‘No Privacy’: Why Blind Women Really Need Accessible Pregnancy Tests

HuffPost is part of Verizon Media. We and our partners will store and/or access information on your device through the use of cookies and similar technologies, to display personalised ads and content, for ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development.

Your personal data that may be used

  • Information about your device and internet connection, including your IP address
  • Browsing and search activity while using Verizon Media websites and apps
  • Precise location

Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

To enable Verizon Media and our partners to process your personal data select ‘I agree‘, or select ‘Manage settings‘ for more information and to manage your choices. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Your Privacy Controls.

Share Button

Remdesivir Has ‘Little Or No Effect’ On Covid Patient Mortality, Says World Health Organisation

HuffPost is part of Verizon Media. We and our partners will store and/or access information on your device through the use of cookies and similar technologies, to display personalised ads and content, for ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development.

Your personal data that may be used

  • Information about your device and internet connection, including your IP address
  • Browsing and search activity while using Verizon Media websites and apps
  • Precise location

Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

To enable Verizon Media and our partners to process your personal data select ‘I agree‘, or select ‘Manage settings‘ for more information and to manage your choices. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Your Privacy Controls.

Share Button

First UK Case Of Permanent Hearing Loss Linked To Covid-19

HuffPost is part of Verizon Media. We and our partners will store and/or access information on your device through the use of cookies and similar technologies, to display personalised ads and content, for ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development.

Your personal data that may be used

  • Information about your device and internet connection, including your IP address
  • Browsing and search activity while using Verizon Media websites and apps
  • Precise location

Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

To enable Verizon Media and our partners to process your personal data select ‘I agree‘, or select ‘Manage settings‘ for more information and to manage your choices. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Your Privacy Controls.

Share Button

25-Year-Old Man Had Covid-19 Twice In The Space Of Two Months

HuffPost is part of Verizon Media. We and our partners will store and/or access information on your device through the use of cookies and similar technologies, to display personalised ads and content, for ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development.

Your personal data that may be used

  • Information about your device and internet connection, including your IP address
  • Browsing and search activity while using Verizon Media websites and apps
  • Precise location

Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

To enable Verizon Media and our partners to process your personal data select ‘I agree‘, or select ‘Manage settings‘ for more information and to manage your choices. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Your Privacy Controls.

Share Button

Nose Breathing During Exercise

I’ve continued practicing the exercises from The Oxygen Advantage for the past several days, and this morning I hit a nice exercise-related milestone.

I decided to take the past two days off from running. Instead I went for walks and practiced reducing my breathing while also doing some breath holds. I figured that some extra practice on the breathing side could be helpful.

This morning I went back to running, figuring I’d continue the interval approach. I decided that if I was going to do intervals anyway, I might as well see what it’s like to skip the 15-minute walking warmup. I wanted to know if that part was even making much difference. So I just walked for two minutes and then started running. That’s what I used to do before I’d read The Oxygen Advantage.

I ran a familiar route where the first half is mostly downhill, and the second half is uphill. I figured that I could probably handle a hill better if it was later in the run, so I’d be more warmed up. I’d previously figured out that nose breathing while running gets easier after about 30 minutes.

The first minute was the most difficult, like I wasn’t getting quite enough air. I felt that I might make it about 2-3 minutes before having to step it down to walking for a couple of minutes. Then I could build up to longer intervals like I did last week. But I kept going even though it felt uncomfortable to breathe this way, and my breathing soon stabilized. After 3-4 minutes, I felt like I could keep going and felt optimistic that I could do an hour of nose breathing running without having to step down to walking.

That turned out to be true. I ran for 70 minutes with nose breathing continuously – my first time ever doing a full run that way.

I ran about 10-15% slower than I used to do with mouth breathing, but I’m happy that I was able to do it. I figure I can build back up my speed as my body adapts better to nose breathing.

I didn’t think I’d be able to reach this point so quickly, so that was a nice surprise. I do think that doing more breathing practice for the past two days likely helped.

In the second half of the run, I also did about a dozen breath holds, usually for 12-13 paces. These are harder when going uphill, so sometimes I only made it 10 paces. Note that breath holds are done after exhaling, so the lungs are mostly empty.

I felt like my breathing wasn’t quite where I wanted it to be for much of the run. It seemed a bit heavier than before, even though I was still breathing through my nose the whole time. Interestingly I found that my breathing got lighter at around 55 minutes, during the uphill portion. The last 15 minutes of the run actually felt pretty nice, like I was getting a taste of what it could feel like to nose breathe while running and have it feel comfortable and natural.

I’d love it if my entire runs could eventually feel like those last 15 minutes – with relaxed breathing through my nose.

It’s an interesting challenge to coax my body into a different behavioral pattern, knowing that it’s going to feel uncomfortable for a while. My body breathes heavier as if it needs more oxygen, but it actually doesn’t. It just needs to build up more tolerance for carbon dioxide.

A key point that The Oxygen Advantage makes is that you know you’re making progress when you feel the desire to take a bigger breath. It’s the discomfort of holding back on that bigger breath that helps you progress.

It’s uncomfortable to breathe more shallowly when my body signals that it wants more air. It’s hard to sip air when my body would rather gulp it.

Running while nose breathing doesn’t feel nearly as comfortable as it felt with mouth breathing. I wonder how long it will take for running with nose breathing to feel normal and natural throughout – or even better than my old mouth breathing approach.

Making progress with personal growth often entails discomfort. Building a tolerance for discomfort in general is helpful. The more we build up this tolerance, the easier it is to step into the growth space. If you’re only willing to grow comfortably, you’ll leave a lot of growth possibilities unexplored.

Share Button

Raising Your Baseline

In practicing the slow, shallow breathing approach from The Oxygen Advantage that I shared about during the past two days, I’m grasping that the key to this approach is to define a new baseline for my breathing and then keep synching back to that new baseline whenever I catch myself drifting from it.

The initial temptation is to sync back to my old way of breathing, which can happen automatically when I lose awareness of my breath. Then I might catch myself and practice consciously reducing my breath so I’m not over-breathing.

An aspect of this change that’s easier to catch is when I moderately exert myself for a short burst, like walking up a flight of stairs. My breathing becomes a little heavier afterwards, so I make a conscious effort to bring it back down quickly, ideally within no more than 2-3 breaths.

So it’s like I have a breathing budget, and I’m doing my best not to squander it. My budget for air this week is much lower than it was last week. And next week I’ll try to nudge it even lower.

I realized that a similar strategy also works for adjusting our emotional baselines.

Suppose you often feel depressed, frustrated, angry, anxious, or some other emotion you’d prefer not to feel so much. Pretend that you’ve suddenly been allocated a lower budget for feeling negative emotions, and you have to be careful not to squander it too quickly.

Imagine if life dramatically cut your negative emotion budget by saying: Henceforth you’re only allowed to spend half as much time in negative emotion territory.

How would you obey this mandate?

You need two pieces to succeed here:

  1. Frequent check-ins with yourself to see how you’re doing
  2. A quick recovery strategy to shift from the old behavior to the new one

Whenever you catch yourself experiencing some negative emotion, you must leave that territory and return to a positive or neutral baseline as quickly as possible. Otherwise you’ll squander your negative emotion budget too quickly.

Do you already have such a strategy? Do you know how to quickly shift yourself back to neutral or positive emotional territory? Can you do this within a few breaths?

If you don’t have such a method, then finding one ought to be a key strategic piece for raising your baseline. Being aware of negative emotions isn’t enough – you’ve also got to change them.

To practice reducing my breathing immediately when it’s too rapid, I do the opposite of the unwanted behavior. I deliberately slow down. I can’t breathe slowly and quickly at the same time, so by doing what’s incompatible with rapid breathing, I stop the rapid breathing.

It’s much the same with negative emotion. What’s incompatible with negative emotion? Positive emotion. So if you do something – anything – that makes you feel good within seconds, the negative emotion has to drop off. It can’t hang around while you’re feeling good.

Then the long-term challenge is to habitualize this recovery pattern by always practicing it at every possible opportunity.

I’m doing my best to not let myself over-breathe. Whenever I notice that I’m doing that, I immediately take conscious control of my breathing and slow it down. If I don’t do this, my baseline won’t shift, and I won’t really get to test and experience the results on the other side.

Initially you may have to consciously take control a lot – like dozens of times per day – but if you stay as consistent as you can, you’ll raise your baseline, and the new behavior pattern will become your new default.

Where else could you apply this idea? You could use it for productivity habits, eating habits, early rising, and lots of other areas of life. The key is to develop a rapid strategy for shifting your behavior in a way that’s incompatible with your old baseline. Then apply that shifting behavior every time you catch yourself running the old pattern.

To really create an effective change, the old behavioral baseline must become unacceptable for you. In order to progress to a new baseline, you must eventually regard your old baseline as out of bounds and below standard, even if it still feels normal. This is a simple approach I’ve used repeatedly times for doing personal growth experiments and also for making long-term changes. To embrace the new, there must be some willingness to say: The old behavior is dead to me.

Share Button

Relearning to Breathe

As I noted in yesterday’s post about learning to breathe differently, I’m leaning into a different way of thinking about breathing and working on changing old habits to see how The Oxygen Advantage approach affects me.

This morning I went for my second nose-breathing run with a similar format like I tried yesterday. I started with a 15-minute walk (all nose breathing), and then I was able to run for 3 minutes with nose breathing before dropping back to walking for a few minutes. That’s longer than the 1:44 I did yesterday for the first round.

For the second round, I ran for 5 minutes before dropping back to walking.

And then for the third round, I ran 42:30 continuously. During this segment I also incorporated 10 breath holds with about 12 paces each time. For the last mile, I pushed myself to run a little faster. My pacing was still slower than I could do with mouth breathing, but I’m getting used to running while nose breathing.

After running for 30 minutes straight with nose breathing during the final segment of yesterday’s run, I thought that maybe I could do that right away upon starting today… like maybe my body just needed to learn the right breathing rhythm. Apparently there’s more to this though since it was still challenging starting out today, so that’s why I only made it 3 minutes the first round. It was better than yesterday at least.

Doing a 3-minute round followed by a 5-minute round worked well for starting. Nose breathing does seem easier and more natural when I’m very warmed up, but apparently even a 15-minute walk isn’t enough to warm me up fully for it.

Perhaps I’ll experiment with faster walking for the warmup to see if that makes a difference. It would be nice to run for an hour without needing to do a couple of intervals first. Maybe I just need more practice to retrain my body to get used to exercising with nose breathing.

I also wonder what would happen if I skipped or shortened the walking warmup (even though it’s recommended by the book) and just started with some short running/walking intervals to warm up to continuous running. Previously I would only walk about 2 minutes before I started running.

Walking Breath Holds

I’m also practicing walking breath holds as The Oxygen Advantage recommends. So while walking, I hold my breath from time to time and count how many paces I can go before feeling a strong urge to breathe again. These walking breath holds are done after an exhale, so the lungs are mostly empty.

After the hold I return to normal nose breathing. Usually the next breath or two is heavier, but my breathing calms and stabilizes within 2-3 breaths, which is how it’s expected to go. The purpose is to train the body to tolerate more CO2 in the blood.

Currently I’m averaging around 16 paces per walking hold. According to the book, the goal is to build up to 80 paces, and a good rate of improvement is to add 10 paces per week. So that means adding 1-2 extra paces per day, which seems doable. If I can do 16 steps per hold today, I can probably do 17-18 steps tomorrow.

It seems almost unfathomable to build the duration of these holds from 16 to 80 paces over several weeks of practice – a 5x increase. It would be an interesting result to walk 80 steps without breathing (maybe even by the end of the year) since that’s far from what I can do now. I’ll keep practicing and see if I can get there. Even doubling to 32 steps per hold would feel like an accomplishment.

Early Symptoms

Switching to full-time nose breathing (instead of part-time) while also making my breathing slower and shallower is definitely different. My nose feels clearer inside but also more sensitive, like there’s a mild stinging sensation. It’s similar to the feeling after eating a big dollop of wasabi paste – that hot mustard burning sensation that really opens up the sinuses.

I’ve felt sneezy now and then too. Sometimes it feels like there’s a sneeze stuck in my nose that won’t come out. This is only mildly uncomfortable though.

While my nose feels clearer and more sensitive inside, my throat has been a little more congested. One breathing pathway is getting used more, and the other is getting used less. So I imagine they’re both figuring out how to adjust to this change. The book mentioned that there may be some symptoms while fully adapting to nose breathing.

What I like about The Oxygen Advantage practices is that they’re easy to incorporate into my day. I can do them while sitting at my desk, walking, and running as I’d normally do. So other than reading the book, there isn’t a serious time investment to make. I’m always breathing, so now I just practice breathing differently and weave in a few simple exercises. I also like that the metrics are easy to measure.

Share Button

Apparently I’ve Been Breathing All Wrong

This week I’ve been enthusiastically digesting the book The Oxygen Advantage: The Simple, Scientifically Proven Breathing Techniques for a Healthier, Slimmer, Faster, and Fitter You. It’s eye-opening and counter-intuitive in many ways. I thought I knew how to breathe, but it turns out I didn’t.

Someone recommended this book to me earlier this year, so I added it to my audiobook queue. I wondered what I’d learn about breathing from nine hours of audio that I didn’t already know. I figured it would just be reinforcement of some relaxation techniques and meditative practices that I was already familiar with. Nope, that’s not what it’s about.

What I didn’t expect was that it would challenge what I thought I knew about breathing. This book encouraged me to experiment with breathing differently – not just during some deliberate breathing practice but all day, including during exercise.

It’s too soon to share long-term results since I’m only a couple of days into this type of experimenting, but I like to share what I’m learning along the way since I think there’s value in the newbie perspective.

Shallow Breathing Is Better

I always thought that deep diaphragmatic breathing was good. Breathe slowly and deeply. Sometimes I’ve heard “in through the nose and out through the mouth,” at least for meditative breathing.

Nope – all wrong. Apparently it’s healthier to breathe shallowly, so shallowly that it barely looks like you’re breathing at all. Just inflate the lungs a little, not deeply. And pause for several seconds between breaths.

Perhaps you believe that if you take deeper breaths, it will oxygenate your blood more. Lots of people believe that. So did I. It’s a myth. Breathing more deeply won’t oxygenate your blood any more than breathing shallowly.

I tested this for myself using the new Apple Watch’s blood oxygen sensor, which takes 15 seconds to test each time. Normally my readings are 96-100%. If I breathe deeply, it doesn’t get any better. And when I slow my breathing down even more and breathe as shallowly as I can, the readings are still in the same range.

Is 100% the best result for this test anyway? No, a slightly lower reading is actually better. You want your cells taking the oxygen out of the blood, so if you’re at 100%, it may mean that your cells aren’t absorbing the oxygen as well as they could be. The high 90s are apparently best.

Taking in enough oxygen through breathing isn’t the issue. Your lungs are really good at taking in oxygen, unless you’ve damaged them through smoking or coal mining. If you’re already close to 100%, taking in more oxygen isn’t going to get you any higher. The blood is already as full as it should be.

What matters here is getting your cells to absorb oxygen from the blood more efficiently. This depends on the level of carbon dioxide in the blood, not on the oxygen level. Whether your blood is at 96% or 99% oxygen capacity, you’re unlikely to notice a difference because anywhere in that range, your blood still has plenty of oxygen for your cells. So your blood oxygen is like a cup that’s always full. The real question is how fast your cells are drinking from that cup. Trying to overfill the cup won’t get you anywhere since it’s never low or empty (or you’d be dead).

With more CO2 in the blood, cells naturally take in more oxygen. Shallow breathing doesn’t affect blood oxygen levels, but it does increase the amount of CO2 in the blood. And apparently there are measurable health and fitness advantages to building up your CO2 tolerance, so your blood is higher in CO2 and your cells absorb oxygen more efficiently. Basically you’re helping your cells absorb more of a key resource they need, so your brain and body will work more efficiently. Help your cells at the micro level, and you’ll likely see benefits at the macro level. This sounds reasonable to me as it’s explained in the book, but of course it invites personal testing to know for sure.

When you hold your breath, what makes you feel that strong urge to breathe again? You may think that it’s your need for more oxygen. It isn’t. It’s actually the urge to get rid of the CO2 that’s building up.

Even while you hold your breath, there will still be plenty of oxygen in your blood being delivered to your cells for a good while longer, but the carbon dioxide buildup feels incredibly uncomfortable, and that increasing CO2 makes you want to breathe again.

As it turns out, developing a higher tolerance for CO2 is advantageous. While CO2 is a waste product, it actually does some good if you can handle higher concentrations of it, including potentially reducing depression and improving focus. And that’s because CO2’s presence encourages cells to take in more oxygen, as previously noted.

I wasn’t aware of this before reading this book, so this simple reframe motivates me to experiment with it to see how breathing differently affects me physically, mentally, and emotionally. I love these types of growth experiences where I learn some new tidbit of information, and then I can dive into some fresh experimentation to see where that information leads in terms of results.

Consequently, this week I’ve begun practicing with making my breathing slower and more shallow, such as while I sit at my desk and work, challenging myself to lean into a less comfortable way of breathing until I get comfortable with it.

Take a Simple Breathing Test Right Now

Here’s a simple breathing test you can take right now. It’s called the BOLT test (Body Oxygen Level Test). It will take less than a minute. You just need a timer or stopwatch – some way to measure seconds. I’m sure you can Google to find an online timer if necessary.

Here’s what to do:

  1. Stabilize your breathing if you’ve been moving around.
  2. Breathe in once normally and then out normally, through your nose.
  3. After your out-breath, pinch your nose with your fingers to prevent any extra air from getting in, and keep your mouth closed. This is when you begin timing.
  4. For this next step I’ll quote the exact wording from the Oxygen Advantage website: “Time the number of seconds until you feel the first definite desire to breathe, or the first stresses of your body urging you to breathe. These sensations may include the need to swallow or a constriction of the airways. You may also feel the first involuntary contractions of your breathing muscles in your abdomen or throat as the body gives the message to resume breathing. (Note that BOLT is not a measurement of how long you can hold your breath but simply the time it takes for your body to react to a lack of air.)”
  5. When you feel that first definite desire to breathe, release your nose, take a normal breath, and note how many seconds have passed. Keep breathing normally afterwards.

Your BOLT score is the number of seconds you timed.

If you do this right, you should be able to breath calmly afterwards. If your breathing is strained or rapid after you release your nose, you held your breath for too long. You want to breathe when you feel the urge to breath, so it’s not a contest to try to hold your breath for longer than that. Keep your ego out of the testing process, and seek the truth.

I suggest you do this test now if you can before you continue reading. I’ll wait. 🙂

When I do this test, I’m not always sure about the exact second when I feel that definite desire to breathe because it comes on semi-gradually. So there might be a 3-4 second range where I’m not really sure if I’m there yet. But I figure that even if I’m off by +/- a few seconds, I’ll still get some worthwhile info from the measurement, and I can also see if I’m improving over time. I might not notice a 3-second improvement, but I’d surely notice a 10-second gain.

According to the book, a typical score is around 20 seconds, and the ideal score to build towards is 40 seconds. If you’re below 10 seconds, you likely have some health challenges that you probably already know about. Apparently you’ll notice health improvements with every 5 seconds of improvement in your score. The book goes into detail on those improvements, along with many exercises for how to improve.

The first few times I tested my BOLT score earlier this week, I kept landing in the 13-17 second range. Yesterday I tried it again after breathing calmly and shallowly for a while, and I got 19-21 seconds. I just tested it now this morning, and I’m currently getting 15-16 seconds. So my scores aren’t hideous, but they aren’t great either. Awesome! That means this is likely to be a growth experience. Now I’m extra curious about what would happen if I trained up to 40 seconds.

Nose Breathing While Exercising

Do you breathe through your nose or mouth while exercising?

I’ve always been breathing through my mouth. Even while walking, I usually breathe through my mouth unless I’m going fairly slowly.

I can’t recall ever doing running, cycling, elliptical, weight training, martial arts, tennis, or any other kind of sustained exercise while breathing through my nose.

If I tried to breath through my nose while exercising, I’d feel like I wasn’t getting enough air. So I always breathe like a doggie. 🙂

The possible exception is yoga, but only if it’s a very yin style with long, slow stretches. If I’m doing a form of yoga that gets my heart rate up, including hot yoga, then I’ll be breathing through my mouth for at least part of it.

When I’m not exercising, I normally breathe through my nose, but even then I might sometimes catch myself breathing through my mouth, depending on what I’m doing.

According to the book, I’ve been doing it all wrong. Supposedly it would be wise to retrain myself to breathe through my nose all the time, including during exercise. I wondered if I could even do that.

I love running and typically run 5-6 miles most mornings, sometimes more. I always breathe through my mouth when I run though. Breathing through the nose doesn’t seem like it would give me enough air. But apparently I don’t need as much air (or oxygen) as I might think. Instead I need to develop a higher tolerance for CO2. Breathing through my mouth all of these years has likely made me extra sensitive to CO2, so I breath through my mouth while running to get rid of CO2 quickly.

Feeling like I can’t get enough air while breathing through my nose is actually the discomfort of CO2 buildup. It’s not the need to take in more oxygen. Fascinating!

I wondered how to retrain myself to run while breathing through my nose. I didn’t see any way that I could just immediately switch over and still be able run for an hour or more. I figured I might only last a minute the first time I tried it, and then I’d be choking for air like that scene in Total Recall.

So how to train if I can’t just switch right away? Do I try doing intervals, switching between mouth and nose breathing? I figured I could do that and then extend the intervals till I could fully sustain nose breathing.

Fortunately the book had another suggestion, which is to do only nose breathing but go slower, and then drop down to walking if necessary. So it can still be done like interval training but between walking and slow running, not between mouth and nose breathing. Okay, I could try that approach.

This morning I decided to see what would happen if I tried breathing through my nose. The book notes that warming up adequately makes it easier. So I walked for 15 minutes to warm up slowly, breathing through my nose the whole time. Even that felt a bit awkward, but I’ve been practicing walking with nose breathing for a couple of days now, so it’s getting easier. Now I can walk with nose breathing sustainably if I don’t go too fast, even though it still feels a little weird and unnatural.

After 15 minutes of walking, I switched to running at an easy pace. It felt like my body was confused right away. I struggled to coordinate a good rhythm between my steps and my breathing. I didn’t know how big or fast my breaths should be. It was pretty obvious that my breathing wasn’t in very good sync with my running.

I made it 1:44 before I had to drop down to walking again to catch my breath, so not even 2 minutes. But I stuck with nose breathing throughout and didn’t open my mouth. I stabilized my breathing with a few minutes of walking and decided to try again. I figured I’d make a game of it and see if I could keep beating my previous best each time I tried. Could I beat 2 minutes this next time?

The second time was better – still awkwardly unnatural at first, but I began falling into a better rhythm. I ran with nose breathing for 5 minutes straight. I probably could have gone longer, but I thought it wise not to push too far too quickly. I figured I’d give my brain some time to process the learning experience more gradually.

I did a few more minutes of walking, still nose breathing. Then I ran for 10 minutes with nose breathing – starting to get the hang of it. That’s more than I expected to be able to do in my first training session of this type.

Then a little more walking, and for the final stretch I ran for 31:30, which was closer to 30 minutes of actual running since I had to stop at a traffic light to cross the street at one point near the end. Amazing!

I was surprised that I could do that in just my first training session with this approach. I don’t think I’ve ever run for 30 minutes straight while breathing through my nose – like never in my life. Somehow I just learned to exercise while breathing through my mouth, and I never thought that might be a problem.

Additionally during the last stretch, I also wove in some breath holding, which is supposed to help even more with the training effect. Now and then I’d hold my breath while running for 10-12 paces, so that’s just a few seconds each time. Then I’d resume normal breathing, always through my nose the whole time. I did about 12-15 of these breath holds during the 30-minute segment. It took me 2-3 breaths to stabilize my breathing after each hold. The hardest were when I was running uphill.

Eventually I’d like to build these breath holds to 20-40 paces, which should be doable as I get more efficient.

I’ll keep training with this approach to see where it leads since I’m super curious about it. I imagine that I could do a 60-minute run with nose breathing very shortly, maybe even tomorrow, since I just did half of that this morning. The key seems to be giving my brain and body enough practice to learn to sync breathing and movement, so I get into a nice rhythm. The rhythms for exercising with nose breathing and mouth breathing are different. I think I figured out one version of a sustainable rhythm today, but I’ll likely need more time to learn the rhythms for different conditions like faster pacing and doing hills. I think it’s just a matter of keeping my mouth closed while running, and my body will figure it out.

Note that I did today’s run at a slower pace than usual, so my heart rate was on the low side for cardio – only in the 120s most of the time (124 bpm average, 140 max). It may take a while longer to rebuild the pacing with sustainable nose breathing.

I’m especially curious if I can eventually run faster while breathing through my nose than I could through my mouth. That seems impossible if I’d need more air to run faster since I can’t take in as much air through my nose. But now that I know that this is really about CO2 tolerance, not oxygen intake, I have to wrap my mind around the idea that it’s very possible that I could run faster while taking in less air than before. That idea makes my brain do a double-take, but it will be fun to find out. That would be freakishly weird – and cool – to discover that I might actually run faster with nose breathing.

For now I revel in the challenge of exploring a different way of running. After decades of doggie style, I’m ready for a fresh approach. For the next few weeks at least, every run will seem different than before, even on familiar routes.

I also have to relearn how to do other exercises with nose breathing. And even when I was doing nose breathing, I have to practice how to take shallower breaths with longer pauses between breaths. I practiced this while doing 40 minutes of yoga last night, and I noticed that my heart rate was lower than usual… as low as 52 bpm on some floor stretches. I think that’s the lowest heart rate I’ve ever seen during a yoga session.

If any of this fascinates or challenges you, I encourage you to read The Oxygen Advantage. See if it inspires you to retrain yourself to breathe differently and to improve your BOLT score. If you get into this and notice some improvements, please let me know how it goes, so we can compare notes.

Share Button

Weight Loss Injection Ads Banned For ‘Irresponsible’ Claims

HuffPost is part of Verizon Media. We and our partners will store and/or access information on your device through the use of cookies and similar technologies, to display personalised ads and content, for ad and content measurement, audience insights and product development.

Your personal data that may be used

  • Information about your device and internet connection, including your IP address
  • Browsing and search activity while using Verizon Media websites and apps
  • Precise location

Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy.

To enable Verizon Media and our partners to process your personal data select ‘I agree‘, or select ‘Manage settings‘ for more information and to manage your choices. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Your Privacy Controls.

Share Button

End the Vegan Tax

Vegans are typically well aware of the vegan tax – the extra money we pay to order a latte, a pizza, or some other item made vegan instead of with animal products. Substitute plant-based milk for dairy or vegan cheese for dairy cheese at a restaurant, and you can often expect to pay more.

Starbucks is one of the main outlets that’s been charging a vegan tax for years, whereby it costs extra to order a drink with soy milk, almond milk, or coconut milk instead of the same drink make with dairy. Lots of other places that offer drinks with plant-based milks also charge extra for it.

Depending on what you order, the vegan tax may be $0.70 to $1.00 for a drink or perhaps $2.50 to $5 more for vegan cheese on a pizza.

Why do places charge this? The short answer is because they can. It makes them extra money to do so. It stems from self-interest.

Vegans pay this tax grudgingly. We’ve gotten used to it, but it remains a sore spot, and it does create a negative impression of any brand or outlet that charges it. I mean… how can vegans not see Starbucks as just a bit assholish for doing this? It’s a greed move – and an unfair one.

The vegan tax positions ordering a vegan item as doing something special or out of the ordinary, so it normalizes animal products. Why should the milk of a raped cow be regarded as normal while some almonds blended in water are treated as special?

I can whip up some almond, cashew, or macadamia nut milk in my kitchen in a minute or two. These are super easy to make. I can also make soy milk using an inexpensive soy milk maker. It’s a bit more involved to get a cow, rape it to make it pregnant, sell its baby for scrap, and drain its tits.

Where there’s an annoyance like this that negatively affects a lot of people, there’s also an opportunity when seen through an entrepreneurial lens.

In some ways this situation is similar to when Blockbuster Video charged late fees back in the day. This policy annoyed customers but nicely padded Blockbuster’s billions. Customers tolerated it for a while, but it also left an opening (one of many) for a competitor to step in and provide a better service.

The vegan tax provides an obvious entrepreneurial opening, and some places are already capitalizing on it. As just one example, I learned of a new coffee place opening up this month in Vegas (where I live) that claims it won’t charge a vegan tax.

Golden Fog Coffee will reflect owners Derek and Juliet Douglas’ plant-based lifestyle where the menu will be 100% vegetarian and will not charge a “vegan tax” or higher prices for plant milks or vegan food items.

Source

But note that on the Golden Fog coffee website, they also buy into the framing of normalizing animal products with the label “standard.”

Standard and plant based quick bite items will be available for patrons, as well as a variety of milk alternatives for plant based latte lovers.

If it were me, I’d use the label substandard for animal products. It’s fair to say that a rapey production process qualifies as a lower standard.

Due to government subsidies, a lot of the true cost of animal products is hidden too. So vegans are actually being double taxed.

Overall it’s an unfair economic frame that ought to collapse under its own lameness and greed. But we can help to speed it along by calling out the tax as an unfair one, and we can encourage entrepreneurs who grasp the opportunity for better fairness and service.

We can also encourage better framing, such as by labeling vegan items as normal and non-vegan ones as rapey. 😉

Share Button