8/5/2023 0 Comments Anxiety yoga anytime videos![]() ![]() Splash your face several times with cold water or, if you can stand it, turn the shower to cold and stand there for a couple breaths. Remember that the vagus nerve is connected to the vocal cords, so anything you can do to stimulate them, do it! The vibratory sound of OM is particularly beneficial. Adding Ujjayi pranayama (Ocean-Sounding Breath) to your daily practice stimulates the rest-and-digest response of the parasympathetic. You may find, with practice, that the pause will naturally occur (especially between the exhale and the inhale). At first you may not be able to pause without reengaging your anxious mind. If your exhale ends before your counts are up, exhale through slightly parted lips, as though you’re slowly letting air out of your bicycle tire. Pause and wait for the next inhale to come on its own. Inhale fully but not forcefully for 3, 4, or 5 counts pause at the top and then exhale the same number of counts. The vagus nerve responds positively to slow, deliberate, abdominal breathing. ![]() Yogic tips to reduce anxiety and increase vagal tone If you’re interested, I recommend Stephen Porges’s book, The Pocket Guide to the Polyvagal Theory: The Transformative Power of Feeling Safe or Dr. There’s so much more to learn about the vagus nerve than what we’ve discussed here, of course. The good news? Yoga for anxiety and other mind-body practices can increase vagal tone, thereby dampening that frantic response of the sympathetic nervous system and reestablishing connection with the rest-and-digest response of the parasympathetic. On the other hand, persistent anxiety, unrelenting stress, depression, unprocessed emotions, and PTSD, as well as poor digestion, chronic fatigue, and inflammatory diseases are all signs that the nervous system is stuck on a fight-flight-freeze, deer-in-the-headlights response and the vagus nerve activity decreases. When vagus nerve activity increases (researchers call that high vagal tone), the nervous system comes into balance more readily, allowing us to meet the challenges in our day-to-day with more ease and to return to calm a lot quicker. Yoga teaches us that by accessing the wisdom mind, we can learn to listen deeply and bear witness to what’s going on inside. But its connection to the enteric brain is what helps us receive and digest our emotions without too much interference from our logical mind. The vagus nerve roams throughout the body, communicating with every internal organ, searching for signs of imbalance. The ancients might say that the vijnanamaya kosha (our intuitive, wisdom mind) is the vagus nerve of the subtle body. It does that through the vagus nerve, the longest cranial nerve in the body, which is considered mission control for the parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) nervous system. Called the enteric (or intestinal) brain, it communicates with our bigger, upstairs brain, relaying those “gut” feelings and providing clues to our mental and emotional states, according to Columbia University neurogastroenterologist Michael Gershon, MD, author of The Second Brain. Turns out there’s a reason for that: Our gut, which begins in the esophagus and extends all the way to the anus, is lined with millions of neurons, which make up, quite literally, a second brain. How many times have you heard the expression, “What’s eating you?” or asked yourself whether you’d be able to “stomach” the sight of something horrific? When you’re anxious do you feel nauseous, experience butterflies in your stomach, or have a sudden urge to evacuate the remainder of your lunch? These digestive metaphors remind us that so much of what and how we feel doesn’t come from our logical brain it comes directly from our gut. ![]()
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