Friday, February 6, 2026

Breath - James Nestor

The tag line - 'The New Science of a Lost Art'. Starts with Nestor in bad health with pneumonia, wheezing and in a rut mentally, physically and otherwise, joins a breathing class where he is taught Sudarshana Kriya and something happens. He sweats when its cold and goes home and sleeps well with no tension. He then devotes his time to figure how conscious breathing can change the way we breathe to reduce or reverse conditions like asthma, anxiety, ADHD, psoriasis etc. He says the average human breathes 3.3 seconds inhale and 3.3. seconds exhale. If we can do 5.5 seconds inhale and 5.5 seconds exhale, even for a short period in the day, it will have many benefits according to him.


He undergoes several tests with Dr Jayakar Nayak who is a surgeon as Stanford and along with co-researcher and fellow breath expert Anders Olsson from Stockholm, gets into 10 days of forced mouth breathing. Everything is the same - diet, exercise - and its broken into two phases - one for mouth breathing and the second where they breathe through their noses and do some breathing techniques. Breathing through the mouth had bad effects - snoring increased by 1300% up to 75 minutes at night, the blood pressure shot up, felt awful. On the other hand nose breathing cut exertion and increases endurance. Nestor explains that snoring, sleep apnea (which is caused by inflammation in the throat and polyps) are caused by nasal obstructions. Breathing also is linked to erectile dysfunction.

The body's energy comes from food (anaerobic) and air (aerobic). Mouth breathing changes physical body and transforms airways. Nestor tried nose breathing by taping his mouth. The right nostril feeds blood to the left side of the brain (deals with logic, language, computing), while the left nostril feeds blood to the right side of the brain (creativity, mental abstractions, negative emotions). He finds the yogic method of nadi shodhana a good way to balance the mind and boost production of nitric oxide. Once he taped his mouth he discovered that sleep apnea reduced from 53 to zero, and went from snoring half the night to not snoring.

Check out the Tibetan Five Rites which are stretches. The Tibetans have used stretching, back bending, neck bending and twirling to prolong health and life as explained dn Kelder's book 'The Eye of Revelation'. The end line - the greatest indicator of life span is lung capacity and it can be increased by the transformative power of full exhalations.

The case of breathing slow comes up - the body needs more CO2 because oxygen is steady whether you breathe twenty of five breaths a minute. Having more carbon dioxide is helpful he says. So slow breathing at the rate of 5.5 second exhale and 5.5 second inhale is most beneficial. He also figures that the recitation of prayer mantra Om Mani Padme Hum is set to exactly that pattern which is the same as the rosary. 5-10 minutes a day of this breathing pattern will have much effect.

Like we overeat we over breathe. Breathing less has many benefits and increases endurance. So breathe in 3 secs and exhale 4, then 5, then 6 past the point of discomfort. Like BKS Iyengar once said 'The yogi's life is not measured by days but by breaths'. Soft chewing has affected out breathing so eat foods that make you chew. Also sit straight, inhale through the nose deep into the belly. The more we do this the more we grow stem cells, bone density, growth.

Netsor talks of Tummo breathing or Inner Fire breathing which has many health benefits and makes the body go through extreme heat or cold comfortably. He also gives the example of Swami Rama who stopped his heart rate to zero and told the audience that one can practice by harmonising their breath (remove the pause between the inhale and exhale, then lengthen the breaths). He gives another practice - lie down, take a brief inhale or 3 seconds and exhale in 6 seconds, increase inhale to 4 second and exhale to 8 seconds. If you can reach a count of 30 counts on exhale or half a minute, toxins will leave the body and one becomes disease free.

Nestor meets another Brazilian yoga expert De Rose where he learns that its all about energy, prana. Tey concepts then are to shut your mouth (no mouth breathing), breathe through your nose, exhale more, chew, breathe more and hold your breath.

Nestor explores and advocates many breathing techniques such as Pranayama, Buteyko, Coherent breathing, Hypoventilation, Breathing Coordination, Holotropic Breathwork, Adhama Madhyama Uttama, Tummo breathing, Sudarshana Kriya and so on. 

Very interesting book and its supposed to have many health benefits. Definitely to try out what I can. Thanks Abhinay.. Loved this book. You perhaps added some health to my life thanks to this book.   

    

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Thought for the Day - When There is no Right or Wrong, There are no Victims

This pertains to the victim mindset which comes from this concept of being 'right' and more importantly, making the other 'wrong'. 
When we understand there is no Right or Wrong - and everyone is right in their own way we can get out of the victim mindset.

When we get out of the victim mindset we free ourselves. Until then we depend on the other to make us 'right'.

When we are not stuck in being 'wronged' we are free to live our life on our terms. To be 'right' as we are and act accordingly.

Dropping the victim mindset is the route to complete freedom.

Monday, February 2, 2026

Mony and Keerti meet Cdr Hemanth Kumar on the Kaundinya

When I heard that Hemanth was heading to Oman on the stitched ship project, I told Mony who lives in Muscat that he could probably meet if time permits. Turns out that not only did they meet, but they also had a meal together and even better, Hemanth invited both of them to see the ship. It must have been one hell of a great experience to be aboard the historic ship.

Mony shared a few pics. Obviously they were thrilled.

Kaundinya - Mony, Hemanth and Keerthi
   

Hemanth gifting Mony a copy of his book on Baig sir

A yali like figure on the ship's mast

Keerthi and Hemanth on board the ship

Lovely pics. Hope to get on the ship sometime!


Thursday, January 29, 2026

A Very Interesting TED Talk - Anders Olson on Breathing

 'Change Your Breath, Change Your Life' 

Really interesting stuff!




Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Raag Darbari - Shrilal Shukla

 The 1968 classic by Shrilal Shukla was originally written in Hindi and fetched the beaurocrat a Sahitya Academy award. It was translated from the Hindi by Gillian Wright in the 1990s. Much has been surely lost in translation but thanks to Wright I could get a sense of the original.



The story is set in a fictional town called Shivpalganj (inhabited by a bunch of chilled out villagers who called themselves ganjahas). One young man Rangnath, fresh from University with his head full of noble ideas of the world comes to the place to regain his health and stays with his uncle Vaidyaji. Vaidyaji is an ayurvedic doctor, President of the Cooperative Union, founder of the college and be all and end all of the village. His two sons. Badri, a wrestler and Ruppan Babu, a student leader, lend him their muscle. Vaidyaji rules the village and controls everything through his stooges such as the Principal of the college, a no gooder who he props as the village pradhan and so on. Trouble brews when Rangnath's ideas of justice and fairness upset the equilibrium of the village and others such as Khanna master who protests against the Principal rebel. A disturbed Vaidyaji resigns from his post and promptly props his eldest son to the post of President and gets rid of the masters and so on. Rangnath also leaves, when he finds that his health is much better but not before experiencing the full gamut of the ways and means of society's machinations and manipulations. Posts, cops, common men, lies, emotions, grandstanding all work together and create a satirical take on life as we know it.

Raad Darbari is a complex tune they say and the novel which represents a microcosm of India and its complexity is named after it. Shrilal Shukla brings to life the rhythm of society in India - privilege, caste, politics, duplicity, hypocrisy, helplessness - all within that little town and its few characters. It's funny because its just too true and Shrilal Shukla captures every bit as it is. Thanks Vinod bhai for the book. Loved it.   

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

The Hyderabad Literary Festival 2026

 This time there were no names I knew so it was more to check out the place. Vinod said he would go all three days and I found a nice gap on the afternoon of the 26th so I headed straight there from the Heritage walk. We went straight into lunch at the food court, ate a bit and then sat in a panel discussing Digital something - Santosh Desai (I liked his 'Mother Pious Lady') and Vandana Vasudevan. Then we strolled over to get a look at Nobel Prize winner Abhijit Banerjee and it was full house so we sauntered back to the food court and snacked on stuff.


The best venue for HLF for me has been HPS. I loved the food court there - a nice open tent where you could sit for hours!



Met Vijay of Blue Pencil, Praveen, Suresh, Sridhar Sattiraju, Vinod Pavarala, Serish Nanisetty, Naren, Shwetha among others Bought Serish's book on Hyderabad 'Golconda Bagnagar' and got it signed. Vinod recommended it highly. I also wanted to meet Namita Devidayal if I could but missed her. I loved her 'Music Room' which I remember was instrumental in making me visit the Mahalakshmi Temple in Kolhapur.

I never get the energy at Sattwa which is too dissipated.

Anyway, we split at around 430 because I had to go someplace.

Monday, January 26, 2026

Hyderabad by Walk - British Residency

 I did visit British Residency twice before last year - once in one of my tanhai walks and once with Tanya - but this one was different. It was by Deccan Archives and I quickly checked if Vasu was game and he was. So a quick breakfast at Poorna Tiffins and we joined Safwan and gang for a dekko at the British Residency. Dheeraj led the walk in the absence of Sibgat and Wahaj. There were some 15 participants which included Ajay and Mukhtiar.

The British Residency from the back (or front)
Empress Gate
Empress Gate

Off we went to the Empress Gate which was the gate that was the main entrance - huge to let elephant's pass. Anyway it faces the Musi and the old city which is where the Nizam's lived. 


A High Flood Level mark indicates the height to which the flood rose. Then to the cannon presented by Mahbub Ali Khan to the Resident. Through the Lansdowne gate to the Rang Mahal garden where the renovated British Residency model stands. 

Stepwell
Cannon presented by the VIth Nizam to the British Resident


Going right through the middle of all this are excavators, trucks and stuff which are engaged in constructing a new sports field in the place where the kitchen once stood. Anyway I walked through the small cemetery where several Britishers are laid to rest. 

Model of the Residency

Cemetery

Darbar Hall

Then to the British Residency itself where there is now a few of 100/150 bucks to enter and another 100 or so to take pics inside. We saw the lions outside (earlier sphinxes), the columns, the pediment, the capitals, the coat of arms. Then the darbar hall, its magnificent ceiling fully restored, the climb down to the dungeons, the climb up to the Oval office. Dheeraj said this design may have influenced the design of the White House.

Oval Office

Some advice to the girls

Many pics and such. This one written on the wall - A girl should be like  a butterfly, pretty to see, hard to catch! 

Vasu, Mukhtiar and me walked out, had a chai and then I got dropped off at Jubilee Hills to go to the Hyderabad Literary Festival where Vinod was waiting to have lunch.