Sarah Pierroz, Author at Samahita Retreat https://samahitaretreat.com/author/sarahp/ Thu, 15 Feb 2024 09:45:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://samahitaretreat.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/cropped-favicon-samahita-1-36x36.webp Sarah Pierroz, Author at Samahita Retreat https://samahitaretreat.com/author/sarahp/ 32 32 AUTOPHAGHY – Tune Up Your Body From The Cellular Level https://samahitaretreat.com/autophaghy-tune-up-your-body-from-the-cellular-level/ https://samahitaretreat.com/autophaghy-tune-up-your-body-from-the-cellular-level/#respond Wed, 12 Aug 2020 04:54:21 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=53804 The post AUTOPHAGHY – Tune Up Your Body From The Cellular Level appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Photo credit by Christopher Campbell on Unsplash

Feeling Sluggish? Tired? Slow?

How are your energy levels these days? Are you feeling energized when you wake up? What about the rest of the day? How efficient is your digestion? Are you having two bowel movements a day? Yes….two !! Now how does one do that?

One reason your body might feel a bit slow or off is because the process of autophagy could be slackening

What is Autophagy?

Autophagy is an important and natural process within cells. It’s generally thought of as a cellular recycling factory. The etymology of ‘autophagy’ comes from the Ancient Greek autóphagos, which means “self-devouring” or “self-eating”. It was coined by a Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve, in 1963. He discovered the lysosome, while he observed unneeded cellular structures and degraded proteins being engulfed in a big bubble and transported to this waste disposal unit in the cell.

Typically, autophagy works quietly behind the scenes in maintenance mode. It plays a more active role when your body responds to stress and regulates cellular function (1). Autophagy helps to recycle unnecessary cellular components, such as damaged mitochondria or proteins, which may prevent cells from dividing and functioning normally. It also helps to eliminate pathogens and toxins at the intracellular level.
This clearing helps your body to regenerate new and healthy cells more effectively (2).

Studies on Autophagy

Only as recent as 2016, autophagy was found to have a key role when the body responds to starvation and infection, and it has become linked with specific conditions, including cancer and neurological disease (2). Years of impressive research and study by Yoshinori Ohsumi led him being awarded the Nobel Prize in this emerging field.

It’s hardly surprising that autophagy is important for long-lived cells such as neurons. Unlike other cells, neurons do not cellularly divide and do not die off to be replaced by new ones. This makes them vulnerable to degradation and may negatively impact learning and memory (3).

A recent UCLA study, printed in Toxicological Sciences in May 2020, investigated the effects of diesel exhaust on the risk of Parkinson’s disease. It showed that increased exhaust exposure increased the prevalence of Parkinson’s, and decreased the efficacy of autophagy (4). What was really interesting with this study is that these researchers were able to investigate the process of autophagy in real time by using transparent zebrafish as their subjects. They could actually watch the process of autophagy, or lack thereof, happen right before their eyes. With such novel techniques, the future of research in this area is full of promise.

“Autophagy helps to recycle unnecessary cellular components, such as damaged mitochondria or proteins, which may prevent cells from dividing and functioning normally. It also helps to eliminate pathogens and toxins at the intracellular level.”

Main Benefits of Autophagy

As we learn more about autophagy, the emerging research has found that it seems to help:

  • Regulate inflammation (5)
  • Protect against neurogenerative diseases, like Huntington’s, Alzheimers’ & Parkinson’s (6) (7)
  • Reduce heart disease (6) (7)
  • Suppresses tumors, promote genome integrity and inhibit inflammation (8)
  • Promote healthy cell survival in the face of nutrient stress (9)
  • Support brain health by clearing out old proteins and making way for new ones that allow communication between neurons (10)
  • Reduce infection and support immunity (11) (12)

So, How Can You Increase Your Autophagy Power?

There are several ways you can rev up your body’s autophagy process. One easy way, is to add a little bit of acute, short-term stress to your system. This can be achieved in three simple ways:

  1. Fasting

    The most typical trigger of autophagy is nutrient starvation or fasting. Fasting gives your system some space for proper bowel movements elimination and time for the body to naturally detox and repair (13). It is generally recommended to fast for a period of 18-20 hours for autophagy to kick in. For example, finish dinner at 6 pm, and wait until 6 pm the following day to eat again. In a 2010 study, mice fasted for 24 or 48 hours to promote the autophagy process (14) (15). If taking a 24 hour caloric break is too much, some have tried intermittent fasting. This can involve a 16/8 plan, where you eat during a 8 hour time window and fast for the other 16 hours of a day. For example, only taking food from 11 – 7 pm. This timed pattern for eating has also been associated with weight loss, insulin sensitivity and lower disease risk (16).

  2. HIIT Exercise

    When researchers talk about HIIT (High Intensity Interval Training) they referring to workouts that alternate between hard-charging intervals and rest or less intense exercise. During the intense interval, a person’s heart rate reaches at least 80 percent of its maximum capacity, for one to five minutes.In a recent 2018 study, a group of men completed an eight-week exercise program where one subset cycled at a low intensity for three days each week, while the other subset cycled at high-intensity intervals (17). Researchers found that the short bursts of exercise, or a “less is more” approach, induced autophagy. Additionally, weightlifting and resistance training for even bursts of just 30 minutes was also found to heighten autophagy. So the next time you go for a walk or run, you can easily add in interval training by alternating between a sprint followed by a walk, and repeat! Jump start your autophagy! We know you’ll feel better!

    For more on the benefits of HIIT, please read here and watch this HIIT training video
    For an uplifting core challenge, click here

  3. Take a Sauna or Cold Shower!

    Another way to dynamically change your intracellular system is to quickly shift your body temperature. Heat stress, as in using a sauna, soaking in a hot spring, a quick steam, and/or a cold therapy, like an icy shower, a cold plunge pool, cryotherapy, or a fresh jump in a lake will also do the trick. These are hormetic stressors to the body. This means when the small stress is applied to the body it can result in processes that make it stronger, or more resilient.
    Heat stress to the body creates heat shock proteins, which may fight free radicals, boost production of human growth hormone, promote repair of damaged proteins, which all in turn correlate to an increase in autophagy. Cold shock proteins help to maintain stem cells, repair damaged proteins, reduce inflammation, stabilize tumor factors as well as fight neurodegeneration. Cold exposure has also been shown to activate brown fat which boosts metabolism and mitochondrial function (18).
    Do be careful. If you are considering adding heat or cold therapy to your routine, please do so with the assistance of a professional. Go slowly and monitor yourself for tolerance and improvements closely. Remember the key is small stress. Then build your robustness!

    In Conclusion

    So whether it be alternating between eating and fasting in specific time windows, or shifting from intense movement to rest and then back again, or jumping into the cold, you can easily optimize the overall functioning of your physiology without making major changes to your daily life or workouts. The main difference in activating autophagy isn’t really in what you do, but more how you do it. It’s all part of the hormetic effect! So what have we done for centuries?  Restricted eating times, cold bathing, different activity.

    Yoga Practice and Autophagy (a note from Paul Dallaghan)

    To our knowledge to date there has been no direct studies on yoga practice’s effect on autophagy. However, an understanding of the nature of its process reveals how a thorough approach to yoga and its techniques would enhance autophagy. The process of autophagy is essentially cellular integrity with its functions carried out at greater efficiency. This is why inflammation is regulated, metabolism works better, immunity is supported, and neurodegeneration is more or less eliminated. The benefits noted in yoga texts, especially hathayoga, refer to similar outcomes when they describe energy levels increase, glowing skin arises, hair and nails rejuvenate, and how the body feels light, essentially meaning efficient in all its physiological processes. Hathayoga practice emphasizes certain cleansing techniques and works with the breath through retentions, processes that put immediate pressure and stimulation on the cell, effectively achieving the stress in HIIT or fasting and triggering autophagy. Equally, certain hathayoga āsanas (yoga poses) that work more with gravity, such as inversions, challenge the cells in a similar way enhancing this recycle and waste removal process. Yoga practice also brings awareness to diet, but more so to when and how much one eats, whereby natural intermittent fasts are part of the process, thereby doubling as automatic autophagy triggers. Ideally, a good hathayoga practice of poses, breath, and sitting leads to greater well-being because of improved autophagy, which aids sleep, feeding back on and improving this cellular healthy process even further. Overall, a regular and comprehensive (hatha) yoga practice offers a combined impact of many of the described triggers across action, diet, and sleep, so much so that we could almost call it hathautophagyoga!!

1. Nature, 2020 https://www.nature.com/articles/cr2013161

2. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 2019 https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncel.2019.00228/full

3. Nature Communications, 2020 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-15287-9

4. Toxicological Sciences, 2020 https://academic.oup.com/toxsci/article-abstract/doi/10.1093/toxsci/kfaa055/5820985?redirectedFrom=fulltext

5. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2015 https://rupress.org/jem/article/212/7/979/41860/Therapeutic-targeting-of-autophagy-in

6. Neurobiology of Aging, 2014 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0197458013005873

7. Nature Communications, 2020 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-15287-9 

8. Journal of Pathology, 2010 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/path.2697

9. Journal of Pathology, 2010 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/path.2697

10. Journal of Pathology, 2010 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/path.2697

11. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2015 https://rupress.org/jem/article/212/7/979/41860/Therapeutic-targeting-of-autophagy-in

12.Nature, 2019 https://www.nature.com/articles/s41418-019-0295-8

13.Cellular and Mitochondrial Metabolism, 2011 https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/ajpcell.00056.2010?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori%3Arid%3Acrossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub++0pubmed&

14. Aging Reviews Research, 2018 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1568163718301478?via%3Dihub

15. Autophagy, 2016 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.4161/auto.6.6.12376

16. Autophagy, 2016 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.4161/auto.6.6.12376

17. Nature, 2012 http://www.nature.com/articles/nature10758

18. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3169181/


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How to Handle Stress and Be Resilient https://samahitaretreat.com/how-to-handle-stress-and-be-resilient/ https://samahitaretreat.com/how-to-handle-stress-and-be-resilient/#respond Wed, 01 Jul 2020 06:48:49 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=53712 The post How to Handle Stress and Be Resilient appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Paul talks about the importance of having personal space, practice and making the most of challenging times for growth.


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Recipe: Mung Bean Falafel https://samahitaretreat.com/recipe-mung-bean-falafel/ Wed, 06 May 2020 04:54:41 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=53312 The post Recipe: Mung Bean Falafel appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Video by Sarah Pierroz

Our newest healthy, vegetarian cookbook, Food for a Balanced Life, is now out on Amazon, for digital download for Kindle! A taste of Samahita in your kitchen. Delicious! Here is the link

If you know Chef well, she is always making new creations. This wonderful falafel recipe is very yummy.  You should try! Using sprouted mung beans instead allows for the falafels to stay extra moist and also gives the dish more protein.We hope you enjoy. Please tag us and send in your photos of your creations! We’d love to see!

Mung Bean Falafel

Makes: 24 pieces

Ingredients

  • 500 g Sprouted mung beans (boiled)
  • 2 tsp Cumin powder
  • 2 tsp Paprika
  • 2 tsp Turmeric powder
  • 1 tsp Coriander powder
  • 150 g Onion (diced)
  • 7 pieces Garlic (chopped)
  • 20 g Coriander leaf (chopped)
  • 2 tsp Salt
  • 1/2 tsp Black pepper

Directions

Sprout mung beans overnight.
Boil the sprouted mung bean for one hour. Let it drain and cool.
Then blend only the mung beans in a food processor.
Place mixture in a bowl. Add in the other ingredients with a spoon.
Let it set in the fridge for 2 hours.
Warm the oven, 180 degrees.
Line a tray with baking paper and drizzle with oil.
Then make the mixture into small balls and press down on baking paper.
Bake the falafels for 15-20 minutes.


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10 Minute Body Scan https://samahitaretreat.com/10-minute-body-scan/ Tue, 31 Mar 2020 04:54:40 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52868 The post 10 Minute Body Scan appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Find a comfortable place to lie down for a relaxing 10 minute body scan tonight with our teacher @Sarah Pierroz and some beautiful music by the Icelandic beauty @Arnbjörg Kristín Konráðsdóttir, sharing her version of the Prayer for Wellbeing.

ॐ सर्वे भवन्तु सुखिनः
सर्वे सन्तु निरामयाः ।
सर्वे भद्राणि पश्यन्तु
मा कश्चिद्दुःखभाग्भवेत् ।
ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥

Om Sarve Bhavantu Sukhinah
Sarve Santu Niraamayaah |
Sarve Bhadraanni Pashyantu
Maa Kashcid-Duhkha-Bhaag-Bhavet |
Om Shaantih Shaantih Shaantih ||

Om, may all be happy,
May all be free from illness.
May all see what is auspicious,
May no one suffer.
Om Peace, Peace, Peace.


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Grounding Ourselves When Fear Arises https://samahitaretreat.com/grounding-ourselves-when-fear-arises/ Tue, 17 Mar 2020 04:34:06 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52779 The post Grounding Ourselves When Fear Arises appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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UNCERTAINTY.

How do you ground yourself as nervousness and uncertainty rises around you, both tangibly and digitally, in response the global spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19)?

SURVIVAL MODE

I’ve learned through wilderness experiences and survival courses, that when you feel lost in the forest or mountains, the worst thing you can possibly do is run.

If you panic, you subject yourself to exposure, fierce weather shifts, and unknown elements. You may lose any bearings that you possibly had, burn calories that you need to conserve, increase your chance of injury through panicked movement, and unnecessarily indulge in a heightened emotional state that will take away your ability to look at things clearly.

Acting from your sympathetic response, your “fight or flight mode”, with its surge in adrenaline and sense of invincibility, might help you if you need to fend away an attacking animal or engage in a daring, life or death maneuver that requires a moment of courage through a rapid or rappelling down a ridge, but even this isn’t ideal. In actuality, when you face animals, like surprising a brown bear on a trail, the best thing to do is to stay calm, make your body look bigger than it is, speak calmly and sweetly to the animal and slowly back away while facing it.

TAKE EXTRA CARE

For the coronavirus, at the base level, we are advised to take more care and some preventative measures. To take consider more care with:

  • Cough etiquette
  • Hand washing
  • Social distancing
  • Symptom care

So take extra care. Sleep well. Rest. Eat nutrient rich food. Exercise. Move. Stay Clean. Be kind. Look within. Love. Take care of those around you.

Sometimes you need to run, and respond quickly, but this is rare.
‘Survival mode,’ in nature, means taking extra measures to move slowly and carefully against your natural tendency of “fight or flight”, to instead head the warnings from this systematic response and flip into a calmer parasympathetic mode. It’s often more advantageous to conserve your energy, to take a detailed survey of the environment around you, to look for and at the resources that you have available, to understand what you immediately need, to innovate and be creative with what you have on your person, and to be clear with what you need to aim to achieve, to make it through the night and on to the next day.

Sometimes ‘survival mode’, means you have to push your body to an unknown limit, trek a bit further to find a likely water source, which may or may not be there, or take cover until a storm passes. Sometimes this can mean staying still and taking rest, making a fire and looking again at the day in the light of the sun.
Above all, survival means effectively managing your mental and emotional state – staying clear and positive, and distinguishing between real threats and perceived dangers.
Acting out of fear tends to bring you closer to death.

“I’m in survival mode” and “I need to take care of myself”.

What does that mean to you?

INDIVIDUAL & SOCIETAL CARE

Destabilizing situations often reveal our hidden, raw needs, the things we hold most important to our underlying existence. They are opportunities to look at how what we need as individuals compares with what we get from our societal structures, organizations, and governments. Globally, there are various reactions to the emergent C-19 virus and perceptions of its severity. It is still wildly unknown.

They can bring to light: How am I taking care of myself? What is it that I really need? What do I want to protect? How do I care for those most close to me? How do I treat the space around me? Other species? What does this tell me about my underlying notions of freedom? What information sources am I listening to and trusting? What resources are available to me, such as: energy, food, water, health care, transportation and waste disposal? And what will happen if those systems become stress or challenged?

Some borders are closing, fears arising, and discrimination and a sense of separation increasing.
Gifted poets, like Cormac McCarthy and Margaret Atwood and Jose Saramago, have brought us through unimaginable, global, catastrophic scenes in The Road, Oryx & Crake, and Blindness. They set up dismal scenarios, of what may happen to society if it gives in to hysteria and fear. But fiction aside, when fears of the unknown arise, essential individual and societal vulnerabilities rise to the surface.

It acts as a call. An invitation.

LOOK WITHIN. PRACTICE.

It’s time to look within, to reflect, to stay in one place for a moment, to let the trees come to us. To reflect and watch if any unknowing, reactive, and sometimes belligerent, explosive responses are triggered within.
Abrupt change allows us to investigate the true nature of an ever-transitioning reality, to move with clear eyes forward through it, and even ground ourselves so we can respond with a spirit of generosity and care, especially when we feel unsure or uncertain about the future.

To respond to life as it is. Not as we tell it to be.

It’s to our own benefit to try to reduce cases of any viral outbreak. To ease the stress on hospitals and our health care systems, to allow care to go to those who need it, to consider the more vulnerable in our communities, to think about our movements and impacts they can have in large social settings, and to use just what we need and go into the world calmly. As we live and participate in communities that are growing and becoming more densely packed every year, and yet open to one another in a thriving global network, this is also a time consider the impact we have on one another in the larger context of a global community.

If we are in our best state, together, we can stand in the forest, decide how we can use our talents and skills, and mental capacity to support and uplift one another.


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How High & Low Intensity Exercise Effect Cognition and Mood https://samahitaretreat.com/how-high-intensity-low-intensity-exercise-effect-the-brain/ Thu, 13 Feb 2020 04:54:10 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52558 The post How High & Low Intensity Exercise Effect Cognition and Mood appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Sometimes we have only a few minutes to get into and use the body, where we can get out for a run, walk, hike, cycle. We may feel as though we are too busy, or focused on a task, but those few minutes can help brain functioning in the long run. New research shows that regular exercise improves cognitive function. Another recent study shows that how intensely we dive into that activity actually effects different parts of our brain. If you are going to run, do you pace yourself consistently? Or work rest in between bursts of sprints? Curious? Read more….

“Individuals assigned to the active training program significantly improved their cardiorespiratory fitness, spent more time being physically active after the training program ended, and performed better on cognitive tests of executive functioning.”

More Reasons to Move!

In a recent publication of the Journal of Brain Plasticity, Gaitán and his researcher team found that regular aerobic exercise favourably improves cognitive function and improved brain glucose metabolism and cognition in asymptomatic, late-middle-aged adults, with a family history or genetic risk for Alzheimer’s Disease. These 23 participants mostly lead a sedentary life. Half of the group only received information about maintaining a healthy lifestyle, while the other half had a personal training session, using a moderate-intensity treadmill training program, three times per week for 26 weeks. The researchers monitored each person’s cardiorespiratory fitness testing, daily physical activity, brain glucose metabolism imaging, and cognitive function tests. Compared to those maintaining their usual level of physical activity, individuals assigned to the active training program significantly improved their cardiorespiratory fitness, spent more time being physically active after the training program ended, and performed better on cognitive tests of executive functioning, which is the ability to plan, focus attention, remember specific instructions, and multi-task successfully. Their findings were in accordance with similar, previous aerobic exercise interventions on cohort with normal cognition (1). So the more you exercise, the more you enhance and protect brain and cognitive function…all the more reason to move!

“Low-intensity exercise triggered areas of the brain associated with cognition control and focusing attention. And interestingly, high-intensity exercise activated networks involved with emotional processing.”

High or Low Intensity Exercise?

A new study published in the Journal of Brain Plasticity, in December 2019, reported for the first time that different intensity levels of running affect different areas of our brain functioning. Angelika Schmitt and her colleagues investigated the individual performance of twenty-five male athletes on incremental treadmills. On separate days, the athletes performed ‘low’ (35% below lactate threshold) and high (20% above lactate threshold) intensity exercise regimes for 30 minutes. The lactate threshold is a measurement which indicates the level of physical activity at which your body begins to fatigue, when lactate begins to accumulate in the blood faster than it can be removed. The researchers then measured the participants’ resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (Rs-fMRI) to see which areas of the brain connective network were triggered when the runners had to perform specific task or tests.

The team found that low-intensity exercise triggered areas of the brain associated with cognition control and focusing attention. And interestingly, high-intensity exercise activated networks involved with emotional processing. So, it may be that you need to channelize your mental energy on a larger task or project, then you should slow down the intensity of your cardio, and if you are feeling more emotional or reactive, then it may be time to increase and push yourself a bit more in your exercise. Regardless of the level of activity, after both exercise conditions, the participants revealed a significant increase in positive mood(1). So, sometimes it’s good to just move to elevate how you feel. Even if your body or mind may be telling you the opposite message.

So, if you have even twenty minutes a day to move, either fast or slow. You can help to trigger more than muscle function. You can get help to enhance your overall brain health, and if your rev up the intensity, tone your emotional state, or slow it down to increase your ability to focus. All, more reasons to move and to consider how we move.


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Are YogaCoreCycle Classes Fun? https://samahitaretreat.com/are-yogacorecycle-classes-fun/ Wed, 15 Jan 2020 07:14:36 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52190 The post Are YogaCoreCycle Classes Fun? appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Our signature program YogaCoreCycle combines all practices available at Samahita but is it fun? Paul mentions how there needs to be a sense of lightness and fun to what we do especially if we are to keep it up for years to come.


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Exploring the Breath, In and Out of the Water https://samahitaretreat.com/exploring-the-breath-in-and-out-of-the-water/ Wed, 15 Jan 2020 04:54:09 +0000 http://samahitaretreat.com/?p=52192 The post Exploring the Breath, In and Out of the Water appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Freediving Populations 

Human populations have a long history of exploring the breath underwater. For example, Ama divers, in Japan, have used long breath-holding techniques to harvest shellfish and seaweed at depths of twenty meters for more than 2000 years. Sea nomads, namely the ‘Bajau Laut’ are also skilled divers, who live a semi-aquatic existence in the Indonesian archipelago. In a typical day, they may spend up to 10 hours in the water. The Bajau people give birth in the water and their children learn to dive before they walk on land. Natural freedivers, armed with a spear, they fish at depth for minutes at a time, all on one breath [1] [2]. Above all, this ability to skillfully move underwater on one breath requires mental preparation. One must focus the mind on the experience of the breath, or absence of breath for that matter, and be completely relaxed while making these extended holds.

Researchers have shown that we modern humans share the same physiological qualities necessary for long breath-holds under the sea. For example, Schagatay and her colleagues found no obvious difference between the Ama divers in Japan and Swedish freedivers in their breath-holding skills and diving responses. So, it’s not a matter of specialized genes. The diving response can be practiced and trained [3].

Physiological Effects of Freediving

As soon as your face goes underwater, your vagus nerve triggers a series of adjustments in your autonomic system.  Your heart rate slows down, a process known as bradycardia, as does your metabolism, both allowing your body to conserve much needed oxygen. The colder the temperature of the water, the stronger the response. Your blood vessels also narrow, a process known as peripheral vasoconstriction, which diverts blood from the hands and feet towards the heart and brain. And as you go deeper underwater, the increased pressure squeezes your spleen to produce extra hemoglobin, a protein which carries oxygen in the body. Additionally, as you increase depth past eighty meters, a surprising physiological discovery starts to occur, which defied the reasoning of physics. Some of your blood shifts and forms a thin layer around your lungs, making a protective barrier, which prevents your alveoli from collapsing down [4].

Also, when you hold your breath, blood oxygen levels decline while carbon dioxide levels rise. This stimulates a small cluster of chemoreceptors located in your bilateral carotid bodies, which runs along your neck. This sends messages about the state of the circulating blood to the brain centers regulating neural outputs to the heart and circulation, further establishing the parasympathetic, slowing effects on the heart [4]. The same effect may be experienced when we experience breath holds. This effect is further increased during seated breath retention when we commonly tilt our chin down towards our chest in Jālandhara bandha. When are inverted, diving down deep, head first under water, we tend to naturally assume this position of a tucked in chin, as it is more streamlined and hydrodynamic.

These changes to our physiological system underwater, called the mammalian diving reflex, is something that we do naturally as babies. It allows us to swim underwater until we are 6 months old. And it is something that we share with aquatic mammals, such as: dolphins, seals, otters, muskrats and beavers; as well as diving birds, like ducks and penguins. Because they are able to conserve oxygen so well, many of these species can breath-hold for up to an hour at a time [1].

Introspective Side of Freediving

So why explore this underwater world on one breath?
Some free divers will mention the calm mental quality that it fosters, the greater awareness of the body, breath and mind. There is a relaxing quality to feeling buoyant and weightless while defending in the ocean, especially when one goes past their buoyancy and starts to experience the sensation of free fall. It also allows for a quiet way to interact with aquatic life around you. A new world to discover, within and without.

As in pranayama, or breath work, when exploring the nature of breathing, in freediving you want to have the body feeling as relaxed and effortlessly supported as possible. Being in water allows you to identify different areas of your body that may be unnecessarily tense. You may begin to have another level of awareness to your response to a breath-hold, to your ability to dive and feel at ease, to use the minimum about effort and oxygen possible in any movements, to become more familiar with your diaphragm, in particular tuning into its flexibility and contractions and overall breathing mechanics. Diving down a simple line to different depths lets you experience your body in a new way, and opens you to a new underwater world. And yet, familiar patterns, habits, thoughts, and fears may start to rise in this new context, which can give insights into your mind’s inner workings. But more than anything, exploring breath, either in or out of the water, encourages a focused mental state, where you can watch and fully tune in and be present to the moment you are in. In this experience, you have to confront the danger of distraction, it surrounds you and is unavoidable.

Increased Breath Awareness

This heightened state of presence can last throughout the day. Back on land, you can appreciate the nourishing quality of breath on another level. Taking time to tune into your breath and simply slow it down has many parasympathetic, relaxing, effects on your body. If you notice your breath becomes short, shallow or rushed, at any point, simply taking in a slow, deeper inhale and exhale can provide an immediate change to your system.

Slowing down to a rate of six breaths per minute, may trigger the body to widen blood vessels and calm the heart rate. A long, slow exhalation also stimulates the vagus nerve, which links your brain to your lungs, heart, digestive tract and internal organs, and subconsciously soothes you down after a stressful, fearful or dangerous event. The more toned your vagus nerve response, the more readily you may enter into a parasympathetic (rest, feed and breed) state then stay in a triggered sympathetic (fight or flight) response. When you breathe slowly, the nerves inside your nose fire signals in a slower rhythm, and parts of your brain are prompted to do the same. Recent research is showing that slowing your breath to the low rate of three breaths per minute can increase theta brainwaves, which mimics a state of deep, slow-wave sleep. Being in this state may leave you feeling more introspective, at ease, calm, and ready to respond to the full, beautiful life events in front of you.

Breath is such a vital function. So taking a few moments to regain yourself, relax, slow down, tune in, readjust and center, is well worth it, whether on land, or when you are about to dive deep.

New Freediving & Yoga Retreat

Explore the breath more in and out of the water in our newest retreat at Samahita. Our resident yoga and pranayama teacher Sarah Pierroz and the co-founder of the longest running Freediving School in Asia, Monica Ganame are bringing their passion and years of experience together. They are offering a novel Yoga, Static Apnea and Freediving Retreat at Samahita Retreat, on Koh Samui and then through Apnea Total Headquarters, on Koh Tao, May 2-6, 2020. For more information about the retreat:

https://samahitaretreat.com/retreat/yoga-static-apnea-freediving-retreat-2020/

Read More:

  1. https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-12151830
  2. http://miun.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A681694&dswid=-7954
  3. https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg16922844-400-into-the-abyss/#ixzz6Anhd2wL4
  4. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23997188
  5. https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg24532640-600-how-to-breathe-your-way-to-better-memory-and-sleep/#ixzz6Ai4yrGSz


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3 Tips to get More from Your Workout https://samahitaretreat.com/3-tips-to-get-more-from-your-workout/ https://samahitaretreat.com/3-tips-to-get-more-from-your-workout/#respond Fri, 20 Dec 2019 05:16:18 +0000 http://samahita108.wpengine.com/?p=51773 The post 3 Tips to get More from Your Workout appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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Are you getting the most from your workout sessions? Follow these three tips to reap the benefits of even the most simple workout and find out how avoiding premature death, according to these studies, could be as simple as moving and sweating more often.

1. Get Up and Move More!

“Higher levels of physical activity, at any intensity, helps to reduce the risk for premature mortality”

The BMJ recently released a meta-analyses of eight large-scale, observational studies, which included over 36,383 participants, by E. Uff and all, in August. The study showed that higher levels of physical activity, at any intensity, helps to reduce the risk for premature mortality in middle and older age adults [3] [4]. The study also reminds us of the importance of getting up and moving. Subjects who were sat still for several hours or were sedentary for 9.5 hours or more a day, were at an increased risk of death.

So you find that you spend a long period of time sitting around, make sure to get up, move, walk, and use your body as much as you can! It might also be useful to set timers or wear devices, like pedometers or fitness trackers, which can help you monitor measureable outcomes, like how many steps you take each day, or how long you move for.

2. Plan & Be Consistent

“The key to successful weight loss is consistency”

In a recent study published in Obesity, by Schumacher and all, 375 participants were studied carefully, and those who able to maintain weight loss successfully had a shared a common trait with the way they approached exercise. Consistency! It didn’t matter if they exercised with moderate-to-vigorous intensity in the early morning, afternoon, or evening, in particular, but that they were consistent with the timing of when they exercised [1] [2]. Further research is needed to investigate if there is a particular time of day that is the most advantageous for exercise. However, in the meantime, this could mean that if you take the effort to plan and carve out a regular time and structure for your physical activity sessions, you may have an easy way to maximize your exercise results.

3. Puff and Sweat

“Engaging in physical exercise vigorous enough to elevate the heart rate and make you puff and sweat is significant in avoiding an early death”

In a large study which followed 204,542 adults, over the age of 45 for over six years in the Australian state of New South Wales, researchers found that those engaged in physical activity vigorous enough to elevate the heart rate and make participants puff and sweat was significant in avoiding an early death. So, if you have time, and the ability, and the will, try to push yourself a little more, and opt for activities like jogging, running, aerobic or competitive team sports over moderate activity like gentle swimming and walking. [5] Push your edge, can you go a little harder, farther, faster? What about a high intensity interval training session? Take a friend with you and challenge one another!

So there you go! Be consistent, move more and add intensity where possible. If you’re having trouble getting started then head over to Samahita Retreat for YogaCoreCycle to begin a healthy routine with our experts!

1. Leah M. Schumacher, J. Graham Thomas, Hollie A. Raynor, Ryan E. Rhodes, Kevin C. O’Leary, Rena R. Wing, Dale S. Bond. Relationship of Consistency in Timing of Exercise Performance and ExerCite

2. “Timing of exercise may be key to successful weight loss.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 3 July 2019. .

3. Ulf Ekelund, Jakob Tarp, Jostein Steene-Johannessen, Bjørge H Hansen, Barbara Jefferis, Morten W Fagerland, Peter Whincup, Keith M Diaz, Steven P Hooker, Ariel Chernofsky, Martin G Larson, Nicole Spartano, Ramachandran S Vasan, Ing-Mari Dohrn, Maria Hagströmer, Charlotte Edwardson, Thomas Yates, Eric Shiroma, Sigmund A Anderssen, I-Min Lee. Dose-response associations between accelerometry measured physical activity and sedentary time and all cause mortality: systematic review and harmonised meta-analysisBMJ, 2019; l4570 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.l4570 https://www.bmj.com/content/bmj/366/bmj.l4570.full.pdf

4. BMJ. “Physical activity at any intensity linked to lower risk of early death: But being sedentary for several hours a day linked to increased risk.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 21 August 2019. .

5. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/04/150406121015.htm


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A Typical Day on the Christmas & New Year Retreat https://samahitaretreat.com/a-typical-day-on-the-christmas-new-year-retreat/ https://samahitaretreat.com/a-typical-day-on-the-christmas-new-year-retreat/#respond Tue, 26 Nov 2019 00:00:00 +0000 http://samahita108.wpengine.com/?p=51654 The post A Typical Day on the Christmas & New Year Retreat appeared first on Samahita Retreat.

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In his familiar witty and friendly way Paul talks about what to expect on the Christmas and New Year retreat. It’s more than just a holiday on the beach (but that’s still an option!) Video by Sarah Pierroz


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