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  Vedic Astrology & Healing
  Tips on Healing
 

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The Walking Breathing Exercise
Walking Breathing exercise is done in exactly the same way as Rhythmic Breathing except that you do it while walking. Use each step as a count, as the pulse beat used in Rhythmic Breathing.
Stand erect, exhale first, then start walking, right foot first. Take four steps while inhaling, hold the breath in for two steps, exhale for four steps, and hold the breath out for two steps. Without stopping, continue the routine: inhale on four steps, hold the breath in for two steps, and so forth. Do not interrupt the walking-keep it rhythmical. The breathing should be done in one continuous flow: do not inhale in four short breaths, a mistake which many beginners tend to make. Inhale one deep breath to the count of four, hold it to the count of two, exhale it to the count of four, and again hold the emptiness to the count of two. This completes one round. Make five such rounds a day the first week-no more-adding one round per week.
If you feel that four steps are too long for you, count three steps and hold one. If, on the contrary, four are not enough and you feel you want to continue the inhalation, take six steps or even eight, and hold the breath on a count of three or four steps respectively. In either case, you should take an even number of steps while breathing in and out, as the retention is done in half the time taken for inhalation or exhalation.
You can do the Walking Breathing exercise at any other time while you are exercising, walking, especially when the air is clean-in a park, a forest, or at the seashore. You can do it while walking to your car or bus, descending a staircase, on your way to pick up your mail from the letter box, during a coffee break in your office, in fact, whenever you think of it. Simply interrupt your usual walking tempo, stop to inhale and exhale deeply. Then start rhythmic breathing to the count of slow and even steps.

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Rhythmic Breathing
Yoga enthusiasts say that by practicing rhythmic breathing you become attuned to the rhythm of the Universe. Rhythmic breathing helps you establish a direct contact with the whole world. You come to experience a sense of oneness with the universe. The result is that the feeling of separateness disappears and with it fear, loneliness, frustration, doubt, despair and other miseries. Rhythmic breathing is a great exercise for relaxation.
Benefits of Rhythmic Breathing
 
Increased oxygen supply (even more than deep breathing)
 
Re-establishes the body's own natural rhythm
 
Helps you to acquire self-confidence, optimism, a calm mind or any other desired quality.
Rhythmic breathing, as well as correct concentration and meditation, can bring about a great change in both your physical and mental state and serve as a step toward spiritual unfolding.
Everything in the universe is in vibration, from the atom to the planets themselves. In all vibration there exists a certain rhythm, so rhythm pervades the universe. The movement of the planets around the sun, the ebb and flow of the tide, all follow rhythmic laws.
Our bodies are also subject to rhythmic laws called biorhythms. Sleep and waking periods also have a rhythm. Sleep is governed by the steep cycle. The waking period has precise cycles of varying metabolic rates which differ between individuals. Some people are wide awake early in the morning, while others reach their peak efficiency in the afternoon or evening.
The yogis say that the deep rhythmic breathing exercise will allow the body to re-establish its own natural rhythm and attune us more to the cosmic rhythm. This will protect us from any negative external influences.
The deep rhythmic breathing exercise, by falling in with the rhythm of the body, also allows the body to absorb a lot, more oxygen than just normal deep breathing.
Technique: Technique:
Rhythmic breathing is done in the same way as deep breathing, but it is timed to the rhythm of your heartbeat. Inhalation and exhalation should be done to the same number of beats, as this establishes an even rhythm.
First assume the correct posture. If you cannot comfortably remain in the Lotus Pose, get into an easy cross-legged position or even sit on a chair. Remember to open your belt, unhook your bra, loosen your girdle or tie if you happen to be wearing any of these items. Keep the spine straight, with hands on knees, and start by taking a few deep breaths, and then stop.
Now put the second, third and fourth fingers of your right hand on the left wrist to find the pulse. Carefully listen to the pulse beat, and after a short while start counting 1-2-3-4 several times, to the rhythm of the beats.
Continue mentally counting 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4 until you fall into this rhythm and can follow it without holding your pulse. Then put your hands on your knees and take a deep breath while counting 1-2-3-4; hold the breath while counting 1-2; exhale while again counting 1-2-3-4.
  1. Sit up straight, either on a chair or cross-legged on the floor. Let your hands just rest on your lap.
  2. Inhale slowly and deeply for eight seconds. Push your stomach forwards, to a count of four seconds, and then push your ribs sideways for a count of two seconds, and then finally lift your chest and collar bone upwards for a count of two seconds. This makes a total of eight seconds.
  3. Don't breathe out immediately; instead hold the breath (called retention) for four seconds.
  4. Exhale slowly for eight seconds. For the first six seconds just allow the collar bone, chest and ribs to relax, so the breath goes out automatically. For the last two seconds, push the stomach in gently, to expel all the air from the lungs.
  5. Keep the stomach in this position for four seconds before you take the next breath.
Do the above exercise three times the first week, and add one more round each week, until you are doing seven breaths. It's best to build up the number of breaths gradually, because if you are not used to doing yoga breathing and you overdo it, you will purify your system too quickly. This will cause your body to release toxins from your tissues into the blood circulation too quickly, resulting in unpleasant symptoms such as headaches, skin rashes and fatigue.
The yogi rule for rhythmic breathing is that the units of inhalation and exhalation should be the same, while the units for retention and between breaths should be half that of inhalation and exhalation; that is, a ratio of 2:1:2:1.
Sometimes beginners find that inhaling for eight seconds is too difficult. If this is the case, inhale for six seconds, hold the breath for three seconds, exhale for six seconds, and pause for three seconds before taking the next breath. In a few weeks you will easily be able to do 8:4:8:4.
 
Rhythmic Breathing With Visualization
The rhythmic breathing exercise is made much more potent if you use visualization while doing the breathing.
Visualization works on the principle that whatever you concentrate on, an extra supply of oxygen and prana (life force) will be directed to that area. The secret of successful yoga is combining the exercise with visualizing the specific area the exercise affects.
The technique is simple. When you breathe in, visualize the prana accumulating in the solar plexus area, just above the navel, behind the stomach. The solar plexus is where the body stores its energy. When you retain the breath and breathe out, visualize the prana going to the brain. Just concentrate on the brain area.
This visualization technique achieves two things. Firstly it produces a reserve of energy in the solar plexus, thereby increasing your general energy level. Second, since some of the stored energy is directed to the brain, brain function and vitality are increased.
Frequency
The rhythmic breathing exercise can be done on the morning and in the evening. Do not overdo this in the beginning. Start with three or four rounds, adding one round per week until you finally reach the desired number, perhaps sixty or more.
 
 
 
  Important Disclaimer The Healing Techniques mentioned and contains in the pages are purely Holistical and no way a substitute to conventional treatment or advise of Medical Science. These are at best complementary.  
 
Where the mind is without fear By Rabindranath Tagore Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high; Where knowledge is free; Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic wars; Where words come out from the depth of truth; Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection; Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit; Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever-widening thought and action - Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake. This website was created for free with Own-Free-Website.com. Would you also like to have your own website?
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