Originally Posted by
Flounder
I hardly ever got my oxygen checked so I don’t have a solid baseline. A couple of years I developed afib and got an Apple Watch to monitor it. That’s when I was able to start tracking oxygen levels. I averaged about 93-95% but it would go up to 100% now and then. A year ago I read the book Breath, The New Science of a Lost Art by James Nestor and it’s, no joke, changed my life.
The past year I’ve spent retraining myself on how to breath. Being asthmatic my focus had been in getting more air in my lungs. By breathing slower and at less volume it’s made huge changes including oxygen levels consistently in the 98-100% range.
It’s taken a shit ton of work to change 50+ years of bad breathing habits and I’ve still got a bit further that I want to go. Wish I’d know about it sooner because over breathing certainly caused a lot of my persistent issues. It’s crazy the profound changes including breathing tests are now better than an average non-asthmatic person even with lowering my asthma medications.
I’d definitely recommend reading the book and seeing if anything hits close to home. A year ago I would have never believed how much it would change my life. I don’t think my doctors fully believe it but they also can’t explain the vast improvement in my health.