The REAL Reason You're Out of Breath Running (Not What You Think!)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
- If you're constantly out of breath while running, even when you try and slow down, this video is for you. Coach Nate dives into the pervasive problem of "over-breathing" and what you can do to fix it from home.
Want to learn more breathing exercises and the science behind the BOLT test? Check out Patrick McKeown's Oxygen Advantage program here:
oxygenadvantag...
And his youtube channel!
/ oxyathlete
Download The Run Experience Training App: tre.onelink.me...
A few years back when I started running again after the Military, a buddy suggested I hold water in my mouth. It forced me to breath thru my nose. It was simple but it really worked.
I’ll try it.
dude im trying that right now thanks for that tip
I always was told to breathe in through the nose, and out through the mouth.
👍
I do that sometimes, and think it tricks your brain a little bit, and makes it easier to breathe through your nose, versus just closing your mouth.
The reason why I’m out of breath when running is because I’m out of shape. 😄
Round is a shape
😂😂🙋🏻♂️
@sheltomo
But for you to be watching this channel shows that you are taking steps to improve yourself. Put in your sweat & tears! Nothing comes easy but the reward is well worth it.
Perhaps you're out of shape because you're out of breath.
He’s talking about people in shape. Sit down.
I just did a 18 min run yesterday. It felt great after listening to you and slowing down my breathing!
Me too man
18 min or 18 Miles??
@@UnCannyValley67 im quite sure 18 mins is 18 mins mate 😂
@House Lannister what, do you expect “min” to be “miles”? jesus fuck
When I was a runner and started to lose comfortable breathing, I would slow the breath-cycle down; inhale over 4 paces, exhale over 4 paces. Very calming and part of my ' zone'.
I'm going to try this
This is what I’ve done since probably 13 years old. 3 or 4 depending on speed. I can’t not do it anymore
You must have some nice lung capacity! 👍 My tempo was 3 and 3 - if I was running at higher speeds, I would do 3 in 2 out.
I do that with three steps.
I do the same thing. It's so great!
Swimming really helped me with my awareness of this. At first I needed to breathe the whole time, but as I got more comfortable I can breathe slower and more controlled
I concur. I swear, 1 month ago, I had shin stress fracture and swam for cardio and went back to running this week with easier breathing. Amazing difference. By the way I'm going to swim this upcoming week to ease back into running and let my leg rest from returning to running again. Just to be safe.
Thanks you guys for this extra tip
Agreed! Swimming really forces this to happen.
@@TheRunExperience as someone who is a literal swimmer, i can control my breath really well in the water, but almost all on land activities have me running out of breath in just a few minutes of not less :’(
@@handoaleman9967 Heat exchange makes a big difference in exhaustion too along with hydration. In hotter day runs, slow it down.
THANK YOU!!! recently I jogged 1km and I almost puked afterwards. Following your advice I jogged 1km again without feeling breathless at all! This is absolutely life changing!! I can finally make some progress
Hey, how is ur progress going.
Hey, a 1km is a sprint, try that and it will go by faster 😁. Go for 2:10
@@rexy6341 isn't the world record 2:11
@@user-cw7ng4ko6i RIGHT ON! This means you will have to over perform! ACHIEVE GREATER LIMITS!
@@user-cw7ng4ko6i I can just about jog 3 minute 800 so I could jog a 3 minute 30 or 40 km then
Instead of breathing through my mouth or nose, I started breathing through my eyes. On cold winter days, sometimes it causes my eyes to fog up making it hard to see. I think I'll try breathing through my ears.
Teach me
How tho
@@kiranrajpurohit2636 r/woosh
@@kiranrajpurohit2636 sarcasm 💀
Hey me too, i can breath through my leg and my hand
This dude makes a video while running up a mountain. I get out of breath just thinking about running
That's because you're an average Joe, not Joe Rogan.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🏃♀️ If you constantly feel out of breath while running, you may be going too fast or there may be something wrong with your approach to workouts.
01:30 💨 Breathlessness is not primarily caused by a lack of oxygen but by a lack of carbon dioxide in the body.
02:55 🩸 Carbon dioxide buildup in the body triggers the release of oxygen from hemoglobin, which fuels our muscles.
04:34 🌬️ Over-breathing, or excessively inhaling, causes low carbon dioxide levels in the body, making us more sensitive to its presence and leading to breathlessness.
06:24 💯 The Body Oxygen Level Test, developed by Patrick McKeown, can measure your tolerance for carbon dioxide and determine if you are over-breathing.
09:21 🌬️ The normal adult who exercises moderately should be able to hold their breath for 20 seconds, while athletes should aim for 40 seconds.
10:31 🚩 A breath hold of less than 20 seconds indicates a significant need for improvement in breathing and endurance.
10:44 🏃♀️ Adjusting your breathing patterns can make you a better, stronger, and more comfortable runner and athlete.
11:10 📚 Gradually decrease breathing volume and increase carbon dioxide tolerance to improve performance.
11:37 👃Breathe less through the mouth and more through the nose to limit oxygen intake and allow for natural carbon dioxide buildup.
12:17 📲 Download the free Quick Start Program in the app to practice nose breathing for running.
12:47 👍 Check out the Oxygen Advantage resources and UA-cam channel for more information on breathing mechanics and patterns.
Best comment ive seen on youtube in a long time. Summarized segments in seconds!
Helpful
THNKS
👑
Thank you 👍🏾
This video is an example of why I watch most videos at 1.5 speed or higher.
This could have been a 5 min video. Kept having to skip forward
Legend
Thank you! You're a life saver!
Yes! This whole "10-15 minute videos" to satisfy THE ALGORITHM just increases the level of chaff in videos, not add more useful information.
Try not holding your breath to the end
Me running in the cold: my lungs🔥🔥🔥
Same here. Can't run below 14C.
ah I feel that, just last week I did a fast mile and my chest was in paain.
EIB
I love it. My lungs feel like they're on fire but I still love it.
@@BruceWayne-us3kw how?!? I usually feel like I'm suffocating and breathing in like Ice cubes lmao
I'm in tears. All my life I was told I have asthma, I was told my lungs suck and I'll never take a full breath of air due to being born 3 months premature.
But following your teaching, Coach. I was able to actually breathe and realize you're right. I can run. I can hold my breath a decent while.
Thank you. Thank you so much. ❤️🥺😭🏳️🌈💯
🙌🏾🙏🏾🥰 Blessings. I hope you only get better 💪🏾
You’re capable of anything! I was told the same and here I am, my favorite sports are running and swimming
You can pretty much get rid of the asthma with enough fitness and expanding the air ways. I had chronic asthma as did my mother and sister. Boxing and footy 5 times a week pretty much cured it.
3 months? Damn. Bro was medium rare 💀
@@AverageAlien bro 💀
I've always taken my breaths through my nose and have always been "criticized" for doing this, despite not having any issues with it. Usually once every couple minutes I will take a large breath in during my run and I find that I'm balanced as well as more comfortable. I tried following the "in through the nose, out through the mouth" gig and it actually caused me to collapse during a run because I got too lightheaded.
Thanks for your awesome channel! I'll be back to watch more soon.
If you wear your hat like that you're going to get a really funny looking sun tan 😁😁
Aww dude. I once wore a baseball cap, sunglasses, t-shirt, and fingerless gloves for a hike. Ended up top of forehead white, lower forehead tanned, eyes white, cheeks to neck tan, shoulders and upper biceps white, rest of arm tanned, wrists and hands white, last two digits of each finger tanned.
I don't really get that lol
🤣🤣🤣👍👍
White people problems
@@razorbreak8606 you just had to make it a race thing huh
I'm 15 seconds. It makes so much sense! I run with my partner who never gets out of breath despite us being similar in our fitness. It holds me back SO much, every run is a battle.
I'm going to try my best!
I'm actually so confused what you're trying to say right now
@@Spyziy He is saying that he forgets to breathe so is worse than his partner
Using your footfall while running do a 4 count inhale through nostrils, 3 count exhale through mouth, repeat. Happy running!
Hey does that sincerely work?
@@bobjones6756 try it and see, I use this while I run and it works well for me. When you exhale rest the tongue on the floor of the mouth and force the air out while using the muscles of the abdomen to pull your navel to your spine. The inhale then just happens as a response to the relaxing of the abdomen, places the tip of your tongue behind your upper front teeth and pull the air in through the nostrils as that allows the most flow into the lungs. Think of your body as a running machine and do the counts in your head until it becomes natural for you. Good luck and let me know if it works well for you. Cheers!
Sorry but I didn't get it can you elaborate.
@@bobjones6756 That's the concept I use too. In the nose 4 steps, out the mouth 4 steps. Full and deep breaths should do the trick.
that's exactly how it's taught in the Finnish military!
For me there are 3 separate but complementary things that I train when I run. 1) Breathing endurance. 2) Muscle endurance 3)Cardio vascular endurance. Long runs I focus on breathing. Intervals for Cardio Vascular and sprints for muscle endurance.
I've not come across this approach before; always thought the deeper the breaths the better the oxygen to my muscles. I'll give this a try. I'm 67 years old and went for just over 30 seconds.
You're supposed to exhale, then see how long you can hold your breath... Not inhale then hold.
Your results on this test can vary greatly depending upon when it is done. On a rest day, it can be very high. On a day after a workout, run, etc, it can be very low. This test is used by some to determine if overtraining is a problem. It is usually done by loading up first: a series of three max inhales and exhales, and then hold. If you determine that you can hold for 40 seconds max, and then on a particular day you can only do 20, this means that you aren’t fully metabolically recovered from previous activity.
Yeah started off having to tap out at 20. Repeated this clip maybe 10 more time and maybe 12 minutes after the first test I could get to 38 seconds.
I do high intensity workouts.
Today we on Mondays we have legs day and there are stairs 5 sets of them each has about 21 steps. We run and down with different intensity and step widths. 1 by 1, 2 by 2, 3 by 3. Full speed slow, squatts in between. And then every time we get on top we run same same as football field also at different speeds and intensity.
I did this test basically 6 hours after the workout and I did 1 minute 5 seconds. Im not in great shape nor in shape.
I was a professional soccer player in last century, lol
Felt the first urge at 70 secs, bc. I was constantly training my breath holding and cardio for months
I never tried this test before and I’m not athletic or anything, but I was able to do 47 seconds without any effort, and i felt like I could go for longer.. so this explains it. I think since I don’t work out my body doesn’t need as much oxygen.. not sure about how useful this test is
Interesting, Ive been steadily increasing my runs for the last 30 days since getting back into it and i did 5 miles previous run it felt great, I didnt feel fully recovered and I could barely do a mile without feeling extremely fatigued. I guess i should have waited a bit longer to go for another run. It was 3 days between.
"we're gonna keep the clock going"
doesn't keep the clock going.
Yeah, he forgot the rest of us. I was closer to 40 seconds. But, I am 56 yo and a horrible runner. must be the power of the Jitz.
life hack: buy a clock
🤣🤣
@@kevinorr328 Jiujitsu?
@@Ryanhogue26 jizz?
I just went on my first run in years today and I am at 13 seconds so there’s definitely room for improvement.
Fantastic and spot-on explanation. I'm a freediving instructor and breathing (or should I say "lack of breathing) is our business. Well done. By the way, your reference to the Oxygen Advantage is very helpful. Excellent book. My running has improved tremendously.
I freedive and spearfish. I love this video. It explains some of what I have been experiencing when working out. I do CO2 tables and O2 tables 2-3 times a week. And apnea walking maybe once. It really changes my cardio, even if I'm not running much. Cheers
Really interesting thank you. I obly got 18 seconds and so I will practise. I always breathe through mouth when running because I feel like I cant get air, so this is really good advice!
I was able to comfortably go for 37 seconds even though I've been living a sedentary life for the past 2 years. Still, when I run, after about 400 meters, I feel a bit dizzy and my heartrate climbs all the way to 170 levels. Maybe it'll be alright after a couple of weeks!
After your 37 seconds how long did it take to catch your breath? It should have been instant in 1 breath. If it takes more, you held your breath for too long I think. This is not a test to see how long you can hold your breath. And you are suppose to empty your lungs before you start. If you have air in your lungs, you can go longer.
I'm completely sedentary, got the first muscle twinge at 30 seconds ish, and could hold to 40 with just a 1 breath recover. I run even worse than you do, but I do breath well, I think.
@Sag Norm: I recovered in a single breath. I stopped at 37 because I was doing it along with the presenter and stopped it in a few seconds after he stopped. I could go till 40 or so I guess :D
Now started running every day and every day my heart rate climbs to dangerous levels after half a kilometer and I switch to walking :(
@@music-o-tastic7200 Well you started working out so you will get better. You have to start somewhere.
And lucky you. Your body is able to extract oxygen efficiently.
Try going slower. Even slower than you think. Just a trot, slow enough to have a conversation. And stick with it, it’ll get easier and your endurance will increase and you’ll begin to enjoy yourself instead of suffering.
I can relate to this, and found it motivating. Now I can do 22 seconds slightly uncomfortably, but when I was fit I could do 40 without particular effort. I used to do the Tibetan square or box breathing which helped a lot. You are supposed not to force how long you hold your breath or lack of breath at the beginning, simply even out the 4 phases, so if you start with a short inhale, the exhale must be kept to the same length, and you repeat the set in the same way, then when you start again you just follow whaat happens spontaneously on the inhale and so on. In time, the hold time both in and out gets longer and the breathing easier.
Just start swimming. That will change you.
have you got va€€inated?
@@mattwhisnant5926 Can confirm, I can easily do 40 seconds.
Hi
I got to 30 and was shocked. I'm not an athlete but a classically trained singer... Without the exhale before the holding I can do it to over a minute. That exhale really makes the difference.
Singers typically have good lungs. I haven't sung in years, so when I started to sing a song I was out of breath.
@@hoop6988 how bout almost 30, obese, heavy smoker, hobby singer, light exercising, sits all day for work male? I got 29 even tho i'm basically a potato, sure i did mma but man, that was 8-9 years ago, spent the last decade balloning up basically.
Not trying to brag, just genuinely confused, cause by all definitions my lungs should've been fucking terrible
Same. Having that slow release of air as a foundational technique built in already really up'ed my game once I made the connection & transferred my skill
Doing Vim Hof breathing made a huge difference in my ability to breathe through my nose and to hold my breath. It reduced allergies and inflammation so that for the first time, I could breathe comfortably through my nose and began to do so naturally.
I made it 15 seconds. No wonder I have always struggled at running.
Word of advice: Don't do the test with a Jolly Rancher in your mouth.
🤣Or cough drops
That’s a whole new game show right there
Eat it first for energy!
@@DrySoup123 idk precisely how it works but I discovered that eating candy at the right time when ascending during hiking with a heavy pack really helps me keep going. At other times, without the energy boost, I got light headed, fatigued more intensely - basic mild altitude impairment. I use the word mild, but when it hits it really sucks.
I’ll keep that in mind.
In my country, school sports activities are called "Physical Education". This involves giving children a ball and forgetting they exist for 45 minutes. When it comes to the one-kilometer race for evaluation, some of the children don't even finish. I had the same experience. I got bad grades in running and the teacher never explained to me or the other kids what the problem was. Thanks to this film, I have a lot of useful information and a path for further research. Thanks.
What country are you from?
nasal cavity:
"allow me to introduce myself."
I HATE ITTTTTT
Killua can run like hell tho....
I'm training for a marathon and I always had troubles with my breathing after catching covid. Did the test and got 12 seconds. I guess I know what my issue is now!
I had covid to, the first 2 months i had problems breathing but now I managed to do the test for a minute pretty easily, I guess Im pretty good at holding my breath xD
@@Ross-bc2iz did you exhale first before holding your breath? i also thought i was doing well, then i realized i didn't exhale first
did you guys get the vaxx?
@maxmad
did you get jabbed or not?
@@Ross-bc2iz
i question you too
would be interesting to know
Thank you for sharing this information.
I am a survivor of three Ventalations from covid pneumonia. Was comatose and spent two months in the hospital.
My doctors say they aren't aware of anyone else surviving such.
Needless to say my lungs have been severely damaged.
But I have had many people help me along the way.
I just tried the test and lasted 20 seconds. I thought we'll I made it half way. But then I was elated to here you say the first time you tried it you lasted 20 seconds.
I am extremely encouraged. 😁
OMG.... Thank you so much, Im a beginner runner, and my coworker just keep telling me that I need to control my breathing, I have been really trying but it seemed impossible and I was on the verge of giving up so I started googling how to breathe properly while running and I came upon your video. So my journey has begun thanks to you
The dude running during these videos adds a nice touch.
He's "special" but that's the way we love him ;)
Would you rather get treated by a doctor or a retired doctor
@@deltashot5608 retired
I cycle about 45 minutes to school and back each day. It's about an 8 mile bike ride, so 16 miles a day. Endurance is really important to me. Thanks for the video :)
My hold time depends on how much I exhale, so hard to calibrate the test. If I squeeze out every little bit of air I barely make 15. If I do a quick exhale like running I go mid 30s.
For the exercise induced asthma folks, I had it bad and took very high VitD doses and it’s gone. Not sure I have the science to back it up, but years of hacking for days after every work out is GONE for 6 months now
I was around 24-26 seconds, shocked. I practiced breathework often. I haven't run in a while, so this is definitely benefit me as I start running again!
Thank you for this. I’m a runner in high school and the coaches never focused on how to breath they always talk about form and pace. Thank you for this
You are welcome! We recognize that there isn't much, if any at all, talk about how to breath while running at the high school level. We hope to spread the word to schools and colleges so more people will stick with it!
Thank you for watching!
“The Science of Breath”... funny how long we as human beings have known this and yet don’t teach it to our young and make it part of a basic, fundamental part of life.
Great video! Really drove home some points for me. I got 38 sec on the test btw. I'll say one thing that you got wrong, tho. In Mr James Nestor's book, Breath, he states that you actually intake 30% more oxygen thru your nose than you do the mouth even if it doesn't feel like it. I've been trying to incorporate strictly nasal breathing while running which is easier in less humid weather. Takes a lot of work but I was able to run 2 miles with uphill just with my nose working on a clear day.
Thanks for this video. Now I feel a bit more informed on why I’m out of breath when running. My score is 24 seconds of holding my breath after exhaling completely. I’m working on joining the military in my country, and I feel like I have the strength and perserverence needed. Just not the endurance. I’ve been running all month and constantly improving. I also bought a jump rope so I can improve my endurance. I just wanna be able to run a few KM in 12 min without stopping.
Thank you for this! I could never understand why I'm always gassed out and no one else seems to be....
This is the missing information I needed, to understand why the Wim Hof breathing technique works. Thanks.
DUDE. Why is Wim Hof suddenly everywhere, I've been looking into his stuff a week ago and since then he is just popping up everywhere I look. Fun stuff, maybe I should really get more into it. Thanks fren
is wimhof really legit? feels like he just puts his body in survival/panic mode all the time. he looks kinda old for his age as well, no?
@@sabinepiter5470 This is an example of the baader meinhof phenomenon.
@@summerjoy1352 Yes, quite possible.
@@Chickenonstilts yeah he legit watch one of his breathing technique videos u will feel good
I’m currently running, 1 mile a day for the 31 days of May and your keeping me going. Thanks for the advice and videos.
How did it go? I have been running a mile every day for a week. I want to do more but my body is not there yet.
Be careful there!
Hey that's a great ideal. I'm going 2 do that this yr. 👍
Wow. I started that yesterday too. Running 1 mile a day. You know a 5K is only 3.1 miles. Thats one of my goals right now
@@terrancekayton007 yeah, it's good, it only takes around 3 weeks to be able to run 3 miles at 8:30 pace at least
I've had things backwards my entire life, and I could never understand why I was always out of breath! Thank you!
Great info!! I’m 40 I haven’t worked out since my mid 20s 26-27 I quit smoking a year ago and I’m going to be getting in shape this video will definitely take me a long way!! Definitely a new 👍💯
How’d you do on the test I made 22. Same thing smoked,late 40’s
@@frankstewart8346 hey bro I was just going through some old emails and I saw this so I wanted to reply back to you I made it to 21🤣😂!! But I’m now I’m starting to run and lift back out so I’m curious to see in six months I’ll come back in six months from now it is March 31 today so around Aug Sept I Will come back hopefully you see this and do the same let me know bro good luck!!💯👍
hell ya billy. its never too late. i love hearing stories like this. Just know you encourage others under neath to do better also
This kind of content was a breath of fresh air. Forgive the pun.
LOL!!!!!
No. I can't.
@@PeytonOver, if you get over 10,000, you might be able to.
@@yinhoukhor7109 I'm just repeating what the scouter said about my power level!
@@PeytonOver, you should be aiming for a milestone like 10,000. You're already ninety percent there.
Most enlightening. Flawless presentation; so easy to understand. Thank you. 😊
Me walking faster than usual:
My lungs: OMG STOOOOP, I CAN'T BREATHHHH
I struggle so much with breathing when I run. Thanks for the invaluable info. Gonna work on it this evening
Same with asthma for me, you need to exhale as much as you need to inhale otherwise you are just going to inflate without any positive changes. And surprisingly I was feeling better breathing less times per minute than average healthy person.
As soon as he started talking I was thinking Oxygen Advantage and Buteyko method. Great stuff. I swear by it.
I'm so happy to see this video! I am an in-experienced runner, but I'm always running with conscious breathing (because I do breathing exercise every day and I am a Certified Breath Coach). Knowing exactly what Coach Nate said about the science makes me feel so proud to be a runner :-) Thank you Coach Nate!
You may like the" Wim Hoff method", he has impressive list of accomplishments.
@Furqan Khan he's the dude in this video :)
Hello, breathjng excercise help me in running? Plz reply i need help
The 1st and 2nd time I did the test I got the inital feeling of I have to breathe at 28 sec but after pausing the video and doing my own timer I made it till 36 seconds and then continued to 54 sec and it only took 3 breaths to get back to normal breathing speed. I'm very happy because I can actually see improvement
Same. (See my comment above). I used to get around a minute or more when I was doing Wim Hof breathing a few years ago, along with the cold showers. Fun.
It seems it doesn't take long to train our bodies to use O2 and CO2 properly.
42 secs and I am 42 yr old, I never breath with my mouth during my easy runs, I only breath with my mouth during tempo and threshold runs, have been doing this for years and it really helps.
I got 45 seconds and I'm 41 but I struggle to run with my mouth closed as my airways aren't good :(
stud!
43 yo and 1min37 secs. Do I win a ham sandwich? :)
@@sylvainbauge No , you win a bulls*** sandwich :)
Hey I don't need to lie to feel good about myself
Just tried this during run, it helps, thank you. Also thanks for helping me lose 3 stone since last sep =]
Nice work!
Oh, what a shame, I hope you find new better stones soon 😔
For me, I inhale and exhale every four steps. I get into my "zone" at the 5th mile and feel my running and breathing become more easy and comfortable. Yet maintaining my heart rate at a low bpm. It does wonders for me.
That's crazy. I just barely got to 30 seconds yet I can barely run a quarter of a mile after quite some time spent runing and attempting to build my endurance. I stumbled upon this channel today after trying to find a solution to my issues and I'm excited to see if all of the tips and education throughout these videos helps. Thank you for putting these videos out into the world, you truly are an inspiration for people across the globe!!
Bro ....i don't know....I'm 65 yrs old...and i could hold 40 secs ...and I'm not as fit as I would like to be....used to be an athelete in my youth. Non smoker and teetotaler till this day ....but the info is valueable
@@stingsweet1976 I was never a super athletic guy. I have done karate all of my life and did wrestled back in high school, but I'm just now focusing on my physical health from all angles. Plus I smoke (weed, not tobacco) so that could lead into more issues of course.
Whatever the case may be, it's good to hear that you're keeping yourself healthy, it reminds me a lot of my dad. That man never stopped his fitness journey until the end, from 5 to 72.keep it up brother, and good luck to you
How are you running now
The truth about this technique however is that you may initially feel much more restricted and out of breath before your body can catch up to it. Once it catches up though you will be much more conditioned.
I only got 10
I just held for 20 seconds and thought i was going to die :)
Same
20 sheesh you guys must be fish i clocked out at 15
Dang I was still doing good at 40
You guys should probably start worming out, did 80 seconds easily, and I smoke occasionally.
Yup! I would experiment with breathing through my nose while running and eventually I could do hard runs and some 10km workouts just breathing through my nose and I improved greatly as time went by! If you breathing very slowly in a steam room or sauna you will be able to last much longer! Thanks for this great video!👍🏻🏃♂️
I come from swimming where nose breathing is critical to keep water out, etc. Also, it has to be synchronized with breath intake in swimming. You use your nose to push out air as you inhale through your mouth in the sidemouth technique.
As a result, it's actually massively difficult for me to not breathe through my nose. In order for my ENT to evaluate my mouth breathing, I have to pinch close my nose.
But I am one of 2 people in the literature with damage to my nose muscle. I have velopharyngeal disfunction as a result of who knows. One of the issues I have with my diagnosis was it is such a rare issue.
Your nose muscles are small and are not explicitly used to conscious control. I worry about overtraining. In fact, I would bet that some sort of overtraining led to my initial injury.
Like VCD/ELIO, my velopharyngeal disfunction has specific triggers: cold definitely, altitude maybe? (still trying to analyze it), allergies or sinal congestion definitely.
It's great to work on your breathing but these are all relatively small muscles that as smooth muscles are not going to "bulk up". Likewise, the tendons that connect your various respiratory tract muscles to your skeleton don't have a toughening up period.
So Coach Nate, I would encourage you to bring a speech/language pathologist into your breathing work, particularly as you are training other people in the techniques. They really are experts on this muscle pathway.
I would also discourage people with any pre-existing conditions from overtraining. Do not do breathing work with active sinus infection conditions. Do not overtrain on breathing if you have a physical blockage or other biological damage, in the same way we wouldn't tell you to run on a broken ankle. Get cleared by an ENT or a Speech/Lang Pathologist if you have a physical barrier to nose breathing.
Having damaged my nose muscles, it has completely re-routed what I can do. My nose will collapse into my airway if I overtrain. I can't breathe in daily life. I have to sleep on my face. It eventually resolves itself but it can take up to 3 weeks to fix itself.
Sprinting and other hard breathing exertions are triggers/cause failure. Cold air can cause a failure. Exercising while dehydrated can cause failure. Exercising with heavy allergy flow can cause failure.
It's a rough way to live when I come from 15 years of swimming and another 15 years of team sports. It took out peak bagging for me. We are just understanding ELIO/VCD and other associated respiratory track damages. We need to move in this space carefully because there is a lot we don't know on a scientific level.
Great video and such an interesting topic. For me 35 secs was quite easy and it took two subsequent breaths to recover so i think it will be possible to get to the 40 mark soon. Feeling fit @ 50.
That's impressive!
that was awesome and explained to me why i always hated running .. thank you
Yes I bought patrick mckeown’s book on oxygen advantage. I have exercise induced asthma and this process helped me tremendously! I had no idea that this even existed. My bolt score now is about 30. Thanks for this video and I hope it will help a lot of people
Mind blowing. I thought breathing through my mouth while running to get the maximum amount of oxygen was the way to go.
Same
40 mmg Hg vs 44 mmg Hg is a big difference even if it doesnt seem like it
But
Its not the only reason why u may be out of breath. Anxiety, stress, depression are huge causes of that.
U must learn how to HEALTHY regulate your emotions, relax your body and regain focus within urself with meditation and mindfullness.
Breathing thru ur nose is a big thing, yes but thats not some magic pill that will solve the main problem which lies in our toxic behaviour towards ourselfs. We just hasnt been educated properly by the "society".
Master yourself and what u are and then u will be able to run 100kms easy
Breathe through both, exhale with your lips slightly pursed.
Same!!!
It is. But people seek out low oxygen environments specifically for training.
Oh man, 20 seconds for me! I could have kept going for sure but it was around then that I felt my diaphragm like pull down a bit like my body wanted to take a breath. So at least I’m on the threshold for normal. I’m ready to work and hit forty!! I’m starting running again tonight. Maybe I’ll come back to this video in a month and see if I’ve improved :D
Hemoglōbin. It was just driving me absolutely batty.
Same. I work in healthcare and have never heard it pronounced like that
Same!!
OMG, Me too!!!
Me too. He was close on a lot of stuff, but slightly off and it felt weird. Like his choice of word for stasis. No - that means frozen in place. Homeostasis is balance
Also.... maybe I'm wrong but isn't he saying it backwards? He's suggesting that we need a higher concentration of carbon dioxide in our bloodstream to regulate our labored breathing? But no... High CO2 levels cause that feeling of suffocating. So you need to focus on your exhale to push CO2 out of your lungs and LOWER your CO2 bloodstream concentration - not raise it up higher.
I've been doing wim hof for 1.5 yrs can do 2min 20 sec,with a wim relaxed not fully out breath during a cycle of wim hof breathing 10.24 sec is my record.
I’m taking a breathwork course but the instructor is less than detailed when it comes to the fundamentals. This video answered some important questions I had, so thank you!
right on track with you, I pushed it to 36 seconds but that was pushing it. 20 seconds was no problem; 27 started feeling it. 36 was "I NEED A BREATH!"
I don’t really workout and I got 51 secs first time. But still can’t run thee are to much without huffin n puffin
Again this isn't about athletic ability, this is about CO2 tolerance.
I’m not entirely sure, but I believe you are supposed to completely exhale. It’s basically “how long can you go before you feel like you need to breathe without oxygen” because you’re just testing your tolerance to carbon dioxide. You probably took a big breath in and only let a little air our, in which case you could go minutes. The guy in the video didn’t really explain the specifics of the test very well.
Hmmmm seems like alot. Did you take deep breaths before starting? Did you completely empty your lungs of air? If I hyperventilate for a while I can do 1 minute+ but if I just try it from normal breath I can do 30 seconds.
jog 4 houses walk two. repeat for 24 -30 houses
Yeah, athletic ability makes a big difference. The muscles in our legs are the bodies largest. After even just a 2 to 3 weeks of training for the first time, they strengthen quickly and the ability to run faster and longer improves substantially and fairly quickly. Running becomes easier and more enjoyable quickly vs the first few outings.
Our bodies are amazing
Wry interesting. I grew up a competitive swimmer, and noticed a few years ago that I get much more out of breath- even dizzy- while running than I do while swimming, despite the fact that I can breathe much more while running. It was a puzzle to me. Just now, I did your one breath hold test, and despite being currently in very poor physical shape, I held my breath for 55 seconds with ease. So I guess there’s my answer. Less, and different, breathing will work better for me. Thanks. Really awesome.
it made me crazy to hear u say glob instead of globe predicated by hemo.
Same
Whoa... I've been very interested in abdominal breathing and breathing through the nose while running!!! Thanks, coach Nate, for sharing this testing on how I can hold my breath! (I was able to hold my breath 36 secs. 🙄🤔) I'll keep practicing. 😅😅
Nice work! Everyone's doing great on this test :)
I left the military because I thought there was something wrong with my heart, but with this video I really wonder how much knowing this at the time could have saved me from leaving. There's more to the story but this comment is too public for me to feel comfortable disclosing my health details. I just may try to get back into shape knowing this in mind. This video was very encouraging to watch.
What I do is count my breaths to my steps.
If im traveling a steady pace I will breathe 3 steps in and 3 steps out.
When I am traveling at a pace that is fast, I breath 2 steps in 2 steps out.
When I am pushing myself at an even faster pace, i breathe 3 steps in and 2 steps out.
I ran 5k in 19 minutes 36 seconds.
Breathing thru my nose?
One word: Allergies!
@Bob - I feel your pain.
@TRE - please do a video on running with allergies. Especially when OTC meds stop working & rebound.
Love the channel
When you hold your nose, nod your head up and down. Try it 5 times.
We didn't get to dive in too deeply on this topic, but there are exercises you can do to unblock your nose. Further your nose acts as a better filter for allergens and pollen which will also help over time. But yes...written down :)
So stop drinking milk
Buy the Oxygen Advantage on Amazon, like $9 for paperback. Teaches you how to unplug your nose, increase your cardio and CO2 tolerance. It's amazing stuff. Nasal breathing has changed my exercise is a great way.
Great info! Thanks for sharing. Remember that other health conditions can affect our oxygen levels. I had adrenal fatigue killing my energy levels. It took a long time to figure out what was happening and how to help myself.
What did you do to get help?
@@TomEatsNC with some simple at home tests I found that I was dealing with adrenal fatigue. This was caused by a chronic fight or flight response created from a life time of abuse. There are several ways to correct this, one of my favorites is using the mammalian dive reflex. By holding your face under cold water, your body will force itself into a responce to survive a swim. This will lower our oxygen consumption, lower anxiety, decrease the heart rate and blood pressure, among other things. All mammals have this involuntary responce to water on the face. You don't need to hold your face in the water till your gasping for breath, but long enough to feel the need for breath. Repeat submerging your face while holding your breath untill you feel a shift. For me, my stomach usually growls, this lets me know that my digestive system just engaged. Your body is not designed to digest and stress at the same time. It's kinda one or the other. If I'm really stressed I will feel a sence of calm hit me when my stomach growls. People very widely with how well they transition depending on their individual conditions. Don't be surprised if you feel extremely exhausted shortly after. It also may be short lived and then I dunk my face again to reset to calm. A super hard nap is a good sign. Hope this helps
@@matthewtikka5133 thanks for the info. I'll give it a try. What did you do to heal the adrenals fatigue? Did you self diagnose? I'm in the same boat but idk where to seek help.
@@TomEatsNC for me it was self diagnosed, then confirmed by a doctor. One easy self test is with your eyes. Within your nervous system, the system that regulates the adrenal glands is the same system that regulates pupil dilation. Go into a dark room with a flash light and give yourself at least 30 seconds for your eyes to adjust to the low light. Facing a mirror hold the flashlight pointing toward your face but not directly at it. Kinda like that classic campfire scene where the flashlight is at chest level shining across your face. Make sure the light hits your eyes. Count the seconds that you pupils stay contracted. If you make it to 30 seconds adrenal fatigue may not be an issue. On the other hand, the shorter the time your pupils are contracted, the more fatigue your adrenals are. For myself, it appears as if the flashlight is flickering on really bad days. My pupils can't hold for more than 3 seconds and they keep recontacting and then letting go. It can happen rapidly. As far as treatment, I have found it's more of a mindset/lifestyle change than anything. Doctors can help, but really all that needs to happen is the body needs to rest. Avoid stimulation like caffeine for a while. Get some proper sleep. Meditation can be extremely beneficial. Lots of people get stuck in what is referred to as beta brain waves, this is good for being productive at work but not good for resting. Meditation can help to learn how to step down into alpha waves and hopefully theta waves. Theta is where the really good spot for healing happens. During this time do whatever you can to let the body and the mind know you are safe. The water on the face trick I mentioned will help. I have found natural things like kava and St John's wart to help as well. Find things that work for you and stick with it for a while. Also, as difficult as it is for some people, cutting down on screen time will help as well. This is a learned thing so don't get discouraged if it seems impossible at first, or it feels as if nothing sticks. Depending on how chronic your condition is, you may only hold the relaxed state for seconds at a time to begin with. But with practice those seconds will grow to minutes and eventually hours and days. Hope this helps
47.92s for the test, paused the video interesting as I posted the number, then listened to the rest...I do a lot of nose breathing and relaxation in my running...used to scuba dive a lot and was very efficient on the tank 👍 but now I'm going to pay a more conscious effort to this... love science 💜 (especially if I can turn it to a new running facet)...cheers 👊
I’m out of breath just watching this.
When holding my breath, I feel fine at first, then there is that window where you feel your body naturally cry out to breathe. If you can power through that window, you reach a point where it ends and you can calmly hold your breath without the panicked need to breathe. I had covid, and both before and after covid I did breath holds, and after I had covid, I made it to almost 2 minutes in front of my friends at a dinner.
That is impressive, doing my Wim Hoff breathing I get a minute max.
I'm proud of myself. I stopped at 33 seconds. I can't run to save my life.
Same
Practiced nose breathing, both in and out, on a 4 mile singletrack trail run through the woods after watching your video today. I think I did pretty well. Generated a lot of boogers, though. Hey, you should do a video on how to blow the perfect snot rocket. Any time I try, I just make a mess. (I never try it when others are around)
Gross - loved it!
I find that if you block the nasal passages with the back of the tongue and allow pressure to build up in your lungs then release with one nostril plugged it usually generates enough force to come out clean.
I saw a vid that said we have a fucked up nasal system because our drainage ducts are very high compared to apes and other mammals generating a lot of mucous. I think this maybe to do with us hunting in or underwater and found that if you tip your head forward towards your knees it is much easier to blow it out. Works backwards as well, but not as easy!
No don't do that! Watch animals. When they're chilling they're breathing through their nose. When they're running they breathe through their mouths, and continue to until they've recovered.
Nose breathing isn't about the size of the hole! It's about warming the air which reduces construction of the airways as well as releasing nitric oxide which is a vasodilator (opens up the blood vessels) Win win. Google it. Buteyko discovered it whilst observing respiratory patients sleeping.
Fascinating. I've never heard it the O2 / CO2 relationship explained like this before. I was awful at the test. Work needed!
Been doing Win Hof for several years, can hold for 40 on this protocol. With the Win Hof with hyperventilation prior, can hold 2 minutes.
I'm not a big believer in all of the guys claims but his exercises will 100% improve your oxygen efficiency and cold tolerance.
Oh wait... did you do the WIN Hof method on accident for all those years instead? You trained wrong!!
(J/k)
@@kj_H65f I don't believe all of his claims either, but science does back the cold exposure. His breathing technique is just one of several that I use. I find his particularly challenging,, not sure if it has any miraculous effects, just fun to do at times and perhaps build up some mental strength and resilience.
Great Video. I'm 52 and started to run 3 years ago again so I can be more active and get stress levels out, I was on the 40 to 45min @ 5k when I started to run .
Yesterday( 09/27/21 I got my first official 5k race and I did 26.12 minutes.
I notice my breathing was not letting me go @ some time on the race and I walk @ list twice but I didn't give up. I will try to follow your advise and improve my breathing for the next race. By the way I subscribed. Thank you for your time posting Videos
On my last practice I did 25.56 so I'm happy to break the 26min mark now. Now goal going for the 25min.
This video is EXACTLY what I needed. I run at every gym session and while I can run for longer now, I was still wonder why the pressure in the lungs, and seeming lack of air won't stop plaguing me. I've tried a few different breathing techniques, but I never understood why none of them really helped.
I'm not the 'believe everything I hear on the internet" kind of person, but I do respect science. Now I've had the chemical exchange explained in this way, it makes sense, and the nostril-only breathing follows that logic.
I am literally going off to the gym, right after writing this, to put it into practice. Thanks for the video.
The way I always thought of it was, when you breathe in through the nose you cause a higher vacuum or pressure difference in your lungs drawing on the capillaries and making the smaller molecule, CO2, leach out more readily and when you breath out through your mouth or nose you cause a slightly higher pressure pushing the oxygen into the capillaries.
Interesting man, do you know where I can get more info on this?
Hmm weird
This really is interesting. Thank you. Something I can work on.
This video improved my condition materially. After some months of monitoring this, I added 15 sec to my "hold". Tx. Really good advice.
25 seconds...interesting take on a concept I was taught 30 years ago through my martial arts training. Known as MOKUSO, the breath is drawn in through the nose for four seconds, held for 2, expelled through the mouth for4, hold for 2...repeat. Do this no matter the intensity of the workout. Extend the timing the more proficient you become. You will automatically breath like this for the rest of your life even whilst asleep.
@
peter mitchell Does it work?
Try this trick. Do this before and after each run! Or whatever you feel tired. Exhale as much as you can from your lungs do it for five times focus on really really exhaling all the air out of your lungs feel your stomach push the air out you can even stop in the middle hold your breath and keep exhaling, taking in minimal amount of oxygen after each exhale. At the end take a deep breath in and I guarantee you will be able to hold your breath way way longer!
I used to be a singer, so I guess I'll technically am still a singer. But over the years I have not sang, and it's due to my breathing. I can't seem to hold a note and I can't seem to even enunciate my words. And something inside has been telling me it's my breathing. Just today I'll stumbled upon a couple videos, this is my second, and I'm seeing hope and singing again, and being able to speak publicly again. Life is so good
Reminds me of a book titled breathe: the science of a lost art
So you first tested a few weeks ago, and since then you can comfortably hold your breath 10 more seconds? That’s incredibly quick.
It’s actually slow progress
Fantastic video. Benefitted me a lot. Thanks for making this great video
I freaked out. The first time was 8 seconds… Second, immediately after, 14 seconds. This is so scary difficult. Thank you for the video!
I tested 22 seconds. This should not only help me with my running (I do 5k's & 10K's. Not very good.) but also with my scuba diving air consumption.
I think this is a bunch of BS. I got 33 seconds and I haven't ran more than 50 yards since college football 8 years ago.
@@blw5005 same. im unfit and got 40 seconds
When I was a kid my coach was telling that while we are training I have to breathe through my nose, or at least breathe in through my nose. I didn't know why, but this helped me a lot. So, turns out this was the reason, very cool.