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The Most Overlooked Pillar of Longevity image

The Most Overlooked Pillar of Longevity

Connecting Minds
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106 Plays5 days ago

Are you following health trends that actually harm your body? In my eye-opening masterclass "The 7 Popular But Deadly Health Fads," I reveal how common health practices promoted by influencers and gurus might be ravaging your gut, accelerating disease, and shaving years off your life.

Discover which popular diets, supplements, and health rituals are secretly sabotaging your health and learn what to do instead. I explain why these seemingly healthy habits are damaging your body and provide actionable alternatives for true longevity.

Register for free access to this essential health information at https://www.livelongerformula.com

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Transcript

Introduction to Breathing and Health

00:00:01
Speaker
Hey, it's Christian Yordanoff. Welcome back to the podcast. Today's topic is one that I think very few people have on their mind, right?
00:00:13
Speaker
And that is the topic of... how we are breathing on a day-to-day basis.

Experimenting with Breathing Patterns

00:00:20
Speaker
And for many, I mean, it's becoming more popular, but I still feel like the large majority of people out there are unaware how impactful the way you breathe is on everything.
00:00:41
Speaker
We can use the umbrella term on your longevity and health, but when you hear some of the stuff I'm going to discuss today, it will make a lot more sense. And the basic TLDR spoiler is the way you breathe activates...
00:01:02
Speaker
your nervous system in a different way. So very simply put, if you do an experiment right now, as long as you're in good health and you're not driving and don't have heart issues or whatever, you're not prone to Fainting or stuff like that.
00:01:18
Speaker
What you can do as an experiment right now is you can take 10 very fast and deep breaths in and out through your mouth.
00:01:29
Speaker
So this kind of thing and see what happens. So this is the easiest way that you can understand how, how,
00:01:42
Speaker
much leverage your breath has over your state, your nervous system state.

Impact of Breathing on Stress and Health

00:01:48
Speaker
And what did what that will do if you do actually try this exercise it will basically activate your fight or flight nervous system, the sympathetic nervous system, right?
00:01:59
Speaker
so what what does How would you feel that? So you will feel your pulse increasing. If you were to measure your blood pressure, that would increase. ah If you could measure your adrenaline in the blood, that would increase.
00:02:14
Speaker
So those are some of the more... ah easily the more palpable things happening. But there's other subtle subtle things that you may not notice at least at first. So when you activate the fight or flight nervous system, the blood tends to go away from the midsection to the limbs. So the idea is we're going to fight something, run away using our legs, climb to safety.
00:02:43
Speaker
So it makes sense that those areas of the body are given priority. But what does that mean? It means whatever's in your gut, in that torso area, is probably not going to get um a lot of resources. And that's basically the the digestion, is the thing that will begin to basically down-regulating your digestion. So you can always digest things later, your immune system,
00:03:12
Speaker
can always deal with whatever it needs to deal with later. But for now, you need to fight or flee. So if imagine if you can do it in 10 breaths, if you can activate the sympathetic nervous system with 10 breaths like that.
00:03:32
Speaker
Imagine not such an extreme scenario, but one where you you're just activating it 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%. is... fifteen twenty percent so this is where a lot of people find themselves in the current world. They're breathing in a way that basically over activates the stress system.
00:03:56
Speaker
And that can contribute to a ton of things. From gut gut problems, to brain fog, to sleep problems, to anxiety. you name it. I mean, at the end of the day, we know that before even food and water, breath is the most immediate but ah prerequisite for life.
00:04:19
Speaker
So, if If we were to create some kind of hierarchy of needs, in actual fact, food and water would be preceded by our breathing.
00:04:32
Speaker
That's how important it is. But the problem with a lot of things like this is because we all do it, we think we're doing it right. You think just the body knows instinctively how to do it.

Christian's Journey with Breathing Techniques

00:04:43
Speaker
The problem is that that just isn't so. um so yeah So at the moment, this this week i've been I've been building out my um for my Live Longer Formula program. I i have a whole section in the program that's all about breathing optimization to improve focus, reduce anxiety and stress, improve sleep.
00:05:07
Speaker
So i've I've kind of immersed myself into the stuff this week. um And I thought I'd record this just to give you ah deeper understanding of some of the mechanisms behind how not breathing correctly will actually contribute to diminished longevity, diminished health. And basically, it will it would just work against you until you resolve it. And I'm going to give you some ideas on what to do, of course.
00:05:32
Speaker
Now, personally, all my life, basically, I was um kind of a not a mouth breather in normal circumstances. but Anytime I exerted myself, so running, sports, soccer...
00:05:48
Speaker
things like that, i always would mouth-breathe. Just nobody freaking told me I'm not supposed to do that. So I was really good, I was fast, like sprinting I was i was pretty fast.
00:06:01
Speaker
I was always one of the fastest in my class. When it came to like 800 meter um running, I would start strong and then everybody would overtake me near the end.
00:06:14
Speaker
so I was always like, why do I suck so much? Why can't I have, don't have any cardio? and I play soccer, I'd gas out all the time. I was good, like technically had a knack for soccer and just in general for sports, but my cardio always sucks. So I'm like, like what the hell?
00:06:31
Speaker
And then when I started doing Thai boxing later on in life in my twenties, um, I'd still would gas out and will do more cardio to get fitter for Thai boxing, which obviously, you know nowadays I wouldn't do that because it's dumb. But when you're young, you just do a bunch of exertion without giving a damn about what what it's actually doing you and aging you and whatever.
00:06:55
Speaker
But I was like, why the hell is my cardio so bad? like I mean, it can't be that freaking bad.

Discovering Patrick McKeown's Methods

00:07:01
Speaker
And then, lo and behold, In 2018, I was listening to all kinds of biohacking podcasts, you know Dave Asprey, Ben Greenfield, and I heard a dude called Patrick McKeown from Ireland. and At the time, ah we were just about to move to Portugal.
00:07:20
Speaker
from Ireland with my wife. So I was like, oh, this Irish lad, how is it going by? Let me hear what you have to say. So I was absolutely enamored that one hour episode i listened to him.
00:07:33
Speaker
Absolutely. He blew my mind, this guy. So that was 2018 in the summer. I remember i was in Portugal here. and As soon as I finished that episode, i ran to the pharmacy office downstairs where we were living and I picked up some tape with which to tape my mouth at night and over the next couple of days, wow, I was like, oh my god, is this what it's like to wake up without your mouth being dry and you slept well and you're refreshed?
00:08:10
Speaker
Jesus Christ. So I was like, ah bought a couple of his books, immediately started reading on Kindle and basically then over the next couple of days I just was like I have to see what this guy's about I went to his website I saw he's doing training and in breathing and i went to Ireland and I spent eight days with him basically we a group of us at his house where the Buteyko clinic is in in Ireland near Galway so we spent eight days with this guy learning all these ins and outs of breathing so since then i'm um since september 2018 i'm certified in his method of helping people correct their breathing and optimize their breathing and he's done a lot of amazing work this guy patrick he has i don't know how many books now 12 13 books he has a whole other method for sports oxygen advantage that i'm also involved in at the moment
00:09:10
Speaker
just about to get certified in that. just for It's the same principle, I just thought I might as well, because I have all the knowledge prerequisites, it's just a matter of doing a little bit of extra work to get that other certification.
00:09:22
Speaker
So that's more for like sports optimization and and stuff like that, and kind of more peak performance. But the Buteyko stuff he teaches, It was, for me, a great game changer. And for some of my clients, it's also been a game changer. you know And he's helped, like at this point, it's tens of thousands of people. ah ah And the reason I'm mentioning this now is because a lot of his basically all of his resources are out there for free. You can buy his books. You can buy his courses. You can become certified in his methods.
00:09:51
Speaker
But he the guy is so awesome that he just gives everything away for free, basically. and you know that's really respectable so I always want to kind of support him. and he Actually, for my first book on autism, had a whole chat a part of a chapter about breathing because a lot of kids' mouth breathe and that causes you know special education needs and lowers IQ and messes with their development.
00:10:14
Speaker
So he actually read over that section of the book and gave me his input for that. So has been really He's been really generous with his time.
00:10:25
Speaker
um Now he's impossible to reach because he's just so ah so busy. But amazing guy. So go and check out his resources. And basically, so what...
00:10:36
Speaker
what um what What is it all about? what what is What is the problem with many people's breathing right now?

Effects of Hyperventilation on Health

00:10:43
Speaker
So we're talking about breathing too much air.
00:10:48
Speaker
It's as simple as that. It's as simple as that. We can call it chronic hyperventilation, but when you when you say that, people don't think they're chronically hyperventilating.
00:11:00
Speaker
i It seems like that's a diagnosable condition. But the thing is, over-breathing is so easy to do. even if you sigh ah couple of times an hour or you yawn once or twice here and there, that can actually be enough because a lot of people then take a deep breath after that, that can be enough to to keep you in a state of minor, mild, chronic over-breathing or hyperventilation.
00:11:29
Speaker
right So what's the problem with that? Well, here's the thing. This is the thing that kind of blew my mind back in the day in 2018 when I was listening to Patrick. So When you breathe too rapidly or too deeply,
00:11:43
Speaker
Carbon dioxide, you're expelling carbon dioxide when you breathe out, obviously. So what happens is you expel too much carbon dioxide or CO2 and the levels of CO2 in your blood drop.
00:11:56
Speaker
Now, the thing about carbon dioxide is the sort of mainstream narrative is just a waste byproduct of breathing and you know energy production and stuff like that.
00:12:09
Speaker
But here's the thing, and this this is where this is where like later on, into some of this may blow your mind if you have some of the health challenges that um you know we'll discuss later. but So, carbon dioxide has a lot of beneficial roles in the body, right? But here's the thing.
00:12:28
Speaker
If your carbon dioxide level in the blood drops, then you your ability... Sorry, or rather not your, but your the ability of chemo of oxygen to be released from hemoglobin to the cells is reduced. Because a long time ago, they found out, a guy called Bohr, found that you you basically need a certain concentration of carbon dioxide in order for oxygen to be released from hemoglobin.
00:13:06
Speaker
if So the point point simply here is that if you if you breathe more than you should, you have less carbon dioxide in the blood because you're expelling more every minute.
00:13:17
Speaker
And that paradoxically, even though you're breathing more, means your tissues and your cells are less well oxygenated. So hopefully that makes sense. Once it clicked for me, I was like hot diggity.
00:13:30
Speaker
So... so The thing is, in mild cases of over-breathing, it's difficult to sort of gauge this because the body is very good at keeping homeostasis and it will it will adapt. If you start, let's say today from tomorrow, breathe 10% more volume of air per minute, well, your body is going to adjust. you know At first, you might feel a ah bit lightheaded and...
00:13:58
Speaker
fatigued and your cognitive function might be reduced, but you will adapt but because the body is able to adapt to these things. right um But over time, it's going to cause you health problems.
00:14:10
Speaker
right that's It's simple as simple as that. So let's talk about some of the health problems that chronic over-breathing can Cause.
00:14:21
Speaker
So here's, this this is the part that, you know, if you have a problem with, let's say, blood pressure or some kind of blood flow, stuff like that, or headaches or, know, dizziness, stuff like that, here's the thing. So carbon dioxide, and sorry, just before I get into that, you if you do the breathing thing where you kind of breathe out, you know, in and out very fast, like let's say Wim Hof breathing, which by the way,
00:14:50
Speaker
Terrible fucking idea. ah If you're 40, trust me. Just trust me on this one. Don't do it. You have no business doing this stuff. Trust me. It's doing you no good.
00:15:01
Speaker
All it does is it raises your adrenaline. and and But the point is, if you do that, if you've ever done the Wim Hof breathing, and no offense to anyone there that really loves it. you know I used to also do it.

Breathing, Stress Hormones, and Health Implications

00:15:12
Speaker
Whatever. um Another mainstream sort of fad that's probably... doing more damage than actual benefit, but whatever. Whatever floats people's boat.
00:15:23
Speaker
Usually a lot of people, they're fit and young or some combination of those and they're feeling the negative effects. But here's the thing. If you've ever done Wim Hof breathing or have hyperventilated, you know you can feel dizzy or sometimes headaches or various kind of weird vertical type symptoms.
00:15:45
Speaker
So why does that happen? Well, because... Everyone is brainwashed right now to think that you have to raise your nitric oxide because that's a vasodilator. But the thing is that carbon dioxide is a potent vasodilator.
00:16:01
Speaker
And if if the levels are lowered in the blood, you have vasoconstriction, which means the blood vessels basically tighten, if you can use that term.
00:16:14
Speaker
And that includes in the brain. right So that's not a good thing. That's not a good thing. um Then you have other stuff, for example, let's see what else, what else I have a list here.
00:16:32
Speaker
so If you tend to over-breathe, like I said earlier, that can activate the stress response. right So you have the autonomic nervous system and it is very sensitive to changes in blood gases.
00:16:49
Speaker
you hyperventilate or breathe too much, That stimulates the fight or flight system, nervous system, the sympathetic branch of the autonomic nervous system. And that increases stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol.
00:17:02
Speaker
And they can do other things like they can raise other stress hormones on top of that. right They can cause other downregulation of metabolism, just lowering of testosterone. I mean, there's like so many.
00:17:15
Speaker
And again, these might be minor increases in the stress hormones, but imagine over two, three decades, more adrenaline, more cortisol than than you need. What's that going to cause? I mean... If, as we know, cortisol increases lower testosterone, well, there, that's one thing.
00:17:33
Speaker
Cortisol can you know ah promote estrogen um ah synthesis through you know upregulating or activating the aromatase enzyme.
00:17:45
Speaker
There's a ton of... ah they Both of these hormones, adrenaline and cortisol, can increase insulin resistance. They down-regulate the immune system, right? So the Wim Hof people that did the Wim Hof breathing in that study, and then they were injected with bacterial toxins, they didn't have any symptoms of illness.
00:18:07
Speaker
not because they were bulletproof and superhuman because of the Wim Hof breathing, but because the adrenaline spike from the Wim Hof breathing actually suppresses the immune system. Because again, like I said earlier, if you're in a fight or flight nervous system state, you don't need to digest right now.
00:18:27
Speaker
You don't need to have a very active immune system right now. um
00:18:35
Speaker
What else? Yeah, so we have so this so this now, if you're triggering the fight or flight nervous system, i mean, we as you know, that can increase anxiety and stress.
00:18:47
Speaker
That can diminish sleep quality. Even 5-10% even a five ten percent or 20% worsening in any of these anxiety, stress, sleep quality.
00:19:00
Speaker
um Just imagine, oh and then we're not talking about one week of doing this. We're talking about people, if they do chronically hyperventilate, they're like this all their life.

Chronic Stress and Breathing Exercises

00:19:13
Speaker
you know I was like this until the age of 32. some people, and some people in their 50s, 60s, 70s, they've been living like this all their life.
00:19:26
Speaker
It's because we seem to have forgotten or maybe the the stresses of the modern world are you know predisposing us to... true you know Because when you're stressed, you're going to breathe faster. So maybe if you're chronically stressed, it's the the sort of one feeding into the other and then you you breathe too much and that feeds back into the stress. So it's really...
00:19:49
Speaker
When you actually sit down and do some of these exercises that slow down your breathing, ah if you start yawning and and sighing and want to take a nap, don't be surprised because you're you were activating your parasympathetic nervous system and that um basically stimulates digestion.
00:20:11
Speaker
It you know can can be ah beneficial for the immune system. It will relax you. That's why with some folks, you know, doing this before bed, especially, you know, if you're living a stress stressful life,
00:20:25
Speaker
It can be an absolute life-changing thing. okay What other things can over-breathing cause? So there's ah an issue called respiratory alkalosis.
00:20:40
Speaker
ah This is where the pH of the blood rises excessively. And that's due to sustained over-breathing. Now, the thing is, so
00:20:51
Speaker
um If you do the Wim Hof breathing, and again, I i really think Wim Hof is a very nice guy, but they took his thing and they turned it into this other thing and it's grown into a monster that is just it it's ah just I don't I don't even want to get into it I'll probably do another episode on that oh separately but he was I remember in in the app he has or something YouTube back 2018 before we go into this stuff before we go into the Buteyko and the Oxygen Advantage stuff we were you know months before that we were into the Wim Hof all the biohacking stuff all the stuff that's big now you know that was seven years ago what we were doing and um
00:21:35
Speaker
I remember he he after the breathing round, you know you take those kind of big escalations and whatever. um He was like, I feel that that your blood becoming more alkaline as if this whole alkaline acidity thing, that's that's an absolute joke.
00:21:53
Speaker
know ah You don't want your blood being excessively alkaline. It's not doing you any favors, right? So in severe cases of respiratory alkalosis, there can be um symptoms of muscle cramps, tingling in the extremities. yeah I've had clients report that.
00:22:15
Speaker
um Involuntary muscle contractions. And this basically, because you have you know various enzymes and things like that that need a specific pH to work in, that can interfere with normal cellular metabolism when the pH of the blood is... And think again, think about this. Let's pretend that we're not doing the Wim Hof breathing.
00:22:34
Speaker
Let's pretend we're smart. like that and we've avoided that um just a long-term minor thing the the you know one two percent uh suboptimal change over three decades 30 years 40 years you know how much it's like You can think about it if you have a leak in a bucket or you have a compounding interest in one direction, it can be beneficial, even of 1%.
00:23:06
Speaker
But if it's a minus 1%, let's say some kind of debt that you have to pay down, that accumulates, over decades, that's going to compound compound into a lot of debt. you know So it's like that in the body. If you if you do ah few things here and there,
00:23:25
Speaker
each on their own improve things by half a percent, 1%, 2%. like Imagine and you sustain those things for decades, that's going to do a lot of good. But imagine you have a few leaks and holes in the bucket, so the breathing and then some kind of gut function, eating a food that you're sensitive to every day, 5% here, 1% here, 2% there.
00:23:45
Speaker
Imagine that compounding against you. So this is the kind of stuff we need to address as quickly as possible. Because also, the end of this sort of period of addressing it, which could be two months, three months, whatever, that's all it takes for a habit to become ingrained. At that point, it's no more real work that has to be done.
00:24:07
Speaker
So... I see it as a really amazing like opportunity to leverage this type of thing. You know you spend a couple of months, change a habit, go through the initial hump, and then at that point, it's just as easy to do the new thing that as the old thing. it's really this is where This is the kind of stuff that talking about longevity, if we can identify as many of these things in a person, which is what we do with my clients,
00:24:32
Speaker
um we can really steer the ship a few degrees that would change the entire trajectory of the person's life and health. Okay.
00:24:44
Speaker
um Other things. i mean just it's Honestly, the this is huge.

Complexities of Breathing Issues

00:24:49
Speaker
like i mean That's why Patrick, just this narrow topic, he's created a 20-25 year career in business empire out of educating people about this. is because It's simple, but there's so many so many sort of nuances to it in the body when a simple thing as just breathing a little bit too much air with every inhalation and exhalation, excaling too much carbon dioxide.
00:25:16
Speaker
That's how leveraged this can be you know in in in both the good and the bad directions. So you have ionized calcium and potassium shifts. So changes in blood pH can affect the ionization of minerals like calcium and potassium.
00:25:34
Speaker
And this can... this So the reduced ionized calcium can lead to increased neuromuscular excitability, which can cause that tingling and cramping, whilst disturbed potassium balance can actually impact impact heart rhythm and muscle function.
00:25:49
Speaker
Over time, these imbalances can stress the cardiovascular system and when severe, can actually predispose to arrhythmias and other cardiac issues. Then you have other things like the impact on inflammation and oxidative stress.
00:26:07
Speaker
So inadequate oxygen delivery combined with chronic sympathetic activation. So if you have too little carbon dioxide in the blood or a suboptimal amount, that means like not enough oxygen is being delivered to the cells.
00:26:23
Speaker
And if you combine that with chronically activating the fight or flight nervous system that contributes to systemic inflammation and oxidative stress. And we know that both of these are known to accelerate aging.
00:26:40
Speaker
In my book, How to Actually Live Longer Volume 1, the three primary drivers of aging and dysfunction, as i I've sort of defined them for you there, are stress, inflammation, and oxidative stress. and this is what suboptimal breathing contributes to. And again, it it might not be a huge amount of stress, but even 5% increase, again, multiply that, compound that over decades and you're in trouble, you know? So we have to really take this stuff seriously. I know it's not the sexiest thing.
00:27:12
Speaker
It's not as sexy as taking supplements and running cool lab tests and, you know, poop tests and whatever else, but um this is where it's at. the these are the fun It's like I sometimes say, you just have to really...
00:27:29
Speaker
dial in the fundamentals and just stay on top of the fundamentals before we even talk about more you know fancy stuff like Methylene Blue or whatever other anti-aging therapies and ozone and whatever else.
00:27:46
Speaker
but You have to dial in the basics, the fundamentals and what's more fundamental than breathing, right? so we know yes So we know that inflammation, oxidative stress can contribute to cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease, diabetes, right?
00:28:01
Speaker
So when you actually think about it, over-breathing increases your disease risk over time, right? It puts a stress on your kidneys,
00:28:14
Speaker
It can increase your blood pressure, it can cause vascular constriction, can stress the heart. Like we already covered, it can increase anxiety, it can contribute to panic disorders, it can contribute to depression. And then of course it can have other impacts on like we said, like sleep, mental performance.
00:28:41
Speaker
can cause electrolyte imbalances, it can cause exercise intolerance. Like for me, I had straight up all my life, I had exercise intolerance because I didn't know how to breathe. And then when I did the Thai boxing, not one of my freaking coaches ever said, dude, shut your mouth, shut your mouth, talk too much.
00:29:04
Speaker
Also, you breathe too much. they Somebody should have said it nobody said it. um And that would have really helped me a lot. ah so But anyway, it's never too late. This is the most important thing. It's never too late to begin course correcting, steering the ship in a slightly different direction.
00:29:24
Speaker
And hopefully this gives you a little bit of ah an idea how important this this is. Like I said, the resources are out there for free. I have this as part of my program.
00:29:36
Speaker
It's a small part of the program, but I'm going to be, ah now that i now that it's almost ready, we're just having some of the the videos still being edited as we speak.
00:29:47
Speaker
But once that's deployed, I'm going to definitely be be um onboarding my clients into the process of beginning the end the beautiful thing is that these are exercises are so simple so easy they're free and you can do some of them when you're out for a walk or before bed while you're in bed or when you're sitting at your desk so it's it's not like oh I have to now carve out 30 minutes every day to do this thing that's the beautiful thing for in terms of implementing ah breathing optimization and breathing re-education into our daily life it's so easy it's so simple
00:30:25
Speaker
And it's free. But the benefits for what we invest are just staggering. Staggering in terms of the time and the effort investment here.
00:30:36
Speaker
So, yeah, hopefully this gives you a good idea of what chronic mild over-breathing can cause or contribute to in terms of health.
00:30:47
Speaker
And hopefully this you found this useful. And thanks for listening. listening And I'll see you on the next episode.