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[00:00:00]

Hello, friends. Welcome back to the show. My guest today is Dr. Leah Lagos. She's a clinical psychologist, HRV performance coach, and an author. Heart rate variability is one of the most important new metrics that people are using to gage heart health, longevity, and fitness, but improving it can be a minefield. Thankfully, Dr. Lagos has spent decades optimizing the HRVs of some of the world's highest performers, and today we get to hear her best advice. Expect to learn the crucial relationship between your HRV and your brain function plus your heart health, the best way to improve your HRV, what most people get wrong when trying to optimize the most surprising factors that can impact your HRV, the role of breath, stress, and fitness, and much more. You might have heard me say that hold luggage is a PSYOP meant to keep you poor and late, but there are sometimes when you just can't help it. You're going away for so long or to somewhere where you need to carry more. And this is where Nomatic comes in with their brand new method check-in luggage. It's been designed from the wheels up to be lighter, stronger, and hold more.

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It's really interesting. It originated being a metric that doctors looked at before babies were born to predict the vitality of the unborn baby, that they would be healthy upon birth. Then in time, doctors began using it as a metric of cardiovascular health and other conditions. Hrb is very much associated with clinical conditions from fibromyalgia to irritable bowel syndrome, to depression, to anxiety. Then a cohort, a small subset of people, including myself, came along and said, Well, what about people that aren't afflicted by a condition but just wanted to get better? That question has been the last 17 years of my research and practice. Wow.

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I think a lot of people listening will be familiar with HRV, what it is, and the fundamentals. But just give us the 30,000-foot overview recap.

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Sure. Hrv has to do with the variability in between each heartbeat. Essentially, the short, simple answer without getting too technical, and I think that's one of the things the public has to understand people get lost in the science, Chris, is that we are looking for for bigger numbers for greater health and resilience. But everybody has a range. The scientific definition has to do with the oscillatory variability in between each heartbeat and measured in milliseconds. That's the technical definition. What we'll talk about today is HRV in terms of RSA, resonant sinus arrhythmia. It's so much easier to understand and grasp as a user because you can look at with all sorts of different wearables that are out now, the peak to trough. When you inhale, your heart rate goes up, and when you exhale, it goes down. That phenomenon is known as resonant sinus arrhythmia. Ultimately, we want that variation to be as big and beautiful as possible, almost like ocean-like waves. But that's not exactly what happens in life. We get stuck. There are stressors, and we can talk about the different variables in time. But we want to optimize those oscillations, to be resilient, adaptable, flexible, marked by agility, to respond as we need and acclimate flexibly.

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Is that what you mean by autonomic flexibility?

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It does. People think about stress in terms of, Am I stressed or am I not? But what we really should be talking about is your agility in handling it. How long does it last? Are you able to let it go when it happens? How long does it take you? Are there specific stressors that take you longer? You begin to look at HRB, and we can dive into this as deeply as you want, but as a metric that gives you insights about yourself. Of course, we can train HRB, and I'll take you through my protocol for doing that, which is in my book Heart, Breath, Mind. But I want the world to understand HRV is a measure for of who they are, what amplifies them, what takes away from their natural gifts. It's a metric that people can calibrate with breathing, but also with study and research on what leads to these changes intraday.

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I have never heard anybody explain the adaptive reason for why HRV lowers when we are stressed. There must be an advantage that given to the user for having a lower HRV under sympathetic arousal. What is that?

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It's likely associated with the reptilian response of immobilization. Our body immobilizes in pre historic days to conserve energy. While the reptilian response served a function and can serve a function in certain stress situations, usually it doesn't, and it stays longer than we That's so interesting.

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So your hypothesis is that when we were reptiles, we would need to... But surely a high HRV, if we needed to lay out in the sun and warm ourselves on a rock, surely that would have allowed us to regain more energy than a low HRV, no?

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That would. Lying on a rock and being in the the sun, the sunshine, the light exposure is what could enhance HRV. But the autonomic nervous system during times of stress wants to conserve energy and What it tends to do is fragment what I call autonomic bandwidth. If you have an HRV, Chris, let's say, just you measure it with your or a ring or other wearables, and there are many, and you have a range of 42 to 75, You begin to look at what's happening on different days to understand what's reducing your HRV. Maybe it's been too late, maybe it's a conflict with a good friend. But what you're asking me is, how could this have been adaptive for us. Yes. My hypothesis would be in terms of trying to conserve energy and somehow keep the body safe in that way. However, we're in such a dynamic world that if we're a fraction of ourselves and the flexibility to respond is reduced, it doesn't work out that way.

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Because we ruminate on the stressor for so long that we actually extend the stressor for a good amount of time.

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Yes. That, for most people, is beyond conscious control. The idea of just let it go is great idea, but then how do you do it? I would argue that letting go is much more a physiological construct that can be taught through processes such as heart rate variability biofeedback training than just, and I'm a psychologist by trade, than just cognitive techniques. But first, you have to teach the autonomic nervous system how to let go.

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Right. So you're suggesting that we go bottom up from the body to the mind, as opposed to top down from the mind saying, Hey, calm down. You're being too stressed. Why can't you just let go of this thing, which often makes you more stressed? So the other question that I have, what determines our range? You've mentioned that we have a range within which we sit. I know that one of your prescriptions will be, your goal is to get to the top end of your range. So therefore, comparing your HRV with somebody else's is pointless. Unfortunately, I'm in a Whoop group with some pro athletes, some cricketers, and some of their HRVs are in the 200s. So I'm always going to be bottom of pile around them. But what is it that determines our range?

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There are a multitude of factors. There are biological pieces to this, and low HRV, in some cases, can indicate a clinical condition. And I've had that happen with clients where we've uncovered and properly gotten treatment and then worked on amplifying HIV as they went through other treatments. But it also can be chronic stress that's not properly managed. It can be a host of different pieces. There are also people that are more sensitive in this world, and there are people that feel deeply, they connect quickly. I call them physiologically gifted that in stressful moments, their heart rate reactivity may jump 30 beats, whereas someone else may jump 10. That's not conscious, and that's not something that talk therapy is going to change. But they can increase the precision of their response under stress by having a stronger what's called bearerreflex gain. Through this process, the bearerreceptors control heart rate and blood pressure, and we gain control over that reactivity in the moment. It just calms. With that said, there are many, many different reasons. People have different levels of the HIV. I had one person, it took us three sessions. I mean, questions after questions. I got it.

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They were drinking 19 cups of coffee a day. Sometimes the variables, Chris, are internal, sometimes they're medical, and sometimes they're external. A big variable that people think about consciously that having a few glasses of alcohol, they know it impacts them, but they don't really have a sense of how sensitive their nervous system is or how long it lasts. But can measure that. Factors like sleep, alcohol use, lack of exercise, chronic stress can certainly dampen HRV, but they're not the only reasons.

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What does low HRV feel like experientially, if it's acute? Let's say that you could just throw low HRV at someone that's listening now. What would that feel like in their body and their mind?

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Someone can't identify low HRV if that's their general baseline state. But some people can, and we actually sometimes train this from my clinic with clients that are athletes on being able to recognize when they have a lower HRV than a higher HRV, when they wake up before they look at their scores, just to develop their sense of somatic awareness and being just aware of what their body is telling them. Some people will say when their HRV is on the lower end of the range, that they feel more myopic, meaning their mind gets stuck more, more irritable, they're less able to control their reactivity, and they speed up faster. But it's really different for each person. What's so fascinating is there's no one-size, fits-all composite HRV. This is exactly how you'll feel in low HRV versus For the high HRV. It's about really understanding the person, helping them be aware of what it feels like for them at the lower HRV and what it feels like at higher HRV, and then understanding the factors that they can control to continue to amplify their HRV.

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Talk to me about the relationship between HRV, autonomic flexibility, and the brain and brain function.

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We used to think of heart rate variability just as a metric of the autonomic nervous system's resilience to flexibly respond, which means if I need to amp up and run across the street, I can. This isn't associated with relaxation or just being calm. It's acclimating or adapting flexibly to the needs of the moment. But then after I've run across the street and dealt with a specific need that caused me to run across the street, that I can return back to baseline quickly. For many years, HRV research really honed in and focused on HRV as a measure of adaptability and resilience. In the last 10-15 years, myself and several other researchers have focused on heart rate variability's impact on the brain. Sure enough, this concept of oscillation, if we think of resonant sciasceremia as an oscillation, when you inhale, your heart rate goes up, when you exhale, it goes down, and we want these oscillations oscillations to be as big as possible, we also want that oscillatory ability in our mind, to be able to focus on something deeply and let it go. It's a different style of oscillatory functioning. But conceptually, the ability to oscillate is what I call cognitive dexterity.

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We're beginning to understand that heart rate variability is also indicative of someone's cognitive dexterity as well, meaning that someone can flexibly alter between deeply diving into a subject matter and then zooming out to consider contextual details, or they're able to consider a lot of information and have a pause before they react. There are different types of dexterity, but what can be really useful is the ability, specifically It's the first one that I work on with people that want the cognitive benefits associated with HRV is inhibition. Chris, if there is something in everyone, when you really dive deeply in someone's being authentic and open, everyone has a place in their life they wish they had a little more control over before they act. It could be work, it could be partnership, it could also be in a sports performance domain. But ultimately, to have the ability to screen out negative thoughts and consider their desired behavior before they respond becomes a part of the cognitive process that they do gain control over. And this process, HRV, impacts the prefrontal lobe specific.

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Wow. I understand that HRV is a metric which is both acute and chronic or systemic, it's an indicator of where you're at now, and it's also an indicator of your overall capacity, autonomic flexibility, probably health and fitness as well, stress response, stuff like that. What is the relationship between heart health and HRV? Do healthier hearts always have a higher, quote, unquote, better HRV? Yes.

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In fact, there's a wealth of research that suggests that low HRV is correlated with cardiovascular conditions. We want that heart to have those large, abundant oscillations that variability is essentially associated with longevity and a longer life. When I see people go through in my clinic, 12-week training, many people stay for years after they say it's not just a change of heart, but a change of life. We go through this process. But in the first 12 weeks, we often see the heart rate independent of physical activity drop five beats. Let's say your baseline heart rate is generally 65. It's now at 60. There is improved cardiovascular efficiency, and certainly that has implications for heart health and longevity.

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How What do you think about the difference between hacking HRV in the moment so that you get the state change and long term duration impact on HRV, the trait change over time? Is there a difference between hacking and improving, or do all of the hacks that improve in the short term result in improvements in the long term?

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It's such a good question, and I really am so glad you asked, because people don't understand that there are two two different, very distinct pathways for using HRV and focusing on HRV for different outcomes. The first one is going through a process such as HRV training 10 to 12 weeks to increase heart rate variability at baseline, meaning without even breathing. Why would you do that? What does it matter? Well, first of all, you want an autonomic nervous system that without even any conscious intervention, can flexibly respond to the world. People who are out and about, have lots of meetings, then go home to a family with lots of things happening, will say, I just have more energy to manage. The sensory inputs of the world require less from that nervous system because the nervous system is optimized. That's one, which is optimizing the baseline. How do we do that with the resonant frequency breathing? It really takes a minimum of 10 weeks, 15 minutes a day, twice a day, breathing at resonant frequency, which I'll describe a little bit later. But what that does, Chris, is by week four, you have increased bearer reflex gain, meaning bearer reflex controls heart rate and blood pressure, and you've increased the mechanisms, the precision by which it senses and responds.

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It's just more precise. I say to my clients, let's say you're a Volvo coming into my clinic. Everything's going well, you get to where you need to go. But now you've You've really increased to being more of a sports car where you can accelerate and decelerate just very quickly without more expended energy. That is the baseline piece. Then within the 10 weeks, You continue to strengthen what's called bearer reflex gain. What happens is that the parasympathetic and the sympathetic nervous system, in stressful situations, the sympathetic activation occurs. But now you're You're parasympathetic, you're parasympathetic dominant at baseline, and it comes quicker to bring down the sympathetic. The sensing is faster and it allows you to let go. This all happens underneath. You're not conscious of it. But you would just say to me, let's say, Chris, can you give me a stressor? Something just...

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Emails.

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Emails. And what about emails?

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When there's lots of them and I need to reply. Lots of them.

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Maybe you come in and you say, The abundance of emails every day is an eight out of 10 stressor. As you go through the process, the emails don't change. The emails have maybe even increased, but your reactivity to them, the feeling of stress towards them, goes down a few numbers. That has to do with the nervous system becoming more precise in your responding, meaning you can amp up, but you can let go faster. I call it return to baseline. That is the baseline piece. You would go through this process to increase your flexibility, agility, adaptability without doing anything. It's a nervous system that is just more precise. That's what the HRV training can do. One, improving baseline. Two, is what I call HRV hacking and using wearables to calibrate your elite self. So you start to collect data. Okay, on Tuesday, I was a 42 HRV on my wearable. But on Sunday, I was a 65. What's the difference? And you begin to target the variables and then define the algorithm through your own tracking to get a sense of what really helps calibrate you. What's so fascinating is it's different for everybody. When you really get to know somebody and look at the way they live their life, the way alcohol may In fact, you may be completely different from your neighbor.

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You may be someone that running three miles a day really activates your parasympathetic nervous system in a beautiful way that shows up in your HRV calculation. But if you do it too many days, it drops it. You start to really get a sense of who am I from a physiological perspective.

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Talk to me about the resonance breathing, how this works, the pushing at the right time on the bike pedal.

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Yes. This process came about to me many years ago in grad school at Rutgers University. Paul Leer, who teaches at UMD&J was giving a presentation about his work with Afgeny Vashilow and Ronja Vashilow that he brought from Russia. They were working with cosmonauts in Russia when they discovered something called resonant sinusarrhythmia. It It essentially is a frequency that activates the entire nervous system and different what's called vagal afferent pathways from the brain to the heart to the digestive track. When you activate this frequency, which is a specific frequency in the body, the numeric is 0.1 hertz, you activate multiple pathways at once, allowing them to tighten or strengthen then the homeostatic regulatory mechanisms. Okay, short succinct way. He was using this at Rutgers and with the Michalos to treat a multitude of health conditions with incredible outcomes, depression, PTSD, fibromyalgia, asthma. I went up to Dr. Lear and I said, Have you used this with athletes? I interested in elite performance. That question led to the last two decades of my research and practice. What we found is that specifically for athletes, This allows them to gain control over anxiety and being able to perform at what I call their full autonomic bandwidth or their elite self.

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The HRB training takes approximately 10 weeks meeting once per week and identifying a rate of breathing that optimizes those beautiful heart rate oscillations. I have you practice that 15 minutes, twice a day. The first four weeks, we work to maximize your baseline heart rate variability. I look for what's called the bearer reflex game, the indication around week four that your homeostatic mechanisms that control how you respond in the moment, how you anticipate a stressful moment, and how you recover from a stressor are going to increase, and that's the first sign. Then sessions 5 through 10, I walk you through my protocol for managing stress more in the moment and being able to oscillate from a sympathetic to a parasympathetic state and becoming aware of when you're in each of those states. For people, let's say at the Olympics, they want to be able to create that parasympathetic state on demand in a certain number of breaths. We do that. A decision maker for the UN will want to make sure that he or she is in a parasympathetic, open, agile, receptive state where they can be very focused or contextually driven, and they will want to learn how to reliably enter what you could call a flow state, but I would scientifically call a parasympathetic state.

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I tailor the training based on the needs of the individual, but it is some modulation of physiological states to then control behavioral outcomes and even how they feel.

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Okay. As far as I'm aware about your process, there is a particular breath rate Between five point something and six point something?

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Yeah. So it's generally between five breaths per minute and 6.5.

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Breaths per minute. Cool. So there is a particular rate, which is individual for each person. When you find that, that helps based on the rate at which your heart beats and the way that it beats, the breathing in and the breathing out at that particular pace can help to amplify or getting it wrong to make worse your HRV. You're suggesting 15 minutes in the morning and 15 minutes in the evening, so twice a day. And the first four weeks is you trying to basically dial in what is that particular breath rate, and then we move forward from there.

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So That was great, and I love that explanation. Generally in the first session, we identify resonant frequency, that rate between 5 to 6.5 breaths per minute. Then we do a little extra fixing on the side and helping to breathe from the abdomen on the breath. Also then learning to be able to inhibit other thoughts. There are pieces of this that I tailor in, and I talk a little bit about in my book, but to activate the prefrontal lobe. One of the pieces, since we're talking about HRV in the brain a bit today, is to make sure to use the Pacer that sets your resonant frequency. If you close your eyes or listen to music, you won't have the same cognitive effects. When you look at a Pacer, matching your breathing to the Pacer, it's a two for one a little bit because you're optimizing oxygen and blood flow all over the body, especially to the prefrontal lobe while training attention. It's maximizing the cognitive enhancements.

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A Pacer is just some cue, maybe on a screen, something like that.

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There's several different ones on the iPhone and the Android. If you just type in breath Pacer, you can find the one you prefer. Some are just a line going up and down, some are balls that expand and contract. I have an app on an elite HRV that walks you through my 10-week protocol. You're welcome to use that if you like. There's many. But that watching the pacer as you do your practice 15 minutes, twice a day, does make a difference in terms of the cognitive impact of the treatment.

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Okay, so you have this 15 minutes twice a day. Is the assumption from you, methodologically, that those 15 minutes sessions will begin to bleed into your breath rate outside of that session, getting closer to that? How long does it take? Because I breathe at whatever rate I breathe at, 6.8 breaths per minute throughout the day on average. How long does it take to do two 15 minutes sessions a day to basically reprogram my breath rate? That seems like a very big change to come from only 30 minutes a day.

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So it does, and you're absolutely right. It does become your habit. But what I'm What you're really targeting is training your heart so that the rhythms, the resonant frequency rhythms, are going to be different when you breathe, let's say, that first week at resonant frequency versus just your natural baseline. But I want the rhythms from your resonant frequency to be your baseline. The heart is a muscle.

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Breath rhythms or heart rhythms? Heart rhythms. Okay, so you're training the heart more than you're training the breath during these 50 minutes sessions. Is that right?

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Correct. Subsequently, you train the breath after seven to eight weeks. But first and foremost, you train the heart. By week four, I start to see the heart pattern that I teach at breathing at resonant frequency to begin occurring just at their baseline.

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That's interesting. How much work is required after going through your protocol of 10, 12 weeks? How much work is required to maintain those gains afterwards? If I stop after 10 weeks, do I just go back to normal?

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You still have to do some breathing, not the same level. What I recommend is to breathe three to four times a week, at least for 15 minutes. It's like calf raises in a sense, Chris. Once you get to a certain level of the muscle you wanted to develop, you don't You have to push this hard to maintain it, but you do have to exercise it. It's not a perfect algorithm. People will say they are fine with twice a week. Other people will say, I just need to do once a day, five days a week. Other times I'll have people that will come back and just say, the cognitive impact, the screen door effect, where I can screen out what's not important and really focus on what is, is waning after nine months, I want to just do a surge for another 10 weeks, and we do. If you notice the benefits minimizing, then you up it. Sometimes it's less. Maybe it's two weeks of going back to Every day, 15 minutes, and you're feeling great again, and then you titrate. You don't have to breathe for the rest of your life for 15 minutes, twice a day.

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But you do have to do some breathing, and I would just base it on how you're feeling and what you're needing to maintain.

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How How should we be breathing throughout the day outside? When we take it off the cushion, so to speak, what is your advice to your elite performance clients on what they should be doing and what they learn in week, whatever it was, 6:00 to 10:00 or 8:00 to 10:00?

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Yes, I love that question. I believe if we had everyone really understanding the powerful impacts of breathing, not only on how we feel, but how we make decisions and how we behave, we'd have a very different world. There are ways to use the breathing to enhance health, and so particularly moments that bring someone anxiety, and then taking what I call a power five, focusing just on that feeling of the crisp, fresh air through the inhale and then letting go. That was a fear or the anxiety on the exhale to reset, and they can take those small intervals as needed. But there are also fun ways to use this to enhance functioning in other aspects of one's life. Parents might use this in terms of with their own children and being able to flexibly respond to multiple children asking many needs at a time and before responding, taking a power of five or doing it with their kids altogether. We should talk about that. Physiological connectivity is real and it's really amazing. But finding moments that you either want to have more control over how you're responding and be able to create a desired response or enhancing cognitive functioning, mental clarity, objectivity for decision-making?

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Let's go into that. Explain to me, give me a couple of protocols, and also, I think, importantly, the cues of how people know to do the protocol. What are some of your favorites? What are the ones that give the most benefit?

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Sure. Many athletes, professional athletes, whether NBA or PGA Tour, will notice their mind racing. It can be even something great that happens, a birdie on the golf course, but their mind races. The sympathetic arousal sets in and their mind is racing. As they're walking from hole to hole, they're practicing their breathing, counting four in, six out, to clear the mind and also return the body to their baseline Four in, six out. Correct. What's interesting about adding the counting, Chris, is you can't count and think at the same time. They require the same part of the brain. For many people, the counting with the breath, and this is not for the 15-minute twice a day practice, that's too much. But this is for epic of time uses to use the counting while they're taking a few breaths to quickly enter their desire It would be science state.

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Yeah, I guess anyone that's tried to do breath counting during meditation knows that you lose the count when you also lose your focus. It's very difficult to keep on top of that as you're going in and out. It's like playing music over the top of a sound that you don't want to hear. You can really only hear one of them, the loudest sound at one time. Okay, what about... So four in, six out, longer on the exhale. What are some cues that you like to give people to remind them, Hey, this is something that you need to pay attention to. This is something that you haven't done yet today.

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For some people, they love being able to use this on demand. If they have a racing mind or a heart rate that speeds up, we'll identify physiological responses that would necessitate using, let's say, the power five to return to baseline. There are other people that just want to use this during the day to keep them calibrated without any specific need. We'll do things like set their phone and to vibrate at three different points during the day just so they can have a quick reminder to take five resonant breaths and recalibrate. In other instances, I like to pair it with habits for people, let's say eating. Before sitting down to have breakfast or lunch or dinner, they take a moment to take five breaths. It doesn't have to be eating, but it can be some other regular activity. So that this becomes a way, not just to bookends at the start and end of every day, but a way to stay calibrated and open and engaged with the world without the energetic expenses of the world coming at them.

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Nasal breathing. Ever since James Nestor wrote, Breath, fantastic book. He came on the show to talk about it. Nasal breathing is another hot new goal in school at the moment. What has your research showed about the impact of nasal breathing on HRV, and what do you see as being the best facial strategy when it comes to maximizing HRV training through breath?

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It's interesting, and I've had many clients who've read James Nestor's book, and they have so much deference for his work, and we evaluate. I've had a few instances where the nasal breathing has shown over what I call the purslips breathing, where you inhale through the nose but exhale through the mouth, maximize their HRV. But in most instances, that's not what I've seen. In more instances than not, the inhale through the nose and the exhale through the mouth leads to increases in HRB when we test it in the moment. I've also had people specifically say, Well, I feel better one way or another. I'm going to defer to the person. I don't believe, Chris, that there is a one-size-fits-all. I very much honor when someone says, This makes me feel this way, then I'm going to defer to it and we're going to work with it. What's interesting, I don't have my clients take a pause at the top of their breath before they exhale, but every once in a while, someone will say, I need that pause. So we incorporate it. There's just nuances for everyone's nervous system. Just succinctly, to answer your question, I have not seen that the nasal breathing produces HRV gains that are more than the inhale through the nose and the exhale through the mouth.

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There is something about the inhaling through the nose and the exhaling through the mouth that increases what's called peak expiratory flow and leads to cardiovascular effects. My endurance athletes, including my golfers on the tour, will say, Doc, at week seven, my training hasn't changed, and I'm just not tired on hole eight anymore. What's happening? That I haven't found to happen with the nasal breathing, but we certainly could I'm focused for it.

[00:41:46]

Who are some of the clients that you work with? What are some of the illustrious heights that they've got to?

[00:41:55]

I've worked with NBA coaches that I have done extremely well in the NBA. I have worked with hedge fund owners, PGA tour players, at the Masters, Olympians that PR'd. What I love about HRV and the training of this process is that it helps any individual maximize their elite self. It's not sports-specific or situations specific. If you are an incredible, and I've worked with one of the top dancers at Martha Graham, and she had incredible experience going through this training and being able to reduce performance anxiety and have what she called her best performances on stage. But what I love about this is it takes anyone and any talent and allows them to remove the anxiety or the fear and then consistently be able to stay at a bandwidth of their maximum talent and abilities and to be able to inhibit other factors that would detract from it.

[00:43:15]

So the big question that I've had since learning about your work, I have a friend, Youssef, who went through your protocol at the start of this year. And a question that both of us had in the back of our mind is, what is the relative effect effect of simply training VO2 max, ie, increasing your fitness versus resonant breathing practices?

[00:43:40]

They work beautifully together. And that's why you see athletes with these incredible HRV scores. I wouldn't say one is better than the other, but what the HIV does, the VO2 max does not, is developing a reflex that kicks in on its own unconsciously to help you modulate stress.

[00:44:04]

What do you see as the role then of VO2 max training? Also, what about the role of low and slow versus VO2 max? I'm sure even if this isn't your area of expertise, you must have an awful lot of insight into this because your clients are going to come to you and they're going to say, Doctor, do you need me to stay in zone 2 for 45 minutes a day, three times a week? Or would you rather me try and get up to maximal 90% plus heart rates for 10 minutes, twice a week? What do you know? What's your insight when it comes to fitness training for HRV improvements? What does the research say?

[00:44:43]

This enhances recovery, and it allows for the heart rate to stay lower for activities during...

[00:44:53]

No, no, no. In terms of protocols of training, if somebody was to do a physical training protocol, what do you tend to suggest to your clients? Are you saying, I want you to focus more on zone 2, I want you to focus more on your VO2 max work? From a physical perspective, what do you tend to advise?

[00:45:11]

That's not specifically an area of training that I incorporate. Sometimes I work with athletic trainers and we'll compare data, and our goal is to collaboratively integrate for a specific outcome.

[00:45:28]

Is there any learning Are there things that you've taken away from that? Are there any particular protocols that you found where you go, Wow, this seems to reliably improve HRV from a training perspective?

[00:45:41]

That's a great question. I'll tell you some trainings, yes, some unexpected data collections and so forth. Sometimes I will see that That running for specific individuals for a specific distance has an incredible impact on their HRV, not all. Sometimes I've seen that with swimming as well. The amount, the distance run is really interesting because for one person it's three miles and for another it's six. Binding what distance and what frequency and measuring it with the HRV can be really insightful. The unexpected ones, I've seen acupuncture improve HRB. I've also, and this is a funny one, but I've seen two People, actors that don't know each other, come from energy healing, and they show up in my office. On both of those occasions and throughout their training, I kept saying what was happening. It didn't improve their baseline. But when They came directly from that session. I could see in the moment that their HRV was uniquely higher than normal and their parasympathetic state more easy to access. I've also seen people take supplements that augment HRV.

[00:47:18]

What are some of those?

[00:47:20]

I have no affiliation with it, but Lyma. Lyma is a supplement that has aAlanar. It's a scientific formula.

[00:47:31]

L-y-m-a?

[00:47:32]

Correct. To optimize, it has antioxidant effects, anti-anxiety effects, and to improve sleep. People take it for various reasons. Again, I have no affiliation with it, but I had enough clients tell me about it, and we measured it. I measured also their sleep as related to HIV, and we saw improvements in both. It's interesting.

[00:47:56]

Is it a supplement or is it a laser that you put on your skin?

[00:47:59]

I think that's separate, but I can also tell you a funny story about light exposure, which is applicable. I've had people use different lasers. I've had people use the Verilux lamp and put it next to their computers. I have many times, more times than not, also seen how that impacts HRV. What's interesting is to use HRV as a metric to determine the effectiveness of an intervention. It's baking changes on your autonomic nervous system, HRV will reflect it, and it's a reliable measure.

[00:48:37]

Talk to me about what people get wrong when it comes to measuring HRV. There's a million ways to do it. There's lots of different wearables. What are the worst and the pitfalls and what are the best ways to do it?

[00:48:50]

Nocturnal HRV is a fairly reliable way to measure heart rate variability because there's generally less movement at night and less variables impacting you. But of course, a measurement after a lot of drinking or eating late or specific stressor is going to skew that. I've had people have foot twitches and then their HRV is not reliable, and so it's not perfect. If you see abnormal numbers, there's generally there's something happening with the wearable or there's a specific behavior occurring in the moment to make it an aberration, and there's no need to panic. You You want to collect data. I always say, all data is good data. It leads to understanding. The Oura Ring can be really helpful for tracking HRV. Elite HRV had A sensor, a core sensor. Polar for measuring HRV in the moment is also helpful. But when you're walking or talking, your heart rate variability is going to change. One of the things people will increases in HRV and aura, and they don't understand it's movement-related. Even at night, if they had a really restless night of sleep or were up and down to help children or go to the bathroom, their HRV reading is going to be skewed.

[00:50:16]

Yeah, that's one of the things that I learned. Joel Jamieson has been on the show. Brian McKenzie also been on the show. Both of those guys are talking about one of the challenges you have when wearing a lot of wearables That throughout the night, they take these snapshots, but these snapshots are dependent on what sleeping position are you in. Are you awake or are you not? And unless you have something which is continuous, whatever happened to that core sense thing that you guys had?

[00:50:45]

I have to call Jason more and ask because it was very good. And the way to use it was to take it as soon as you woke up in the morning, and then you could reliably measure your HRV across time. And I have to give him a call. I I don't know if they ran out.

[00:51:02]

For the people that don't know, there was a finger-tip HRV sensor thing that you guys were quite highly affiliated with, at least this is one of our suggested measurement devices. I thought that was a great idea. I couldn't get it in the UK, and then by the time that I'd moved to the US, it had stopped shipping. I think you guys suggest Polar straps and a few other bits and pieces.

[00:51:27]

The Polar is great and has It has fairly high scientific reliability such that you can even publish research off of it. It allows you to capture HRV in the moment as well as at sleep at night. You have that optionality. I'm a big fan of the Polar. You can also download it to your phone. I've used it with coaches and specifically NBA players to be able to get a sense of where they're at right before a game. Are they in a sympathetic or parasympathetic state? Then we play games like how to bring your heart rate down by five beats in two breaths. Can you do it in one breath? Can you do it in half a breath? It's a very simple way to increase HRV and also to allow someone to enter into a competition in an ideal performance state.

[00:52:20]

Are there any other vagal practices that you recommend or that you like?

[00:52:28]

There It's interesting. There are a host. There's something that... There are different places in New York and California. I don't know how popular it is all over the world, sound baths. You go into a training center or a spa, and they use different instruments to produce different sounds. The vibrations are really fascinating because they do activate the parasympathetic nervous system. Of course, I've collected the data on that. It does persist for some people for beyond the moment. But what I really think people should understand is before trying to add all of these different interventions to increase vagal tone or to get into a parasympathetic state or even to increase parasympathetic state at baseline is to understand thyself and measure what really helps to calibrate their most elite self, what amplifies and also detracts from them, and then what their goal is. You can even do things like, Well, how many days of the week am I in my top 25% of HRV? If your best days are Saturday and Sunday, but you're training, competing, making decisions Monday through Friday, we have a problem. That would where I would start for most people. Then after they have a sense of their HRV range and the variables that amplify and detract, then committing to 10 weeks or 10 to 12 weeks of the HRV training, breathing 15 minutes twice a day at the resonant frequency.

[00:54:19]

The reliability is really important. You're training the biggest muscle in your body, your heart. But without the training that stimulates the bearer reflex at that certain algorithm, you don't get the If you do exactly what I've asked, the 10 weeks, twice a day, 15 minutes, it works. But I've tried. I've had people call me from India, Chris, Can I work with you for 10 days? It doesn't work like that. It's the chronic stimulation of the bearer reflex at this rate, 15 minutes, twice a day, 10 weeks, to reliably increase bearer reflex gain and really gain control over the modulatory mechanisms of how you anticipate, respond, and recover from stress.

[00:55:01]

Is there such a thing as a non-responder to resonance breathing?

[00:55:09]

Yes, but at first. Then it becomes a bit of detective work to understand why. If someone is not responding to the resonant frequency breathing, then we begin to talk about what's happening in their life, whether it is a chronic, almost paralyzing state of stress, it's a lack of recovery, it's overtraining, and then we address it. After we take away that variable, then HRV training works across ages around the world, and it's just a commitment to time and disciplined breathing at resonant frequency that produces the results.

[00:55:58]

What are the most common pitfalls when someone does their HRV training? Let's say that someone thinks that they're a non-responder and they're going through the checklist of particular things. Is it that they've got their frequency wrong, they've detected it wrong, and they're trying to breathe at the wrong rates? What are the common errors?

[00:56:17]

It's funny. It may surprise most people. It's not breathing at the wrong rate. Even if you breathe 0.2 seconds off, you're still going to have salutary health positive benefits. It's the trying so hard that I have to make this perfect, I have to make this time meaningful that they don't actually let go in the moment. They put so much pressure on themselves that they minimize the impact of the training. I've seen that happen a few times. Then what I'll say is, I want you to make this your spa time or playful. I want you to be playful about your breathing, light, gentle. The more It's really true. The more you can enjoy it, the more the benefits will find you.

[00:57:07]

Isn't it interesting? We're trying to go bottom up to teach our nervous system that this is safe, that you are okay as you are, that you can deal with this, to expand that autonomic flexibility so that the brain then is given the room to be able to make better decisions. And in the process of trying to do bottom up training, a top-down problem comes in. Yeah, how funny.

[00:57:33]

The other condition I've seen interfere with the immediate effects of HRV is PTSD. If you take someone who has just experienced a traumatic event, their body is in such a startle state, it takes time. But don't give up. The HRV biofubic can work for you. It can work for anybody that's gone through a source of trauma. It's just sticking with it and being persistent. Sometimes in those cases, I'll pair a memory of feeling safe. It's not the memory, the cognitive, it's the feeling. It's really interesting. You can help someone access physiological imprints for many people, men, too, leaders of huge corporations, software companies, banks. One of the most potent times people have felt safe or a sense of connection is holding their child for their first time, men as well as women, and recreating a feeling of safety, going back to an imprint that exists, connecting to it on the inhale, and letting go of the rest of the world. If you're feeling stuck, I would also add connecting to a time in your life you felt really safe, connected, or a sense of love, and letting go of trying so hard and persisting Testing with the practice, it does help everybody.

[00:59:04]

It just sometimes it takes just a little more time to start.

[00:59:07]

Hell, yeah. Dr. Leo Lagos, ladies and gentlemen, where should people go? They want to find out more of this. They're going to follow the program.

[00:59:14]

My program for Heart Rate Variability Biofeedback is in the book Heart, Breath, Mind. It's on Amazon, it's Barnes & Noble, it's a local distributors around the world. If you want to also connect with me, my website is drleah, L-E-A-H, lagos, l-A-G-O-S. Com.

[00:59:38]

I'm right. Leah, I appreciate you. Thank you for your day.

[00:59:40]

Thank you, Chris. It's such a pleasure.