Close Menu
Your Life After RetirementYour Life After Retirement
  • Home
  • Retirement News
  • Lifestyle
  • Fitness
  • Wellness
  • Senior Health
  • Finance
  • Medicare & Insurance
Top Post

Art trails, swimming spots and punt safaris, all easily accessible from Cambridge’s new train station | Cambridge holidays

June 25, 2026

When the claims experts are gone, who handles the next Gulf war?

June 25, 2026

The Earth Beneath Our Breath: Reclaiming Our Most Natural Medicine

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Art trails, swimming spots and punt safaris, all easily accessible from Cambridge’s new train station | Cambridge holidays
  • When the claims experts are gone, who handles the next Gulf war?
  • The Earth Beneath Our Breath: Reclaiming Our Most Natural Medicine
  • DOE Boosts Interest Discount for Student Loan Autopay
  • Avoid Afib in Hot Weather: 8 Tips
  • Cold Plunges and Pushups Became Part of Trey Lewis’ 100‑Pound Platinum Country Comeback
  • I Found Dozens of Prime Day Travel Deals Worth Adding to Cart Now
  • What the Refrigerant Transition Means for Your Next AC Repair, Replacement or Warranty Claim
Thursday, June 25
Your Life After Retirement
  • Home
  • Retirement News
  • Lifestyle
  • Fitness
  • Wellness
  • Senior Health
  • Finance
  • Medicare & Insurance
Your Life After Retirement
Home»Senior Health»The Earth Beneath Our Breath: Reclaiming Our Most Natural Medicine
Senior Health

The Earth Beneath Our Breath: Reclaiming Our Most Natural Medicine

yourlifeafterretirementBy yourlifeafterretirementJune 25, 2026
The Earth Beneath Our Breath: Reclaiming Our Most Natural Medicine
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn

As a medical student, I considered it a profound privilege to study the human body, to explore organs under the microscope and through dissection. But years later, I realized that something vital had been missing: a relationship.

The Bond Between Man and Nature

The curriculum I followed was rich in detail and precision, yet it failed to explore the relationships between organs, between systems, and between the human body and the living Earth. It treated the body in silos – cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological – as if these were separate entities. And it did so while entirely omitting the Earth itself as one of those systems. We were born and educated into a paradigm that treated nature as something separate from us – something to dominate, extract from, or ignore.

This fragmented view now permeates our language, thinking, health systems, and educational models. We speak of “mental health” as if it’s separate from physical or spiritual health. We even speak of “body-mind-spirit” as separate systems within a holistic framework.

Breathing for Nature

My study of breathwork began to dissolve these false boundaries. It awakened me to the wonder of how the body’s design is exquisitely tuned to serve life. Every anatomical feature, from the spirals of the nasal conchae that guide airflow to the lungs suspended upside down in the ribcage, exists to facilitate the movement of breath, and, with it, the flow of life force, energy, and information.

Every breath we take contains molecules from ancient trees, ocean winds, mountain air, and the exhalations of our ancestors. It’s a sacred reminder that we’re not just in a relationship with nature; we are nature.

When we’re in harmony with that truth, our breathing reflects it. It’s expansive, fluid, satisfying – attuned to the moment and responsive to our needs. But when we’re chronically stressed, sedentary or carrying unresolved trauma, our breathing becomes shallow, tight, and erratic. Most of us are unconsciously breathing in ways that signal to our nervous systems that we’re under threat. We’re not just anxious because life is hard; we’re anxious because we’re breathing as if we’re being hunted.

Science now supports what mystics and healers have long known: our breathing habits shape everything from blood pressure and immune function to mental clarity and emotional regulation.

Profoundly practical

Conscious breathwork – breathing with attention and intention – transforms an automatic function into a low-risk, deeply empowering form of natural medicine. It has the power to regulate the nervous system, reduce inflammation, and support trauma integration and re-pattern dysfunctional breathing over time. With practice, we recalibrate our internal baseline. We begin to move through the world from a more grounded presence. We slow down. We drop into rhythm – the rhythm of tides, seasons, sunrise, and decay. We come home to a pace that is human, sustainable, and sane.

While breathwork is often seen as abstract or esoteric, it’s profoundly practical. It empowers us to participate actively in our healing. It can be done alone, in a community, or integrated with other modalities. It costs nothing. It’s accessible. It’s Earth medicine that returns agency when so much of what impacts our lives seems out of our control.

Conscious breathing

Conscious breathing is a bridge back to the body as Earth, and to the unseen intelligence that connects all things. It invites us into a deeper relationship – with ourselves, with others, and with the living world. It increases our capacity to feel, not just joy and wonder, but grief, rage, and heartbreak too. And that’s where the real healing begins.

You don’t have to move off the grid to reclaim this, nor do you need perfect peace and quiet. You just need breath and a willingness to listen. There’s activism in choosing breath over burnout, in teaching our children how to regulate their own nervous systems instead of reaching for a screen, and in remembering that your body – not an app or an algorithm – is your first and most faithful teacher.

And yes, this is also political. In a world that profits from our disconnection, choosing to slow down and breathe deeply is an act of resistance. It’s saying: I will not outsource my wellbeing. I will not forget that I am part of something sacred and that we are part of one another. Reclaiming the breath is a return to the body, back to truth, back to Earth. 

Who is the author?

Dr. Ela Manga is an integrative medical doctor, author, speaker, facilitator, and a global voice for an emerging new paradigm of wellness.She has a special interest in the application of the art and science of conscious breathing to inspire healing-informed systems and communities.

Read more about Dr Manga here:

GRAB OUR LATEST LONGEVITY EDITION

This article features in our latest issue, alongside other incredible articles and features. Our “Back to Earth” issue is Longevity’s must-have edition for anyone ready to reflect on what we put in and on our bodies.

Get expert insights from Dr. Zach Bush, Dr. Ash Kapoor, Oscar Chalupsky, Dr. Maureen Allem, Dr. Anushka Reddy, Dr. Des Fernandes, Dr. Craige Golding, and many more. The issue explores everything from food, clean beauty, sustainable living, fashion, travel, and other mindful choices.

While available nationally in Southern Africa at your nearest Woolworths, Exclusive Books, and selectively at Superspar, Pick’n Pay, Airport lounges, and your local garage shop, you can also buy a digital copy at Zinio.com.

MAIN IMAGE CREDIT:Photo by Darius Bashar on Unsplash
Beneath Breath Earth Medicine Natural Reclaiming
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email
Previous ArticleDOE Boosts Interest Discount for Student Loan Autopay
Next Article When the claims experts are gone, who handles the next Gulf war?
yourlifeafterretirement
  • Website

Related Posts

Senior Health

Inside Biohackers World: How Innovation and Evidence-Based Practices Are Shaping the Future of Longevity

June 23, 2026
Senior Health

Fitness On Her Own Terms: How Serena Williams Trusted Her Body To Get Back Onto The Court

June 23, 2026
Senior Health

Dr Michael Fossel: Exploring Telomeres, Human Longevity and Healthy Aging

June 22, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Alyssa McElheny’s HYROX Tips for Athletes with a Running Background

June 4, 20260 Views

Best Student Loan Refinance Companies of June 2026

June 4, 20260 Views

How much should you pay for an ethically made T-shirt? | Ethical and green living

June 4, 20260 Views

Is AI Better for Patients?

June 4, 20260 Views
Most Popular

No One Likes Medicare Advantage

June 4, 202610 Views

How Medicare’s initial enrollment period works

June 4, 20266 Views
Trending

Alyssa McElheny’s HYROX Tips for Athletes with a Running Background

June 4, 2026

The Muscle-Building Starter Pack: Train Hard, Eat Enough, Recover Right

June 4, 2026
Latest post

Art trails, swimming spots and punt safaris, all easily accessible from Cambridge’s new train station | Cambridge holidays

June 25, 2026

When the claims experts are gone, who handles the next Gulf war?

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
yourlifeafterretirement All Rights Reserved 2026

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.