Have you ever felt like you were drowning?
Deep breaths are essential.
Without them, even the brain cannot function well. Put simply, it runs out of oxygen. Allow me to illustrate:
In Dr. Julia Evans’ class on neurobiology, volunteers
participated in a series of demonstrations to highlight the importance of rest. Using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), Dr.
Evans measured how much oxygen was in the volunteer’s brain during the
following:
1. Regular breathing at rest (not thinking about
anything in particular)
2. Holding their breath
3. A simple cognitive or language task for a few
minutes
4. A more complex cognitive or language task for
a few minutes
Regular breathing was poetic: oxygen levels gently undulated like a calm
day at sea. Holding their breath, on the
other hand, was a storm: sudden dips in
oxygen levels left the brain gasping.
The simple cognitive task looked a lot like regular
breathing. Thinking about something easy wasn’t making
many ripples.
At first, the more complex task looked the same: gentle fluctuations in oxygen, nothing major,
just like breathing. After a few minutes,
though, the brain’s oxygen levels began a wild dance, dipping and spiking. On the outside, nothing had changed. Most volunteers reported that they did not
even notice a difference.
The brain definitely noticed. It was using oxygen more quickly than the
heart could supply it.
Imagine living without air.
We can’t do it. Our
bodies are designed to rest. Even after
billions of years of practice, life on Earth needs to stop and breathe. And not just every once in a while—we must rest
frequently, daily, even within the hour.
Even a brief moment of rest can restore the oxygen to the brain.
After taking a moment to breathe (without thinking about the
task), the volunteer’s oxygenation levels returned to normal.
What does this mean for Speech Therapy? As I work with my patients, I aim to “exercise”
their brains. Even athletes know
that rest is important. Yes, strength is gained from a challenge, but at some point we just hurt ourselves. We must rest. So during
therapy, I frequently pause and allow my patients to re-oxygenate their
brains. Think how tired injured and differently-developing brains must be! They have to work so much harder
to complete each task, even if it doesn’t show on the outside.
What does this mean for my life? I have to build in times of quiet, times of
mindfulness, times of prayer—however brief—to re-oxygenate my own brain. It’s difficult, especially when my schedule
is full to bursting. And I definitely
don’t always succeed. But after a while,
I can feel my brain gasping, and I know it’s been too long since I’ve taken a
rest.
The brain is sacred.
Without it, there is no breathing.
We must honor our brains’ need for rest.
We must stop and breathe.
It takes work and discipline to regularly rest. This is counter-cultural. The world tells us that the purpose of
rest is to allow us to work harder. But
rest is a natural state. It is good to
rest, to enjoy each other, to enjoy God.
Rest for the sake of rest is good. With the psalmist, we sing: “Oh, that I had the wings of a dove! I would fly away and be at rest.”
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