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Use Stress to Create Calm (5:20:10)
You will see this exercise in the breathing for calm and focus section of the course. A 5:20:10 (inhale:hold:exhale) restricts your breathing to around 2 breath cycles per minute. See the questions below and comment with your answers. I will be posting a follow up to this post. 1. Could this exercise be used as a calming breathing practice? 2. What do you think will happen in terms of arterial oxygenation saturation? Oxygen saturation (SpO2) is a measurement of how much oxygen your blood is carrying as a percentage of the maximum it could carry. It is a reading out of 100%. Normal Sp02 is between 95-98% and can be recorded on a simple pulse oximeter. 3. If one day you find this exercise easy (no stress or air huger) and another day you find it more difficult, what is that a reflection of? 4. This is an exercise I would regularly use at the start of a recovery session with athletes we train (see pic below). Why would I start with this? what am I trying to learn about the state of the athlete with this exercise? FYI - Generally 2 things result in a low Sp02 readings below 95% - An inability of the lungs to inhale and send oxygen to all cells and tissues - An inability of the bloodstream to circulate to the lungs, collect oxygen, and transport it around the body Try performing a 5:20:10 for 2 minutes and see how you feel. Use the breathing pacer. Rip in with some answers or questions
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New comment 2h ago
Use Stress to Create Calm (5:20:10)
0 likes • 20h
Shooting from the hip here Dave. 1. For sure. Calm for a lot of people... but for some a 20 sec breath hold might be more on the sympathetic side. 2. Oxygen, guessing it would go up seeing its a breathold on an inhale. 3. You've had a shit day, grap sleep, anxious. Shallow breathing, over breathing. 4. Assessing where they are at in their recovery - stress, fatigue, etc. Based on the response you observe you could then adjust the rest of the session towards their needs. In short, are they finding it easy or is it stressing them out. I personally feel calm doing this type of exercise. Feels a little like a 478 breath, only longer. But haven't used it as a recover tool yet so can't comment on this. Any recommendations for pulse oximeters and do you think its worth investing in one?
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Jeremy Stead
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@jeremy-stead-8669
Hey there, Im Jeremy. Live in a small surf town in NZ.

Active 2h ago
Joined Nov 10, 2024
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