Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Breathing Practice

A simple respiratory discipline that connects Nasreddin's emphasis on immediate sensory awareness with physiological demands of altitude.

Nas
Why It Matters

Nasreddin frequently tells stories about the simple and obvious being overlooked. The Breathing Practice grounds the climber in the body's basic rhythm, which altitude forces into prominence. High places naturally change breathing patterns; learning to work with rather than against this change is essential. This simple practice becomes profound meditation: noticing each breath, the ratio of inhale to exhale, how breath reflects mental state and physical condition. The examined joyful life recognizes that breathing is both mechanical and spiritual—we can control it consciously or surrender to its wisdom. On mountains, breath becomes teacher. When breathless from exertion, the climber learns patience and pacing. When struggling with altitude, conscious breathing becomes anchor and comfort. Nasreddin's approach emphasizes discovering wisdom in what's already present rather than importing new techniques. The breath is always here. High places simply make its presence undeniable. By honoring the breath as primary teacher, the climber finds that mountains become allies in deepening presence rather than enemies demanding endurance.

Helpful guides
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Play & Joy
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