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Instep Premier Products
Buteyko Instructions For Children
Extract From "The
Buteyko Manual For Asthma"
by James J
Hooper
(Copyright 1998 - All Rights
Reserved)

Disclaimer From Buteyko
Manual
This manual and associated products are
general information products only.
This information should be used only
under consultation with a register physician. Do not
alter any medication or treatment without proper medical
advice.
Any liability to the author, publisher,
or agents for any impact on the purchaser or any other
reader of the use or non-use of this information is
expressly disclaimed.
The purchaser or other user of this
information does so at their own risk.
This Chapter Includes:
1. Preliminary Discussion on
Breathing
2. The Buteyko Method For
Children
1. What is “Depth of
Breathing”? We will cover this briefly in
this chapter before going into the technique for
children.
As it is the cause of some
conflict in people who have already learned “abdominal”
breathing. When I refer to how “deeply” you breathe, I am not
referring to where in your body you breathe. I am not referring
to your “lower belly” moving when you breathe, or your “upper
chest”. I am referring to the length of time each breath
takes.
If it takes a long time, it is a
deep breath. If it takes a shorter time, it is “less deep”. Of
course this is reflected in the anatomy of where you breathe as
well. A deep [long] breath usually means that have used the
lower part of your lungs, and a shallow breath [short] MAY mean
that only your upper chest moves.
The reality is that what part of
your body moves when you breathe is a result of the position of
your spine rather than anything else. For example, sit in a
slumped position and breathe normally, noticing what part of
the area below your neck moves. Usually, you will see your
upper chest and rib-cage doing most of the work. Now, sit up
straight and fold your arms behind your back [the reverse of
folding your arms in front!], breathe normally without forcing
your breathing. Usually, you will see that more movement is
lower down — in your belly so to speak.
Notice now that if you stay in
this postition and take very small, short breaths [“mouse
breathing” which you will learn shortly], it will still be your
belly area that moves — not your chest! So you will be
“abdominal” breathing “shallowly”.
So do not worry about which part
of your body moves when you breath — the movement is the result
of something rather than what you should try to
do.
Go to page 68
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