How slower breathing really helps against stress
People who are often stressed can feel calmer by making certain adjustments to their breathing. Possibly this also positively affects concentration and attention. Psychologist Roderik Gerritsen studied the effects of breathing differently for the first time, and explains them. Gerritsen receives his PhD on 13 December.
Roderik Gerritsen: 'In science there was hardly any attention for Breathing therapy.'
Breathing therapy: it is fairly common these days. People experience positive effects when dealing with stress and anxiety, but in science there was hardly any attention for this. Roderik Gerritsen changed that. Yet that was not the intention when he started his PhD research. 'Many studies have been done on meditation, from Zen meditation to loving kindness and transcendental meditation. These report positive effects on physical and mental health. My question was: what leads to those effects?'
Studying all that research, Gerritsen missed something. 'I suddenly thought: why is nobody talking about breathing? In all those meditation forms, your breathing also changes, but nobody brought that up.'
With slower breathing your heart rate drops
Gerritsen got into it, and came up with a possible explanation for the effects of breathing differently. For instance, paying attention to your breathing, which is usually done in meditation, activates the parasympathetic nervous system. This is the part of your nervous system that causes organs to enter a state of rest and recovery. With slower breathing, often a result of breathing with attention, your heart rate drops. In fact, this is the way you tell your body not to react to threats.
The reduction in stress levels can do a lot for body and mind
As a cognitive psychologist, Gerritsen was particularly curious whether breathing differently can bring improvements at the cognitive level, such as attention, concentration, planning and keeping yourself to that planning. Not enough research has been done on this yet, Gerritsen emphasises, but he can imagine that it works. 'These breathing patterns put you in a relaxed state that allows for greater mental flexibility in various contexts.'
Other labs are already taking it up
Apart from literature research, Gerritsen also conducted experiments himself with groups of elderly people doing tai chi, for example. 'Not much came out of that, it was before I came up with the theory on the background of the effects of breathing. Now I would really like to do experiments with people who get as close as possible to a certain breathing rhythm, for example by having them look at a little ball that grows and shrinks at the desired breathing rhythm.' It is difficult to then investigate long-term effects as well, but that will certainly happen after Gerritsen's inception. 'Other labs are already taking it up.'
Practice at a quiet moment first
Does Gerritsen have any advice, can we all work on our breathing? 'People who often feel stressed or have burnout can definitely benefit from changing their breathing.' In that case, they need to practise it at calm moments first, otherwise it can actually increase stress. Some students who practised belly breathing for the first time in one of my experiments found it difficult and stressful. So practice quietly first, and focus first on a fairly low frequency of breathing. 'Breathe slowly and deeply, about six times a minute, so ten seconds per breath. If you do this regularly, the frequency of your basic breathing also drops, and that lowers stress.'
‘That low frequency is the most important thing.'
If you have mastered slower breathing a bit, you can try it in situations where you notice you are stressed. 'That low frequency is the most important thing. In addition, you can try to make the exhaling take a little longer than the inhaling.' That makes for a greater variation in your heart rate variation (hrv) and that is healthy. It also activates that calming parasympathetic nervous system more. 'Finally and really less important than the low frequency, it's interesting to pay attention to the fact that your belly expands when breathing in and not your chest.'
Text: Rianne Lindhout