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How well do you breathe?

Teresa Dixon

Dec 05 2024

How we breathe is very underrated aspect of health but influences wellness greatly so it it’s important to know how you are breathing – be proactive not reactive.

What is it to breathe well?

Good breathing is key to maintaining good health and is rarely considered but can greatly impact how your body operates. A breath ideally should always be through your nose with ease, unless you are talking or performing hard out exercise.

The diaphragm and the lower ribs work together to gently draw air into the nose and then into the lungs

The nose warms and moistens the air aiding its delivery to the lungs, it regulates the incoming air and helps create nitric oxide (this has an anti-inflammatory effect and helps reduce the build-up of plaque and cholesterol in our blood.

Mouth breathing is classed as dirty breathing (snoring is also mouth breathing) as the nose has a special lining that collects 75% of the bacteria in the air allowing your immune system to deal with it and bogies also have an anti bacterial affect.

Breathe work being very important to wellness is why I may include this as part of your movement coaching so you have the correct breath work for right situation eg box breathing helps control anxiety, diaphragmatic breathing creates deep relaxation etc. Today we are reviewing light nose breathing known as the Buteyko Method. This method has a key role in promoting good breathing patterns and helps with many other processes in the body including the anti inflammatory mechanisms.

You will learn how to breathe well be given breathing exercises with essential oils (a personally chosen oil to help with your wellness plan) as well as either an essential oil treatment (proactive wellness and distress) or a clinical neuromuscular massage treatment to get you moving freely, feel rejuvenated, sleep may improve, thinking become clearer and more energy.

Test your breathing

The test is called a breath pause or controlled pause.

This gives you a baseline to how well you breathe and a way of monitoring how you are improving when doing 4 minutes of breath training per day.

The controlled pause measurement is the length of time you can comfortably hold your breath (without a forced hold and starting from gentle shallow breathing) when finishing the controlled breath you should not be gasping for air and be able to return to gentle shallow breathing. The best time to test the controlled pause is first thing in the morning on waking ( as your breath is normally shallow and gentle throughout the night and on waking).


You will need a stopwatch or the ability to time your controlled pause. Make sure your breathing is gentle, taking a small shallow breath in and out via your nose. When this is achieved pinch your nose and keep your mouth closed so no air can enter your lungs. Start the timers as you grab your nose until you feel the need for air (this may be a flutter of the throat or diaphragm) As this happens stop the clock and make note of the time. When you remove your hand breathing should be slow and comfortable as before starting measuring (if this is not the case you have held your breath too long and the measurement will be inaccurate).

Research shows that a healthy control pause measurement is more than 40 seconds. How well did you do?

Here are some tips that will help:

  • Try and breathe through your nose at all times
  • Breathe gently
  • Yawn with your mouth closed
  • Try not to sigh
  • And most importantly practice your breathing
  • Avoid high intensity exercise if controlled pause is less than 20 seconds
  • Digestion increases breathing rate so alway do controlled pause on empty stomach

Patience is needed for breath work as it can take up to 6months to achieve a good controlled pause.

Please contact me to discuss this further or book appointment (Masterton online)

Book Now

Written by Teresa Dixon · Categorized: blog · Tagged: Breathing, coaching, essential oils, health, movement, pain, Wellness

Oct 16 2024

Wellness Coaching is a proactive whole-body approach to maintain optimum wellness and reduce the risk of movement going wrong (sprains, strains, arthritis, osteoporosis, joint replacement, low back pain, aches and discomfort) you’re never too young to start!

Physical wellness is the lifestyle choices you make to keep your body in good condition and free from disease or illness. This can be broken into:

  • Eat well: not on a constant diet just making good whole food choices to nourish our bodies.
  • Move well: this is not a fitness program just about moving often and moving freely (fitness is movement with a specific purpose).
  • Hydrate well: we are 70%-85% water and is virtually involved in every bodily function so it’s our starting point.
  • Breathe well: this is one the most under valued functions in the body and has major influence on both physical and mental wellbeing.

Mental wellness is your ability to cope with the daily loads of life. Having a good mindset to see your own potential and getting things done, this should also include contributing to your own family friends or community. The ability to be present enjoy the moment and not be hinder by negative thoughts.

The BodyMOT is designed by Dr Jo Abbott it is a lifestyle analysis using science based research and assessments to help you reach your health and wellness potential. This supportive coaching programme comprises of an initial assessment with follow on coaching sessions which may include ( depending on your unique needs).

  • A thorough health and movement  history where you tell me your journey so far.
  • Set Wellness goals this could be maintaining or improving your current health.
  • Aromoatouch essential oil treatment (Rejeuavanting massage).
  • Zyto wellness app (Proactive approach to wellness using essential oil (if desired).
  • completing wellness log.
  • Body compositions (Lean muscle and fat mass, hydration levels).
  • Mineral Assessment.
  • pH levels and urine testing.
  • Movement assessment.
  • Breathing assessment.
  • Wellness Marker.

How well balanced is your wellness?

Feel free to fill in the chart and have a free 15 min Discovery Call or email me.


Written by Teresa Dixon · Categorized: blog

Aug 27 2020

Be forward thinking about movement today and reap the rewards in years to come.

As an expert in Health and Movement, I know that waiting to break is costly in time money and health. ACC doesn’t cover wear and tear, so finding out we have it, is very costly and TOO LATE!

If you have stiffness, pain or reduced movement you are already on the slippery slope to wear and tear in years to come.

Our current approach to musculoskeletal health is reactive. We need to make sure you are moving today.

Taking a bottom of the cliff approach is out dated and can lead to serious health issues like Type 2 Diabetes, Heart Disease, High Blood pressure etc.


Don’t let poor movement make you a ticking time bomb for poor health!

How do I know I have good movement I hear you ask?

Take a simple, scientifically proven, Sitting – Rising TEST

In a study published in the European Journal of Cardiology and Discover magazine, a Brazilian researcher had more than 2,000 patients ages 51 to 80, take the “Sitting-Rising” test.

People who scored fewer than eight points on the test, he found, were twice as likely to die within the next six years compared with those who scored higher. Those who scored three or fewer points were more than five times as likely to die within the same period compared with those who scored more than eight points


How well do you perform this action?

Let’s try and see.

  1. the picture, start by standing cross legged and sit down to the floor.
  2. Every time you use your hands, knees or lose your balance deduct points.
  3. Start with 10 and deduct a point each time use use a body part or have a sharp drop etc to help your body get up or down.

Example score – to sit on the floor, if you use a hand on the knee and one on the ground deduct 1 point each time a body part helps you out (2 points in total). To stand, you use a hand on the floor and one on your knee (take 2 points off).

Total of 6 points.


If you score less than 8 you need help with your movement now

Even if you have no pain or discomfort you may have a movement disorder which may lead to a movement disease (arthritis tendinitis spinal issues) and stop you doing the things you love or may even lead to an operation.

Assessing your movement is a great start to improving your health. But we all know, it doesn’t end there. We need to integrate, hydration, nutrition, sleep and emotion too. This is where I can help you navigate your way to better overall health with my BodyMOT coaching package.

This coaching Package is a holistic approach to health that helps you find the source of the issue and take targeted action. Together we can begin to understand your body’s needs and support it for many years to come.


If you want to take action now, don’t hesitate, send me a comment in below. If you are curious for more, come along to a talk on Thursday 3rd September at 3mile in Carterton

https://www.facebook.com/events/403374953968658

Written by Teresa Dixon · Categorized: blog

Jul 11 2020

Are you a bee? Does your horse…..

  • Hollow or duck their back away from you?
  • Stiffen their back in response, making you bounce more?
  • Show resistance, raising their head, putting their ears back swishing their tail?
  • Would you rather float like a butterfly?
  • Horse and rider move as one
  • Sit in a balanced position that is effortless and rhythmical, easily remaining in the seat
  • Have the ability to communicate with your horse using your seat
  • Have your horse soften and use his back, come through from behind and really swing through?

Although this is a seemly basic move in riding terms, the body needs to have the capacity to:

  • Stabilize the body so you can soften into the saddle
  • Follow the horse’s movement through your lower back, absorbing the motion through your pelvis
  • Be able to open and close the hip joints
  • Keep your glutes and hamstrings relaxed
  • Breathe rhythmically to avoid blocking and stiffening  
  • Stabilize through your core, allowing absorption through your hips and stable shoulders

How do you know if you have the capacity to absorb the movement during sitting trot, enabling you to make it look so graceful and easy? If you are unable to breath rhythmically, develop relaxation in any specific part of your body, or have the mobility in your joints, it doesn’t matter how hard you train, you still won’t function efficiently.

When working with a biomechanics coach like myself, we work together on a meaningful task to assess your capacity to achieve the task, in this example, sitting trot. Then we start on the journey as everyone’s body has a unique makeup and it will respond differently. Past injuries, current health and lifestyle all influence how we move differently. We peel back the layers and assess each potential issue in its own right.

As part of this assessment, we look at whether the muscles can actually perform the task at hand. If they can’t, we then perform very specific soft tissue work to improve its function. We also develop corrective exercises to assist the restoration of correct function. In some instances, a wellness log will be used to further support you returning to full function.

So why sting like a bee when you could make a few changes to your own biomechanics and improve your beautiful relationship with your horse. Book a Biomechanics assessment today.

Written by Teresa Dixon · Categorized: blog

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teresa@ipcoach.co.nz

Skype: teresa.j.dixon

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