Jawad Mian Profile picture
26 Feb, 25 tweets, 4 min read
1) The way we breathe is inextricably linked to the way we live.

I’m embarrassed how long it took me to figure this out.

Given my sinus I’ve been breathing poorly my whole life.

What I’ve learned 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼

stray-reflections.com/article/170
2) Breathing, with awareness and intention, sits at the heart of spiritual practice.

To let one breath go, say the Sufis, without being conscious of it is a sin.
3) Breathing usually happens without us, of course.

Even if we try to stop, some force overpowers our efforts.
4) Chinese culture names qi as the vital life force flowing through all living beings.

Yogis call it prana.
5) Our daily intake is twenty-five thousand breaths, and we may well not even notice one.
6) So central to biological function, how we breathe bears directly on our physical and emotional health.

Take a moment to observe your breathing.
7) Focus on each inhalation, each exhalation.

Air is entering through the nose, passing through the brain and down the spine; it reaches a sort of fullness and then ascends through the abdomen and lungs, returning to the room by exiting the nose.
8) Again, feel the sensations as the breath makes a complete circle.
9) The nasal passages don’t merely take air in; they clean it, heat it, and moisten it.

These actions precursor a release of chemicals that lower blood pressure and regulate the heart rate.
10) Fasten the mind to the rhythm of breathing, and it tends to become absorbed and calm.
11) Now, inflate your belly with each inhalation and swell your chest.

Feel your ribs expand to the front, sides, and back. 

Hold your breath but don’t force it.
12) The position allows for the smoother passage of vital fluid through the spine.

The Sufis may tell you that breath retention purifies the heart.
13) As you exhale, first empty your stomach, then your chest.

This is the way your body wants to take in and expel air.
14) Understand this: weakness of breath underpins weakness of mind and body.

Strength in breathing carries strength to both.

Know that breath must be exercised.
15) We are ever breathing through either our right or left nostril; temporarily, one or the other is somewhat blocked.

This is known as nostril dominance. Responsibilities shift between nostrils about every two hours.
16) Yogis tell us that breathing through the left allows for a more active right brain and therefore an open connection to ida nadi, our more tranquil and feminine aspect.
17) Breathing through the right, our left brain takes charge, activating our fierce and masculine aspect, pingala-nadi.

Yogis employ alternate nostril breathing to balance the nervous system.
18) When we breathe heavily, we expel carbon dioxide, reducing blood flow.

Fast, shallow breaths reduce the carbon dioxide in our circulatory system and slow oxygen circulation.

That’s why exercise or panic can cause headaches and light-headedness.
19) Leaving poor oxygenation unintended leads to racing or irregular heartbeats and chronic anxiety.

It can leave us confused and forgetful.

Breathing slowly, on the other hand, retains carbon dioxide, which means more energy and bodily efficiency.
20) Documented breathing irregularities sit behind illness, which means that correcting our breathing, introducing an evenness in inhaling and exhaling, can prevent ailments or reopen the airways in a manner that allows for a less obstructed healing process.
21) Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel urged us to pause and catch our breath.

Even slowing our breathing for a few minutes each day can do wonders.

We only need six to eight deep breaths to elicit physiological changes.
22) The ideal breath is 5.5 seconds in, and 5.5 seconds out—5.5 breaths per minute.
23) When we lose control, the breath is the first to go.

When we get stressed, what changes? When we get angry, what changes? When we’re sad or happy, what changes? Our breath.

Every emotional alteration goes hand in hand with changes to our breathing.
24) The way we breathe is inextricably linked to the way we navigate our waking hours, and in that truth lies some very, very important wisdom.

Life exists in breath. We should get acquainted with it.
25) For more distilled infusions of clarity and inspiration, check out the Stray Reflections book.

An antidote to the great angst of modern life. 👉🏼 strayreflectionsbook.com

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More from @jsmian

22 Feb
1) If you review all the big declines in bond yields since the beginning of the secular downturn in interest rates in 1981, you find something very interesting.

Thread 👇

stray-reflections.com/article/92/The…
2) From each historic low, the 10-year Treasury yield retraced 50 to 61.8 percent of the drop over a span ranging from 2 months to 14 months.

The fundamental reasoning almost did not matter, this curious pattern held every time.
3) 1981-84: The 10-year yield fell from a high of 15.8 percent in September 1981 to a low of 10.1 percent in May 1983.

Then rose to 13.9 percent over 12 months and retraced 61.8 percent of the decline.
Read 14 tweets
19 Feb
1) I’ve noticed that I increasingly forget things.

It started with people’s names, then I'd forget plans, even early memories with my wife and children.

I began to worry what if my absent-mindedness affects my ability to think and write?
2) Once I was driving with my wife and she said excitedly, “Remember when...”

I wrack my mind, but I’m at a loss. She looks over at me and sees a blank face.
3) I quote Nietzsche to her, “The advantage of a bad memory is that one enjoys several times the same good things for the first time.”
Read 14 tweets
14 Feb
1) Stray Reflections is now 7 years old.

But I *almost* gave up multiple times on the journey.

This is that story. 👇🏼
2) By 2017, I had been writing for nearly three years and the business was generating no more than $40,000 in revenue.

My savings had run out. We were living month to month.
3) Mark Twain’s guidance for writers felt to me like a condemnation:

“Write without pay until somebody offers pay; if nobody offers within three years, sawing wood is what you were intended for.”
Read 25 tweets
7 Feb
1) Do you ever find yourself striving for perfection, and then being disappointed because it always eludes you?

THREAD 👇
2) As a young student in Hamburg, Peter Drucker went to see the opera every week.

He had very little money, but showing up an hour before the performance meant scoring any of the unsold cheap seats allocated to university students for free.
3) Upon one evening, he sat for Falstaff.

“I have never forgotten the impression that evening made on me,” he said, totally overwhelmed by Giuseppe Verdi’s comic opera.
Read 12 tweets
4 Feb
1) It is our lot to see things differently.

Bystanders look for a long time—free of constraints, unobscured by their own judgments, waiting patiently to grasp the essential truth.
stray-reflections.com/article/177/Th…
2) What we see is that the ICT revolution is far from complete and that rather than a dystopian, divisive future, what lies ahead is a green socially sustainable golden age.
stray-reflections.com/article/173/Fu…
3) We also see through the mist of the pandemic. The outlook is uninspiring, even with the vaccine breakthroughs.
stray-reflections.com/article/175/Th…
Read 5 tweets
28 Jan
1) If you're not reflecting on risk management after this week's events then what are you even doing?

Here's a thread on some basic thoughts on how to better manage risk and mistakes going forward:
2) First of all, given where we are in the investment cycle, focus more intently on the downside than the upside.
3) Slow down if you see a loss of money on any position. That should put you on high alert.

Keep looking for disconfirming evidence.
Read 10 tweets

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