands of years, humans have understood breathing has a powerful influence over our physiological and psychological wellbeing. But many people still find it difficult to understand the link between breathing and its impact on our body’s physiology and stress levels. Research has shown the way we breathe has a powerful effect on how stressed we feel. When we feel stressed, one of the physiological changes that occur is activation of the sympathetic nervous system (fight/flight response) and an immediate increase in respiration switching from slow, abdominal breathing to faster, shallower, chest breathing. This is a normal and healthy response in the short-term. If we are constantly triggering the sympathetic nervous system throughout the day however, we begin to habitually take shorter, shallower breaths with our upper chest, even though the stress may have passed. The danger is that this style of breathing sends signals to the brain that we are under stress when the reality is, it may not be under stress at all.

  29. Breath was the conceptual discovery of Dr Judith Kravitz. She applied her existing knowledge of conscious breathing to a variety of healing techniques, including acupressure, to develop a holistic breathing-based treatment. This treatment has become recognised as a hugely effective self-help tool and the intention is to equip individuals with an appreciation of how they can use their breathing today and every day to bring about personal transformation. Transformational Breath can be combined with other kinds of alternative therapy to maximise effectiveness.




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