Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - James Nestor on the Art and Science of Breathing
Episode Date: August 17, 2022Breathing might sound like a boring topic. It’s our most basic biological function, and something we do unconsciously every day. So, it may seem shocking that a book with the title Breath could beco...me a New York Times bestseller. The reality is breathing is a lot more fascinating than many people realize, and how you do it can have drastic effects on your health. That’s something James Nestor (the author of Breath) discovered while researching his book, which explores how humans have lost the ability to breathe properly and how it affects our health in various ways, including snoring, sleep apnea, asthma, autoimmune disease, and allergies. And all that is why I invited James onto the podcast to discuss this often-ignored aspect of everyday life and how we can change our breathing habits to improve our lives. In this interview, James and I discuss . . . Why you’re probably a mouth breather (even if you think you’re not) How breathing affects sleep and what you can do to fix snoring Resonant, coherent breathing and how it affects mental and physical health Tips on how to breathe and what to do in between sets in the gym And more . . . In case you’re not familiar with James, he’s an author and journalist who has written for Scientific American, Outside Magazine, BBC, The New York Times, The Atlantic, National Public Radio, and more. So, if you're at all curious how your breathing technique is affecting your health, and what you can do to improve your breathing patterns, sleep, and more, don’t miss this podcast! --- Timestamps: 0:00 - Try Recharge today! Go to https://buylegion.com/recharge and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! 4:06 - What inspired you to write the book Breath? 5:17 - Why are we the worst breathers? 10:22 - What are some of the negative effects of bad breathing habits? 12:03 - Can you explain “mouth taping”? 14:32 - How does mouth tapping while sleeping affect sleep cycles and stress levels? 16:16 - Can we train ourselves to breathe better? 19:04 - Do you recommend any breathing routines? 20:41: - What do you mean by breathing at a slower rhythm 25:01 - Can you explain some mouth taping techniques? 28:57 - Are there some symptoms of mouth breathing during your sleep? 31:39 - How to deal with tape adhesive? 41:52 - Is there anything you would like to add? 47:26 - Do breathing techniques benefit recovery during workouts? 50:57 - Where can we find you and your work? --- Mentioned on the show: Try Recharge today! Go to https://buylegion.com/recharge and use coupon code MUSCLE to save 20% or get double reward points! Breath: https://www.amazon.com/Breath-New-Science-Lost-Art/dp/0735213615/?tag=mflweb-20 James Nestor’s Website: www.mrjamesnestor.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello there, lovely listener. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me
today to learn about a topic that sounds kind of boring, breathing, our most basic biological
function, something we do unconsciously all day, every day. But my guest today, James Nestor,
has taken that topic and turned it into a New York Times bestselling book
because it's actually a lot more fascinating than most of us realize.
And how we go about breathing can have drastic effects on our health and well-being.
And that is what today's interview is going to be about.
James is going to share some of the interesting things that he learned in researching his book
and exploring how we humans have lost the ability to breathe properly and what that is doing to
our health and our well-being. Before we wade into it, your ability to gain muscle and gain
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Try Recharge risk-free and see what you think. Hey, James. Good afternoon. Well,
is it the afternoon for you? Just afternoon right now. You hit it by about seven minutes.
So yes, we're safe to say that.
So you're on the West Coast then, obviously.
I am indeed, yes.
Cool.
Well, thanks for taking the time to do this.
I really appreciate it.
And I want to start by just saying that as somebody who has written a few books myself
and sold a few books, it's always fun for me to see somebody do what you've done
with breath because you've taken something that sounds kind of banal, um, uh, breathing. Okay.
And then you made it interesting and made it practical and made it, made it popular,
or at least more popular, more mainstream than it was, uh, before you published your book.
So congrats on that. Thanks a lot. Appreciate that. Yeah. And
so this isn't normally how I start these interviews, but I was curious. I want to ask,
what inspired you to write the book? Like, how did you get interested enough in breathing to
want to write a whole book on it? And because again, I'll ask that because I've written a few
books and I know what it takes to do that if you're going to do a good job. It wasn't one
thing in particular. It was a whole bunch of things that happened over years and years
and years. And I kept getting told no by every single person I talked to about this book from
friends to journalists, to my agent, to my publisher. They thought it was a pretty bad idea.
I did as well, but it was only until years of digging and research having my own personal experiences
that i realized that i thought that there was another story that could be told about breathing
if you go to a bookstore there's a lot of how-to books they're pretty new agey feel good nothing
wrong with that but they didn't really get into the nitty-gritty of why breathing is important and specifically why human breathing, why modern
humans are the worst breathers in the animal kingdom. And so I thought that was a more
interesting story to explore. And I spent years and years digging into it, trying to figure it
out. Why are we the worst breathers? Well, you can just look around and see we have a face that is dramatically different than the faces of
our ancestors. And when I first discovered this, I didn't believe it until researchers told me to go
look at old skulls, which I did for months and months. And you notice something that all of our
ancestors had straight teeth. They had very large mouths. They had these pronatic faces, these faces that
grew outwards. And if you look around today, the vast majority of us have crooked teeth
because our mouths are so small. Teeth want to grow in crooked or rather they want to grow in
straight, but our mouths are so small that they have to fight for position. That's why they grow
in crooked. Well, prettier though. A hundred, not true. If you look at statues, you think if we had the, that might be
pretty. Well, look at, look at Greek statues, right? It depends on what your definition of
pretty is. And Lord knows there's about 4 million different definitions for, for what attractive is
now. And that's great. Next time you go into a museum, look at old Greek statues, look at old
Greek paintings, look at friezes on the wall, look at Egyptian statues, and then look at what happens
to paintings of people and sculptures of people starting around the 1500s and 1600s. And look
what happens to their faces. And that could be more attractive for some people, but functionally, it is much less
efficient and much more troublesome to breathe through a mouth that is too small. We tend to
choke a lot more. We have chronic obstruction in our noses, and it's made us look dramatically
different. I suppose I was thinking more prehistoric in the aesthetic.
Well, sure. But there's a beauty in function as well. You know, our ancestors were perfectly
designed to function in that environment, which is why we're around today and which is why so
many other animals aren't. But if you look at what's considered traditional beauty, you know, and you look at
our ancient human ancestors from 10,000 years ago, 5,000 years ago, 2,000 years ago, 1,000 years ago,
they all had these pronathic, these wide jaws and these pronathic faces. And if you look at
models today, models and sports stars, they tend almost all the time to have these wide faces.
And that's what we view as attractive because we're viewed to things that are functional,
right?
True.
And so then how does that connect with breathing, though?
Connects with breathing because if you have a mouth that's too small for your face,
you have a smaller airway.
If you have a smaller airway, you're going to have trouble breathing.
This is one of the reasons why so many of us struggle with snoring and sleep
apnea, chronic sinusitis. This upper palate of our mouths here is designed to be flat and very wide.
For the vast majority of us nowadays, that upper palate goes up and then impedes the airflow in
our noses. So we end up breathing through our
mouths all the time, which if we do that long enough, when we're younger, our faces will
actually grow differently. They will become more recessed, which will make it harder for us to
breathe when we're adults. So add to that the posture that everyone's sitting in. I'm a great
example of that right now, hunched over a desk for 10 hours a day. Add to that pollution, allergens, indoor pollution, outdoor pollution, and it's
just been a recipe for respiratory disaster. And that's what we're seeing all over the planet
right now. And so if I'm hearing you correctly, then one of the primary factors in this change in our jaw, in our faces, is mouth breathing?
Too much mouth breathing?
That's one of them.
Most of it is due to the industrialized diet that we started eating about 300 years ago,
depending on where you were, maybe a little earlier, maybe a little later than that.
That food did not allow us to chew a lot.
And our ancestors were chewing for hours a day,
which is one of the main reasons
why they had these big pronathic faces, right?
You also have a population that has not been breastfed
for two years and three years,
which makes a big difference for facial growth.
And then after that, after infancy,
you've got an environment that teaches people
to sit down in front of stuff, hunched over all day.
And when they're not working in this position, they're like that when they're at home, hunched over, looking at a computer, watching TV.
And we're chronically obstructed.
The majority of us suffer from some sort of chronic obstruction because of, again, pollution, allergens, some immune issues.
And so all of these things, not just one in particular, there's some that have been
more powerful drivers than others, but all of these things have combined to really make us
terrible breathers. And that's taken such a huge hit to our health because of that.
What are some of the negative effects that people might not
be aware of that stem directly from either mostly or exclusively from just a lot of bad breathing?
I think that people are aware that if you breathe improperly, it can make it harder to work out if
you're if you're easing. Seems like that word is getting out and about.
But what a lot of people don't realize is how you breathe,
especially how you breathe at night,
will determine your chances of having a stroke
later on in life, will help influence
whether or not you get heart disease,
will help influence whether or not you get
metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and more.
Who knew that all of these chronic conditions
were tied to our breathing,
specifically sleep disordered breathing? So if you look at all of the vast majority of the chronic
maladies that we are suffering from today, these are conditions that humans have created. They are
not around in a natural environment. These are things that we've created.
So the way that we can help ameliorate these problems
and reduce them or get rid of them entirely
is to turn back to a more natural form.
If you look at animals in the wild,
look at how they're breathing, right?
Look at a horse running at full sprint,
how it's breathing, a cheetah running at 50, 60 miles per hour, how it's breathing, it's breathing through its nose
into its belly. And it's so rare that you see people breathing this way, especially at night,
the vast majority of us are mouth breathers at night. And it's, it's just, it's affecting us in
innumerable ways. I named a few of them, but there are many more than that.
in innumerable ways. I named a few of them, but there are many more than that.
And speaking of breathing through your mouth at night, so can you talk to us about mouth taping,
which when I first heard about it, I actually heard about it. It wasn't from you. I heard about it from somebody else. And of course, my initial assumption was this has to be bullshit,
right? And let me look at this. Then I was like, there actually seems to be something to this.
And I even did it a bit myself
and didn't notice much of a difference probably because I don't breathe too much through my mouth
at night, I suppose. But I thought it was interesting. Yeah. So I heard about this years
and years ago. I was in the same position as you. I thought that this was just complete idiocy and
it didn't help to go on YouTube and see people using duct tape and seven different
pieces of tape that they do this thing every now and then. I was like, this is so stupid.
And it wasn't until months and months after that, that I started talking with researchers,
clinicians at Stanford, other leaders in the field. They say, don't tell anyone,
but I prescribe this to all my patients.
And I said, well, why aren't you more open about this? They said, because people are going to think I'm a quack, but I've been doing it for decades. And it's so effective, especially for
kids who are chronic mouth breathers, especially at night and for adults as well. So to be clear,
mouth taping isn't going to cure everyone's problems, right? But from what I've seen, there are only benefits to be had from this. For some people, those benefits are very small. For other people, it's completely transformed their health. Completely. People who have been chronic snorers for their whole lives, for decades and decades, no longer snore when they mouth tape. Same thing with sleep apnea can be greatly reduced. Am I saying that this is going to work for you if you have sleep apnea now? No, but it will have some sort
of effect on you. And that effect from what I've seen will be positive. Could be micro, could be
major. So it wasn't until I actually tried this myself that I realized I was a mouth breather at
night. As long as I've known, I thought it was
normal to go to bed with a pint of water by your bedside and to wake up and go pee a few times a
night until I started breathing through my nose and realized that I didn't need that water. I
didn't need to wake up and go to the restroom throughout the night. And my sleep quality just
went through the roof just by closing my mouth because of
course it did how you breathe during night is is so important to your sleep cycles and your stress
levels and more how does that affect sleep cycles and stress levels when we're sleeping when you're
breathing through your mouth especially when you're choking or you're snoring you're stressing
your body out right so you're increasing, you're going to get spikes in blood
sugar, cortisol, you're going to be waking yourself up, you're going to be inhibiting yourself from
entering into those very deep layers of deep sleep, which are so essential. Those are usually
the layers that we get into earlier on in the night. If you look at people with chronic sleep
apnea, they never really enter into those deep sleep stages, which means they're never able
to really filter out all the junk in their brains and start anew. And if you don't do that for long
enough, you're going to suffer. You're going to suffer from mental issues. You're going to suffer
from physical issues. This is not controversial stuff, right? We've known this for decades and
decades. So breathing through your mouth makes it much easier to snore or have sleep disorder
breathing. What happens when you breathe a lot of air quickly?
It's really easy to make that sound.
Now breathe very softly in a rhythm through your nose and try to snore.
Almost impossible.
So the nose is slowing down that air and it's controlling your respiration.
So you don't go.
nose is slowing down that air and it's controlling your respiration. So you don't go.
It's hard to do that when you're breathing through the nose. So this trains you into that natural sleep cycle and that natural respiration, which will allow you to have better quality sleep.
If you look at other animals sleeping, look at how they're breathing. They're breathing
through the nose. I think nature knows something how they're breathing. They're breathing through the
nose. I think nature knows something. And I'm sure humans were breathing through their noses
when they were sleeping before the modern age, at least a lot more than we are now.
And can we train ourselves to breathe better so it becomes instinctual and we're not
constantly having to pay attention to, okay, breathing in
deeply into the stomach. Yeah. You know, the last thing any of us needs is another thing to feel
guilty about. We've got enough of that with diet, you know, reading the label of every single package
of food, counting calories, counting carbs, counting protein, counting fat. We get enough
of that exercising. Did I get my 7,000 to 10,000 steps a day? Did I work out for two hours? Like
I said, I was. Then you haven't even touched nutrition yet. Did I eat enough fruit today?
I ate enough vegetables that Ian. Yeah, I've had too much fructose. Oh no. You know, I, I,
glucose is okay, but fructose and not. I think my liver is shutting down.
Yeah, am I in ketosis?
Oh my God, did I just eat lectins in those fava beans?
Let me check my constant glucose monitor.
Yeah, and you know what?
For a lot of people, that stuff is so important.
We have the power to take our health into our own hands now,
which I think is so exciting with all of these wearables
and with all of this knowledge
about nutrition and exercise. It's awesome. But I don't think we need to feel guilty or we need
orders in another category. So unfortunately, though, you can eat all the right foods, you can
exercise all you want. But if you aren't breathing correctly, you're never ever going to be healthy
ever. And I believe that more now than I ever have. So you have to find a way of fixing your dysfunctional breathing.
The majority of us are breathing dysfunctionally. That's just a fact. So what I've found is all of
these methods, sleep tape, controlling the respiration throughout the day, coherent breathing,
some breath work, all of these things help train you to become normal.
They don't make you superhuman.
They just get you down to that normal level, which is where you should have been.
And after a while, for some people, these habits can be adopted after a couple of weeks
of breathing properly.
Their bodies just get it,
and then they never have to think about it because breathing is an unconscious act, right? You want
to set your body up for that natural rhythm so it becomes unconscious. Other people, it's going to
take months. Maybe some people, it's going to take years. So it depends on how dysfunctional your
breathing is. Depends specifically on what that dysfunction is. Is it dysfunctional your breathing is, depends specifically on what that dysfunction is.
Is it dysfunctional breathing at night?
Is it dysfunctional breathing while you're exercising,
at rest, when you're sitting on a couch, whatever.
But these simple steps,
the point is not to make you feel guilty,
it's to acclimate your body to normal breathing
so you breathe that way unconsciously the rest of your life.
And you mentioned breath work. Is there a simple routine that worked well for you or that you would
share? You know, I think of, for example, I run through about 10 minutes of yoga poses just for
stretching. For me, my hips tend to get tight and my shoulders tend to get tight. So I do,
it's no more than 10 minutes a day, but that's really helped a lot in the gym. And I would say
just in general, and it's,
you know, something simple that doesn't take much time.
Well, everyone's different. I make a big point in the book not to prescribe the same thing to
everyone and say, you just need to do this and you're going to be cool because people are of
different sizes. They have different tolerance levels. They have different problems with their breathing.
So you have to experiment with different stuff and see what works best for you.
I found that more vigorous breath work.
I really respond to that.
I like Kundalini.
I like Kriyas.
I like the real intense stuff.
Wim Hof method is fantastic.
The science behind that is rock solid.
But some people will respond to much more mellow breathing.
I try to make a point in the book also, before you want to go from like zero to 100 with
your breathing, you have to be able to breathe normally first.
This isn't as sexy and as fun to wear sleep tape and to breathe in these very slow rhythms
throughout the day than it is to show up with a whole group of people and to breathe in these very slow rhythms throughout the day
than it is to show up with a whole group of people
and to breathe to hallucinate.
Like, you know, that's quite an adventure.
But it's necessary to get that normal stasis,
that solid breathing down before you bump up
to the next level of human potential.
When you say breathing at a slower rhythm, what do you mean?
Most of us breathe too much and we breathe too quickly. So if you look at what is considered
normal right now, anywhere from 12 to 20 breaths a minute is what's considered normal. But 50 years
ago, it was about 8 to 12. So you see how much that has shifted.
So many people are breathing so much.
And once you cover yourself with sensors and sit in a lab, something I've done a zillion
times at this point, and you notice what happens to your body when you fill up your
lungs a little more, you allow your diaphragm to descend a little more.
You take fewer breaths, but each of those breaths are richer, a little deeper and calmer.
You look at what happens to your blood pressure, your heart rate, your heart rate variability, other markers of stress and relaxation, and your whole body enters this state of coherence where everything works
at perfect efficiency, which is exactly what you want, which is why this slow breathing is referred
to as resonant or coherent breathing, which is why it's used all over the world by not only
therapists, but for people with blood pressure issues or autoimmune issues or depression issues.
Everyone can benefit from running a little more efficiently.
It sounds like that's something that also would be great to do at night when you're winding down,
maybe even in bed when you're trying to go to sleep.
Absolutely.
And a lot of people have used this and found it has really been helpful for sleep.
Not only the sleep tape thing,
which you can do or not do. I don't care what you do. I found it's been a huge benefit to me. And
that's the one thing I've heard more from people than anything else. Thousands and thousands of
people is how much that's transformed their sleep and their lives. But this slow breathing,
whenever you're traveling, I've found is really effective. And you can slow it down even more to lower your heart rate even more.
This is something you shouldn't do in the middle of the day because it'll make you too
mellow.
And sometimes you don't want to be too mellow.
But if you're on a plane and you've got another 10 hours to go, or if you're agitated, need
to go to sleep, you can breathe in to a count of about four, hold for
seven, exhale for eight. We'll just do that once. So you breathe in two, three, four, hold two, three,
four, five, six, seven, exhale two, three, four, five, six, just like that.
It's very simple.
And if you put your hand over your heart, you're going to notice when you're holding
your breath or exhaling, your heart rate is going to decrease because this is you controlling
your biology.
It's you tapping into your nervous system and allowing your body to feel safe and to
relax.
Once you're in that state, it's much easier to fall asleep.
I know this is something soldiers even talk about in firefights
for helping regulate their heart rate and just keeping their body under control
so they can continue to fight back.
So if it can work under those conditions.
Yeah, the last thing you want to do is have a scattered it can work under those conditions. Yeah. The last thing you
want to do is have a scattered brain when your life is on the line and a lot of military use
box breathing, inhale to four, hold for four out for four, hold for four, just like a box.
And if you think of someone like a sniper, I can't imagine a sniper being good at his or her job going.
The very first thing you do when you're stressed out in your office,
when you're about to go on and perform somewhere, when you're about to go and talk somewhere,
taking these slow rhythmic breaths can change the way your brain functions and how your body functions as well. Can you talk to us a little bit more about the mouth taping?
Because for people who haven't heard of this, they're going to be wondering, okay, so duct tape
is out. Understand that. What kind of tape? And they might have some concerns, probably the concerns
that both of us had when we first heard about it. Well, I'm in my office in my backyard here. I
usually have a roll of this stuff. I'm looking for it right now. I don't think I do. I got kicked out of the house today. So you my daughter drops a penny in the other room, I can hear it.
And I miss the days when I could just not hear anything for hours at a time.
That's the exact reason I built this place. It's about four by seven feet. So it's about the size
of a phone booth, fits a computer and chair, and that's it. The unfortunate thing is sometimes the
neighbors are really fastidious about their gardening. So sometimes some asshat comes out there with a leap blower.
But, you know, that's life living in a city.
Back to work here, everybody.
You want to know about sleep tape, mouth tape.
You want to know about the best tape, what to use.
I don't care what you use, okay?
I have no mouth taping brand.
If I was smart, maybe I would have released that a couple years ago.
Didn't happen.
What I've found has worked best for me is micropore tape. It's surgical tape.
You can buy it Walgreens or Amazon or at your local independent pharmacy, wherever you want.
What this stuff is, is it's designed to be put on skin and taken off. And so it has this very
mild adhesive. What you don't want is something like Gorilla Tape
or Duct Tape. That's such a bad idea. You want something that's going to come right off because
the point of this tape isn't to hermetically seal your mouth shut like some hostage situation,
right? It's to just put it on your mouth to remind your mouth, remind your body to keep your mouth
shut.
At any time when you're using it, it comes right off, which is what it's supposed to
do.
So with this stuff, this micropore tape, what I do is I put my fingers on it a few times
and just make sure that there's hardly any adhesive on it.
Then I put it on my mouth.
And I've experimented with not using this at night.
My sleep quality goes straight down. I record my sleep with an Oura Ring, Whoop Band, all that
stuff. And whenever I put this stuff on, it goes back up to where it was. So I travel with this.
I have a hard time sleeping without it, even when I'm camping or whatever. It's a weird habit,
hard time sleeping without it, even when I'm camping or whatever. It's a weird habit, but you'll see if you're like me and so many other people, what a difference it makes.
It's interesting that your body hasn't become attuned to sleeping that way and it still
requires the tape, huh? Yeah, it is. And it's unfortunate to tell you the truth. I don't happen
to possess one of those big pronathic
faces with one of those big wide jaws. So a lot of people can wear the sleep tight for just a
couple of weeks and they naturally will keep their mouth shut. Okay. They learn how to do this.
I don't do that because whenever I put my head down on a pillow, my mouth opens. That's my natural position is to have my mouth open.
And so I have to wear this tape.
This isn't true for, I don't know an estimate,
maybe 50% of the people won't need sleep tape
after a few weeks, few months.
I'm not in that 50%.
I'm gonna need it the rest of my life.
And need and want is a different thing. I don't
need it. I'll survive without it, but I'll be significantly less healthy because my sleep
quality will go down. And for people who are not sure whether they breathe through their mouth at
night, are there some common symptoms? I mean, people could probably deduce, all right, if you
wake up very thirsty,
very dry mouth, that could be one, right? That's really the first one. If your mouth is pasty and dry when you wake up, you are breathing through your mouth. This isn't really clear, rigorous
science, but if you tend to go pee a lot throughout the night, that might suggest that you have some sleep disorder
breathing. You aren't able to go in those deep stages of sleep and release the proper hormones
of vasopressin specifically to allow yourself to store water comfortably to not do that.
I noticed that once I was able to have really get into those deeper levels of sleep, I did not have
to go to the restroom so often. And so many other deeper levels of sleep, I did not have to go to
the restroom so often. And so many other people have said the same thing. You'll have to figure
out for yourself. So you can also ask your partner if you sleep with someone, if they breathe through
their mouths. And a lot of people are going to deny it. They're going to say, there's no way
I'm a mouth breather, but more than 60% of us breathe through our mouths. And I don't care if you're super fit and you're vegan or you're keto or whatever. The majority of us are breathing through our mouths
at night. You can continue to do that. That's fine. But you're going to put yourself more at
risk for having respiratory problems and lower sleep quality. Yeah. I mean, the, the worst we
sleep, the worst, basically everything that matters in our body functions, right? So if, you know, I'll joke sometimes, I'll tell people, if you want to see what you're really capable of, figure out getting eight hours of good sleep every night.
again, the quality of sleep. There's so many people who can sleep nine hours and say, well, I got nine hours. I'm good to go. They're not sleeping well. And what I've found is so much
of sleep quality is based on breathing quality. Not all of it, but so much of it is. And once you
figure that out, there's a good chance that your sleep will improve and thus your health and life will improve.
Hey there, if you are hearing this, you are still listening, which is awesome. Thank you. And if you are enjoying this podcast, or if you just like my podcast in general,
and you are getting at least something out of it, would you mind sharing it with a friend
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Word of mouth helps really bigly in growing the show. So if you think of someone who might like
this episode or another one, please do tell them about it. Question with the mouth taping,
because I was doing it just for fun for several weeks. And one was facial hair. Like, you know, right now I'm kind of shaven. But if my facial hair was grown out a bit more, it was the tape would come off easier. And then sometimes probably half of the nights, because I tend to roll over on a side. I don't sleep on my stomach, but I'll tend to go over on the side.
And then my lips will be parted just a little bit
and then saliva gets through.
And then I'd wake up, I've lost half of my seal.
It's almost useless at that point.
Did you run into any of those issues?
Yeah, I did for months and months
until I figured out a system that worked for me.
And again, I want to say
that everyone's going to find their own system.
They're going to find what works for them. But as far as the tape coming off, and a lot of people
think that mouth breathing at night has to be, it doesn't have to be with a huge open mouth.
Your lips just slightly parted. Okay. And so when people say, oh, I'm not a mouth breather because
I'm not, I don't have my mouth craned open, it's not true.
So for a lot of people, placing the tape across all of the entire lip has been very beneficial.
I did that for a long time until now all I need is a teeny little square of it at the center of my lips and my mouth stays closed.
If you notice that drool is coming out of your mouth at night, then your
mouth's not closed, right? That shouldn't be happening. That isn't a natural thing for us
to sleep and have drool coming out. So I think you need to tape up a little more with this whole
argument that people say, oh, I have a beard. I can't use sleep tape. It's total garbage.
What you're taping is your lips, not your beard. So there are some sleep tapes that
go all the way around the mouth. People want to use those. That's cool. I don't think it's
necessary at all. You're just taping your lips with a piece of tape that has a mild adhesive.
Again, I want to be clear that at any time in the night, you can just go and it should be coming off.
If you have to struggle to get this off,
you're doing it totally wrong.
This should be able to come off very easily.
And so again, I guess in my case,
I was moving around enough or whatever was happening enough
to get it to at least come off partially.
So it would have been a matter of just persisting.
Yeah, or find a different kind of tape.
I was using the micropore as well.
Yeah.
Okay.
Maybe you need even more adhesive on it, but I would experiment with it.
I want to mention one thing that's super important.
This is one of the reasons a lot of people try sleep tape and then don't do it anymore
is in the morning when it's time to take off the tape, people tend to just rip it and their
lips get completely chewed up. I made that mistake too. Okay. This is a terrible thing to do.
So how you do it again, I wish I was in my other studio where I had some tape. I'm looking for
some, but how you do it is you never take it off with your finger ever, ever, ever put your hands
up and you put your tongue in there. You don't have to put your hands
up. I was just doing that to accentuate, but you only take it off with your tongue. Okay. Just put
your tongue back and forth on your lips until the tape comes off. This way, you're not causing all
of that irritation to your lips every time. And this way, your lips won't be affected and you'll be
wanting to use it the next night instead of cursing me and everyone else who has told you to
use sleep tape. And I'm assuming with your lips, you're not doing anything special. It's just a
normal mouth closed position. You're not like duck facing or you're trying to suck your lips in at all. And I'm not here to judge.
Someone wants to like hang upside down, you know,
and develop some extremely complicated procedure to doing this.
God bless them.
Go for it.
The only thing I use that I've found is effective
is my lips are shut.
Just a piece of tape.
You just, I windshield wiper back and forth
until the tape comes off.
And I'll do that maybe five strokes of my tongue on my lips and the tape comes off and
I'm going to go.
So that's what I would highly suggest people do.
I know this seems like a lot of orders.
It's not.
You find a piece of tape with easy adhesive, take it off with your tongue, done and done.
That's all you need to do.
Yeah, for what it's worth, I was using 3M micropore tape and it generally worked well.
Again, I ran into a couple of issues there, but I'm inspired to try it again.
The thing with my sleep is this was not a case, so I'm 38 now, and this was not a case 10 years ago.
I mean, 10 years ago, would pass out unconscious,
five minutes, blackout for six and a half, seven hours,
wake up, feel totally fine, you know, 20s,
invincible basically, but now, after having two kids,
that probably didn't help in the sleep department,
but I don't have trouble falling asleep.
I can have trouble staying asleep,
so I will wake up several times at night and sometimes I have to pee. I've actually intentionally
stayed away from water at least an hour or so before I've gone to bed. And so I've tried many
different things. And what seems to be most associated with my sleep quality, no surprise,
is just kind of general stress and aggravation levels. Like if I
am generally dealing with a lot of annoying bullshit that is generally just aggravating me a
lot, then unfortunately, when I was younger, it didn't seem to have this effect. But now that I've
gotten older, I see it in my sleep, even though, you know, I wouldn't even say that I feel very
stressed per se. I guess it's just enough. Whereas I can think of times
when I'm having fun and things are not pissing me off all the time because running businesses in
particular, there's a lot of stuff that's just not very fun. I will immediately start sleeping
better. So it might unfortunately be a matter of, in my case, having to address really the underlying cause that is bringing me into this heightened kind of, again, I guess overstressed kind of state and is not necessarily as simple as, well, just tape your mouth and you'll be fine.
Although I am inspired to try it again.
No, no.
And I would never say that. You know, the mouth tape is,
I think it's all about removing barriers,
finding those things you can improve and improving them.
When you look at the scientific literature,
so many sleep issues are tied to sleep disorder breathing.
That's just a fact.
If you talk, yeah, sometimes if you're extremely stressed out,
you have trouble sleeping, your mind is racing, but you have to find the core reason of your sleep disturbance
and then drill down into that.
And you are only going to benefit from breathing better when you're sleeping, right?
Is it going to cure all your problems?
Of course not.
But you've removed that barrier.
And so the next one is, okay, my mind is racing.
What can I do to chill myself out?
I've found breathwork or a short meditation before you go to sleep. And I've talked to many sleep
experts about this. They said, you know, you need really good sleep hygiene. About an hour before
you're going to sleep, you're just prepping for it. It's like you're getting ready for a big show,
right? Or a workout or something. You're doing all the right things. You're not drinking too much water. The lights are low. You've got your blue blocker glasses on,
you know. You're just chilling things out, making it very, very mellow and relaxed.
I've found that some mellow breathwork, even doing Wim Hof method or vigorous Kriya,
has put me right to sleep when I've been stressed because
those intense breath works, what they do is they focus all your stress. They're stressful to do,
right? They take a lot of energy to do. And so afterwards, that stress is spent and you're on
the downflow of that. And so you get it right when you're truly relaxing. And I found that's been
really beneficial to me. And I can sympathize with your, you know, I wish I was just sitting
around writing books, but you're doing all this other crap that just drives you insane all day,
because this is the modern world and you're trying to keep your head above water.
So those things have really worked for me, especially
switching time zones all the time. What do you do if you just flew into Europe? I always do breath
work and I always use sleep tape and I always try to really mellow myself out an hour before I'm
going to sleep wherever I am in the world. Yeah, I appreciate you sharing that. And I've been
fairly good in that regard as well. And my case is interesting in that I rarely ever have trouble falling asleep. My mind is basically never racing. If it's a bad night, I'm just going to wake up four or five times for no great reason. And I'll fall back asleep fairly quickly. It's an odd situation. It's there are other people out there who certainly have the same issue, but it's not
for the common reason of, you know, I'm just feeling so stressed.
I have so many things going on.
And again, it changes immediately and markedly if I am just not dealing with all the normal
bullshit that I don't like to deal with.
Well, I think you know your solution.
I know.
I think maybe I'm just reaching a point of where it's time to make a change.
Yeah.
Although put on the psychologist hat here.
Well, I think, you know, it's know what's going on, man.
Sell it all and move to Puerto Rico.
Sit on the beach.
I think, you know, that's that's the solution.
You'll be sleeping great.
That almost certainly would work.
It might not be the best idea right now, but it probably would work.
No, no.
Don't tell the wife.
Yeah, you're good.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
She's into horses.
I don't think there's a horse scene in Puerto Rico.
I think you would be surprised on that count.
I think there's probably a big horse scene in Puerto Rico.
But anyway, breathing. Here
we are talking about breathing. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Well, that actually was all the questions
that I had for you. Is there anything that we didn't cover that you think would be worthwhile
to add here at the end? Well, this is muscle for life, right? We have to talk about muscles and breathing, of course.
I didn't even think of that myself.
I usually don't prepare for these,
but I said, damn, muscle for life.
I gotta deliver some goods here.
But I think the one thing, if you look at performance
and if you look at athletic training for so long,
we haven't focused on breathing. We focused on every
imaginable nutrient out there and optimizing those. We focused on, you know, anaerobic versus
aerobic, but we haven't focused on the actual respiration that's happening while you're working
out. And I think that this has been a real blind spot for so many trainers.
It's changing now dramatically. So many trainers are starting with breathing. Because when you're
working out and you're trying to build muscle, I think it's so important to be able to be running
aerobically. You can run anaerobically for a little while, but if you do that too long, you're going to wear down.
And so aerobic energy is so much more efficient and is so much better for your body.
And you can only do that efficiently by breathing efficiently.
And I mention this because there's a gym down the street from my house.
I see the people in there breathing. It doesn't matter if they're on a stationary bike,
if they're lifting weights, whatever.
It's a freaking disaster.
And they think that they're working out harder
because they're going,
they think they're doing their body favors,
but they're not.
They're there to be healthier, presumably,
but they're really not enabling their body to
work at an efficient label where they'd be able to build more muscle and be able to come back
and work out even stronger the next time. So I know this sounds a bit soapboxy, but I think if
people are interested in building muscle, you have to also become interested in how you're
fueling those muscles. The vast majority
of the energy we get is from our breath. It's not from food or drinks. So it's definitely something
you should be paying attention to. And just to follow on that, so something to consider,
if you're doing serious weightlifting, particularly with, let's say, exercises, more whole body exercises,
like a squat or maybe a deadlift or maybe an overhead press to stabilize your torso and
stabilize your core effectively, you really need to hold your breath for, it doesn't have to be
for an entire set, but like, let's say you're squatting, right? And let's say there's a fair
amount of weight. You're not just goofing around with the bar or something.
So you're going to take a deep breath into your stomach, you're going to brace your abs as if
you're you're about to get punched, right? And you can press your tongue into the roof of your
mouth as well, and hold your breath. And then you might get one or two reps out of that, have to reset your breath.
And so a common weightlifting mistake in particular that newer people will make is they will try to
breathe continuously and quote unquote normally throughout a set. And that can actually be
dangerous if the weights start to get heavy because you inevitably lose tension in your core,
which then like you can think of, you know, putting a bunch of weight on your back and then
not having a stable core that can lead to injury. Yeah, I completely agree with you. And if you
think of what happens when right now, even if you're hunched over a desk or in a car, whatever,
you take a big, big breath. You look at what happens to your posture.
Look what happens to your back. Look what happens to your shoulders. We have these two huge balloons
here, right? And of course, they're going to dictate how our posture is, especially when
you're loading weight on top of that. Your posture is so important. And when you see people over
breathing or breathing too much, when they're posting large
amounts of weight, this is very dangerous.
You know, this is how people can get really injured.
So one of the things that I think is so important in developing healthy breathing habits, part
of that is to breathe, learn how to breathe fewer breaths, but deeper breaths. This is going to push the diaphragm
down. It's going to make your ribcage and the intercostals more elastic so that you can have
that more solid posture when you're working out and lifting weights. It's not something you can
just immediately work on when you're in the gym, right? This takes a long time to develop that
diaphragmatic motion, the incursion and excursion of that breath and of that diaphragm. So this is
something that people can do anytime. If you're sitting in a car, if you're sitting at your desk,
if you're watching Netflix, whatever, just focus on taking fewer but slightly deeper enriching breaths. Not only will you be able to
get oxygen more easily this way, not only will you be calming yourself down, but you'll also be
building up that diaphragmatic motion, which can help you in the gym and can especially help you
in your posture when you're lifting loads. And you can also practice in between sets when you're resting. It's actually a good time to take those deep diaphragmatic breaths because
you are going to recover faster in between sets. And for people who are into weightlifting,
that can actually make a significant difference in the effectiveness of your workouts because
most people who are really into it, they are keeping themselves on the clock in
between sets. So maybe it's two and a half minutes or two minutes that they get. Max would be three
or three and a half, maybe in between sets of like really heavy squats or deadlifts. And the
amount of performance that you recover in between sets is impacted, right, by how you're breathing.
Of course, there are other factors,
but that's one of the factors, right? Of course it is. And if you see people working out,
again, I see this all the time, in between sets, they're just checking their email.
Why not get your heart rate down? Why don't you get your blood flowing? Why don't you open up those blood vessels, right?
And focus there on the moment and concentrate.
And I think that's how you're gonna get the most
out of your workout.
And you're gonna be able to filter out all the toxins
from your body much more effectively this way
and also feed your hungry muscles,
which is what you're presumably in a gym to do.
So I think it's been overlooked for a long time.
I think people viewed it as some woo-woo thing.
But if you look at the science,
it's been there for decades and decades,
and it's solid.
And the only thing you need to do
is to just understand that this isn't some placebo effect.
This is just you accessing your own biology, right?
And it's you toning and enabling
yourself to perform to your utmost potential, which is what you would want to do.
And an emphasis on the importance of breathing and its connection to life. I mean, that goes
back thousands of years, right? This is nothing new. It's just modern science confirming what was
known to our ancient ancestors, right?
Yeah, everything in the book, and I hope I was very clear about this. This knowledge has been
around in various cultures, thousands of years, one culture would discover it 5000 years ago,
another culture completely independent of them would discover the exact same thing,
the exact same breathing techniques and say,
this is a medicine. Breath is a medicine. And it was considered that way up until probably the last
century where we thought that drugs could fix everything. They fix a lot of things, but they
didn't fix everything. And you have to have your body tuned up, especially when we're battered by
all of the damage that the modern world is doing to us
from pollution to our sitting position, distress levels, activity levels, activity levels, you
name it. Zoom problems as we had for 15 minutes before we got on here. Extra stress, extra
aggravation. But if you're going to make it through that, you know, you have to take care of your body if you want it to remain balanced. And I think that breathing is something that's been often ignored, but is a central part, an essential pillar of our health.
We can't just take pills.
Sometimes you need to take pills, but that is not the solution for health.
It's a good way to make money, but it's not a good way to make healthy people.
But this was a great interview.
James, I really appreciate, again, you doing it.
And why don't we wrap up with where people can find you and your work?
And if there's anything in particular you want them to know about, if you have another project already in the works you want people to know about sure uh i'm trying to get better at the social media
thing so i'm on instagram mr james nester that's mr james nester i also have a website with about
400 500 scientific references on it breathing um exercises people can do interviews with experts
all of it's free there There's no paywall,
anything like that. That's at mrjamesnester.com. And we're starting to do breathing retreats,
which have been a real blast. So week-long retreats where people can come and learn from
the experts in the field and get around and rediscover this thing called breath.
And they can learn about that at your website as well, I assume?
They can learn about it at the website. And yeah, I have a book out too. But you can learn about that
at the website that came out a couple years ago. Yeah. And again, that'll be, of course, linked in
the show notes and mentioned in the intro. But for anyone who hasn't come across the title yet,
it's breath. And I don't have the subtitle off the top of my head. But if you put in,
if you go to wherever you buy books and search for breath Nestor, even breath James, it'll come
up, right? It should. Otherwise that go leave that store. If it doesn't just find a, find a
better search engine, just immediately find a better store. Damn it. Well, thanks again,
James. This was a great interview. I appreciate it.
Sure.
Thanks a lot for having me.
Well, I hope you liked this episode.
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And I hope to hear from you soon.