People with sleep apnea, who experience pauses in breathing or
shallow breaths as they sleep, often wake up countless times during the night.
Not exact matches
Here's what research is showing — that
as we humans text, a few interesting things happen physiologically Our breathing becomes rapid,
shallow, or non-existent (we hold our
breaths until we must breathe).
Most people tend to hold the
breath, breathe very
shallow and tighten up the body
as they approach orgasm.
Breathing like this —
as opposed to taking
shallow breaths, which we tend to do when stressed — forces more oxygen into your cells, slows your heart rate, lowers blood pressure, and improves circulation, ultimately resulting in an energy boost.
As airways narrow in response to asthma triggers (be it pollen, secondhand smoke, or cat dander), you may experience rapid,
shallow breathing, shortness of
breath, wheezing, and coughing.
«Studies have shown that you can take in and give out seven times
as much air — that means seven times
as much oxygen, seven times
as much prana — in a three - part deep
breath than in a
shallow breath.»
When a person is fearful or anxious, the sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight response) is activated, and a person will take quick
shallow breaths to bring oxygen to the muscles
as quickly
as possible (think: being chased by a bear).
Short,
shallow breath is appropriate for fight / flight,
as the body prepares to survive a conflict.
If you're upset and breathing
shallow, take three deep
breaths, exhaling twice
as slowly
as you inhale.
Skeeter's documenting the help is so passive (though Stockett tries and fails to show it
as dangerous), so far removed from real civil rights actions that she comes across
as a
shallow neophyte who will die her last
breath absolutely out of the loop.
But
Shallow Breath is slightly slumped,
as if exhausted, or trying its best to inhale and exhale in the midnight hours.
My
breath becomes
shallow as I am awash with a zen - like focus on maintaining my balance, and partially so
as not to disturb Beck — who is intently fixated on the picnic table in the center of the room.