Could this be true? Let's find out where breathing trouble has its gnarly roots buried deep. Once you've run out of other "reasons" you'll be able to see the powerful hold grief & sadness have on the lungs. Keep reading...
Repression of emotions (good and bad) has expression going in the wrong direction. There is an end result of NOT doing what is natural. Crying, yelling, getting angry, etc. are all natural. They're also very frowned upon in our culture, our work, our relationships and our whole upbringing. We stuff it over and over and over again.
Ever lose something or someone you love and feel torn apart? That's grief. Loss from people, loved ones, wallets, jobs, opportunities all create grief. Grief is also natural...and it's very stuffed back by our culture. No crying, no screaming, no tearing your hair out...at least not enough to get the charge of the emotion out. The residue (what remains unexpressed) gets stuffed back into the lungs. Sadness/grief can tear apart a life if left unchecked.
Here's what I know from my own direct experience and working with lots of clients with breathing trouble and grief. It's very hard to develop a breathing problem without lots of suppression of emotions. Very hard indeed. Bad breathers hold on--too long and too tight. That's what anchors breathing challenges in a tight chest with tight lungs--emotional tightness.
If you suspect your breathing challenges have at least some of their roots in this territory I have GREAT NEWS for you. I've set up a page of FREE TOOLS for challenged breathers. These tools are available 24/7 every day of the year. There are also a few other tools you might want to purchase there too--but please use all the FREE STUFF first! It has the possibility to dramatically improve your breathing and your emotional tightness. The great news is that it is SO inter-galactic and way out there (energywork woo-woo land!) that you don't have to believe anything I tell you. Nor should you. Use your own improvements to be the judge.
Please tell your friends and loved ones who are challenged with difficult breathing. All the resources are on this site under the Got Asthma? page.
Love,
Rudy Hunter