Everest Part 1: Breathe
In 2018, I successfully climbed the highest mountain in California, which is also the 11th highest peak in the entire United States, Mount Whitney. It stands at 4421 meters. One of the most unpleasant feelings of that trip was the feeling of not being able to catch my breath. As we neared the peak, I recall stopping every five steps to put my hands on my knees and take deep breaths. As I started to plan my trip for Everest Base Camp, I decided, I did not want to go through that again.
Social media is an interesting phenomena, it’s a digital space in which I have made friends and lost friends. This friend that I am referring to in this blog is Paul French. I still remember the day I first saw his account, he would post some very Cosmic and ethereal images/videos of everything from cells dividing to touching videos of animal interactions with humans, in which I would ask myself the question “Who is demonstrating the definition of humanity? The animal or the human it was interacting with?” It was these very deep thought provoking posts that attracted me to his account and when we finally interacted via chat and video, I was happy to discover that he was a ‘Therapeutic Breathwork Practitioner’.
I won’t steal Paul’s thunder, I recommend reaching out to him for more precise knowledge of breathing, but I will summarize what I learned.
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To Contact Paul:
LinkedIn: Paul French | LinkedIn
Credit Analyst
1 年Amazing Sal Rosales
Product Training Specialist at Hunter Industries
1 年Following! Inspired to renew yoga practice, especially pranayama.??
Technical Program Manager @ Microsoft | Cloud AI Delivery | AI Inferencing
1 年This is so cool, Sal! What a huge accomplishment.