Brits turn monks breathing techniques
Britney Spears ~ Angelina Jolie ~ Sandra Bullock ~ Jennifer Lopez ~ Daniel Radcliffe ~ All Celebrities ~ All Actress ~ All Actors
Home / Entertainment News / 2008 / May 2008 / May 4, 2008
Brits turn to monks breathing techniques to beat stress

Top News

Andhra Pradesh SSC 2008 Results

Rededication Day marks Congress Government's fourth year in office

60 per cent voting recorded in second phase of Karnataka polls

PM says India, Bhutan have a challenge to evolve sustainable development

Brit taxpayers to pay 1 mln pounds on Osamas right hand mans security

Turkish Petroleum Company plans exploration work in the Mediterranean

Manchester bans big screens for Champion League Final fearing violence

Scientists identified geological faults in quake-hit region in China a year back

Bird flu spreads in Darjeeling

Brits turn to monks breathing techniques to beat stress

British city workers are using breathing techniques practised by monks to cope with the credit crisis in the hope that the exercises will help them reduce stress levels.

London, May 4 : British city workers are using breathing techniques practised by monks to cope with the credit crisis in the hope that the exercises will help them reduce stress levels.

The professionals are taking up the centuries-old breathing techniques used by monks, shown to lower both stress and blood pressure.

After experts found that Gregorian chanting could promote a sense of well-being and help people to cope with pressure, a course was set up to teach its rhythmic breathing techniques.

Demand for the course among City professionals has doubled in the past six months as the crisis in the financial markets has deepened.

"Research shows that the regular breathing associated with chanting can have a significant and positive physiological impact," the Telegraph quoted Dr Alan Watkins, a senior lecturer in neuroscience at Imperial College London, as saying."Communal singing and the simplicity of the melodies seem to have a powerful effect on reducing blood pressure and therefore stress," he said.

Dr Watkins, who also runs a company that helps executives perform better in stressful conditions, said the training helped create a more coherent pattern in the heart rate.

"When times are tough, as they have been recently, people tend to suffer increased stress," he said.

"We have found that teaching individuals to control their breathing generates more positive emotional states and they can connect better with those around them.

"Communal singing and the simplicity of the melodies seem to have a powerful effect on reducing blood pressure and therefore stress," he added.

ANI

May 17, 2008

May 16, 2008

May 15, 2008

May 14, 2008

May 13, 2008

May 12, 2008