Breath Token May 2021

A breath token is a breathing exploration that I develop for friends & clients and send out as a gift.

In 2021 the breath tokens are about our relation-ship to breathing.
In the current climate, rather than giving an instruction, I feel like taking a step back and formulating an open question instead.

The question for this month is: How do I sense the breath flow? Is it more of an exchange between inside and outside or is it deep in the body, for example?

We can explore the question through touch, movement, sound, writing, drawing… We can explore it any time, anywhere…

If you have any questions or would like to share something with me, please feel free to contact me: hallo@nicolacaroli.com.

Orientation

Listening to trauma expert Dami Charf talk on the subject of „orientation“ the other day, I thought that her suggestions on how to orientate correlate directly to Natural Breathing. 

“Orientating myself, looking around the space where I am, releases me from being stuck in traumatic states. With orientation in the present moment, I can arrive in the actual situation and the body can relax.”, Dami Charf said.

Orientation can be looking around the room, or naming or touching objects, silently or aloud. Dami Charf advised to keep orientating oneself until a reflective inhale comes, which signals that the body has reset itself.

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Protean Breath

One of my private indulgences is surfing online for porcelain. On one of these haunts, I came across a remake of Jean Cocteau’s ceramic art work “Protée” from 1960, picked up by the French porcelain manufacturer Raynaud.
Protée, or Proteus, is the ancient Greek god of the sea or god of rivers. He is in charge of the constantly changing and transformative nature of water. According to Wikipedia, “the adjective protean, means “versatile”, “mutable”, or “capable of assuming many forms”. the breath.
What a perfect description of the breath!

The image on Jean Cocteau’s plate is Proteus exhaling with a blow, presumably moving water into motion.

Beating at the last breath in his lungs

I‘ve just finished reading Lirael, a fantasy novel in the Old Kingdom book series by Garth Nix.

In the realm of the Old Kingdom, it is the practice of the so-called Abhorsen to move in out of the world of life and the world of death. For the Abhorsen, the boundary between the two worlds is like a membrane one can feel and touch. Interestingly there is no change in breathing while going into death, only changes in temperature and mobility. The Abhorsen seems to have two bodies in one, one body that stays in the world of life, still breathing, while the other body, also breathing, goes into the world of death to fight necromancers and other dead creatures.

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Breath Token April 2021

A breath token is a breathing exploration that I develop for friends & clients and send out as a gift.

In 2021 the breath tokens are about our relation-ship to breathing.
In the current climate, rather than giving an instruction, I feel like taking a step back and formulating an open question instead.

The question for this month is: Where can I sense the breath movement? And How do I experience the breath movement in that place?

We can explore the question through touch, movement, sound, writing, drawing… We can explore it any time, anywhere…

If you have any questions or would like to share something with me, please feel free to contact me: hallo@nicolacaroli.com.

BQ – Breath Quotient

Breathing experts Dr Ela Manga and Viola Edward have developed a method to assess healthy breathing parameters: Breath Quotient – observations of Breath Intelligence.

Here’s the article from Dr Ela Manga‘s website:

“Breathing is far more than the exchange of air. It is a language. It is a reflection of the quality of life force as it is expressed through the body, mind and heart. Every breath that we take mirrors our conscious and unconscious thoughts, the emotions, feelings and sensations that we experience in every moment. The breath can also be a reflection of deeply held emotional trauma, of habitual patterns of tension that have been carried from the moment of conception, or the experience of birth and the conditioning imprinted by family, culture and the journey of life.

Observation of the subtle nuances of our breathing patterns is simply the most obvious and measurable way to observe the mental and emotional fluctuations reflected in our physiology. Through our awareness of the breath as a support for mindfulness and presence, we are offered an entry point to help release unconscious breathing habits that hinder clarity and balance.

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I wanted to help people find their own breath

Beautiful statement about dance, breath and the pulse of life by British choreographer Aakash Odedra in Dance Magazine.

„I consider there to be two spheres in my life: the inner world and the external physical world. Most of the time they don’t align.

As a child, whenever I heard music, I instantly disconnected from the present and vanished into a world of myth and fantasy. A swing of an arm created a painting that only I could see; a hand gesture gave birth to an Indian god; continuously spinning while looking down at the carpet made my eyes see patterns spring to life. I remember coming to and all the adults reacting, some clapping, some laughing and a few just looking at me weirdly.

Sadly, the world within me felt more appealing. My family, which had just migrated from Africa, lived in a rundown area of Birmingham, England, right next to a train track and industrial buildings. The sky always seemed to be gray. I soon realized why some of the adults were looking at me weirdly or laughing: They didn’t see what I saw—they only saw what was around them. It became my ambition to share my inner fantasy world. To create a bridge that gave deeper meaning to the dull, gray world I lived in.

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Backbends and cardiovascular health

Here’s a great article on the effects of backbends on cardiovascular health, and thus breathing, by Yoga and anatomy teacher Sara Doyle PhD.

“Last weekend I taught a Yoga Lab workshop on the anatomy of back bends. Yoga Lab is a monthly workshop at Blue Point Yoga Center that draws from the latest scientific research to understand the effects of movement and mindfulness. There are many good reasons to practice back bends, but improvement in cardiovascular health may be one of the most important, and one of the most overlooked. There are several ways that a regular practice of back bends can impact your heart and lung function. The back bends don’t even have to be deep. Moderate poses such as bridge pose or locust pose would work well.

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Breath Token February 2021

A breath token is a breathing exploration that I develop for friends & clients and send out as a gift.

In 2021 the breath tokens are about our relation-ship to breathing.
In the current climate, rather than giving an instruction, I feel like taking a step back and formulating an open question instead.

The question for this month is: Imagining my lungs and ribs as my wings, I can ask myself how do my wings feel at this moment? Are they powerful, drooping, stuck together, light or heavy, for example?

We can explore the question through touch, movement, sound, writing, drawing… We can explore it any time, anywhere…

If you have any questions or would like to share something with me, please feel free to contact me: hallo@nicolacaroli.com.

Breathe through me

There‘s a wonderful religious breathing scene in Ani Tuzman’s novel, The Tremble of Love. The novel is based on the life of the 18th century Jewish mystic Rabbi Yisroel ben Eliezar, also called the Baal Shem Tov.

In the scene, Leah, the local Jewish shoemaker in the Polish town Okup, has been imprisoned by Christians for blood libel. A mob of young men are trying to get into her cell for revenge.

„Breathing in the foul mustiness, Leah felt a sudden rising panic that made the dank room feel smaller and airless. She had to breathe fresh air or she would die in this merciless crypt. She tried to stand but she hit her head on the low roof of her cell. The clammy walls she found on hands and knees closed in around her. Dark and fear were swallowing her. She had to calm herself. She would take God‘s name. That‘s it. There were many to choose from. She would repeat them out loud, one by one, slowly, over and over again: Adonai, Ein Sof, Shechina, HaShem. „Breathe through me.“ She must feel God‘s love around her, in her. She would think of God‘s love as the air she breathed. 

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