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Claim Your Space, Breathe into Your Back
Take a moment to notice your breathing. What parts of your body move with
your breath? Did your breathing shift as you observed it? Notice
any judgments about your own breathing.
Your personal cathedral
Shallow chest breathing takes up as little space as possible. Deeper
belly breathing pushes out into the world. Back breathing claims the
space that is already yours, the three-dimensional cathedral arch of ribs,
spine, and sternum waiting to be filled and emptied and filled again by
your own breath.
Next time you're near a baby, or a cat, watch her back expand as she
breathes. We all breathed that way at first if we had freedom of movement,
before we
learned to suppress tears and shouts by holding our breath, before we learned
to hold still instead of moving, before we started using our diaphragm as a
storage closet rather than a breathing muscle.
Back breathing for singing
At a singing workshop this summer, I asked for help with breathing for singing.
The teacher placed her hands about half-way between my waist and armpits,
thumbs around to my back, and asked me to push her thumbs away by breathing
into them. At first I pushed into my shoulders, but then I found a way to
breathe into the middle of my back.
It felt like the first full breath I'd taken in 30 years. Joyful, effortless,
once I remembered how. I could sing four times longer on a breath than I
could before.
Try it for yourself
Put your hands on your waist, thumbs to the back,
and then move your hands as far up and back as you comfortably can.
Let the bones of
your thumbs connect with the bones of your ribs with light pressure. As your
breath flows in, allow those back rib bones to push your thumbs apart.
Experiment. You may struggle at first, pouring in more effort than you need.
You may find your way, then lose it again. Keep playing with it.
How does it feel to breathe easily into your back?
You may feel your torso filling like a barrel, expanding slightly all the
way around. You may feel your lungs separating as they expand, like wings.
We're all singers
Think of a song you know, any song. Go back to the ABC's or Twinkle Twinkle
Little Star if you have to. Sing it playfully, as if you were singing with
your favorite four year old. Allow a full easy breath into your mid-back, and
see how far you get into your song before wanting to breathe again.
Now you
can practice in the car or anytime you have privacy and a little spare time,
singing to see how much air you allowed to flow in.
Come home to your breath
When you notice
dissociation,
obsessive thoughts, or
anxiety, you can use them
as a reminder to practice back breathing. First
acknowledge the pattern you noticed ("Ah, there it is") and then allow
your mid-back to open to your breath. The shift in attention can lighten the
pattern over time, with the same effortlessness that fills your torso
with air.
When you're working with
anger or
boundaries, breathing into
your back gives you space to notice what is true for you. Outside your
body, you have to take other truths into consideration, but your inner
territory belongs only to you.
Drop the effort
When we don't succeed at something, we often push harder and work longer.
All the work in back breathing is in remembering how
to stop working. Are there other areas
in your life where less effort could lead to more ease and success?
Learn more
My thanks to Michele Simon, Bay Area Balkan singer, percussionist, and teacher,
who guided me through the breathing breakthrough.
I've learned a lot about singing at Anne Weiss' Everyone Welcome Community
Choir/Class here in Portland. Her warm, inclusive, non-judgmental teaching
style is perfect for exploring your voice in safety.
Rib image from Gray's Anatomy (public domain) via wikipedia's Human rib cage
article.
Let me know what you think!
Did this article spark a response in you? I'd love to hear about
it! Call or email to
share your thoughts.
Buy the book
This article is part of Wellspring of Compassion: Self-Care for Sensitive
People Healing from Trauma, available from
WellspringofCompassion.com,
Powell's Books, or Amazon.
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For a free phone consultation about whether supportive
bodywork can help you claim your inner space, call Sonia at
503-334-6434 or
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Copyright © 2010 Sonia Connolly
Section: Heal Your Boundaries
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