The Rule of Three
Think about this for a moment. You can survive:
Of all the things your body needs to survive, breath is the most urgent. It's not optional. It's not a nice-to-have. You must breathe to live. And yet, most people are shallow breathers. Chest breathers. They're not getting nearly enough oxygen into their system, and their bodies are suffering because of it.
What Your Cells Really Need
Your cells need four things to survive and thrive:
When you breathe deeply, when you engage in diaphragmatic breathing, you're not just filling your lungs. You're sending oxygen into your bloodstream, which transports it to every cell in your body. And here's something remarkable: through breathwork alone, you can actually change your cells from acidic to alkaline.
The Acid-Alkaline Balance
Dr. Otto Warburg won a Nobel Prize for his discovery that no disease, including cancer, can live in an alkaline environment. Think about that for a moment. Disease and cancer are, according to many experts, a buildup of toxins and acid in the body.
Your blood needs to stay at a precise pH of 7.36. Your body works with incredible precision to maintain that balance. But the foods you eat, the stress you carry, the way you breathe—all of it affects whether your internal environment is acidic or alkaline.
This discovery sent me on an alkaline cleansing journey years ago. And every time I've lived an alkaline diet, the weight just falls off. Not because I'm starving myself, but because I'm creating an environment where my body can actually function the way it was designed to.
Living Food vs. Dead Food
Here's something to consider: What is living food?
Living food is something that grows on a tree, a bush, or in the ground. It's fresh. It's alive with nutrients. And yet, so much of what fills our supermarkets is anything but alive.
Large food producers often don't let the ground rest. They pump artificial fertilizers into the soil year after year. The essential nutrients that should be in the soil aren't there anymore. So we get beautiful-looking fruit and vegetables—show ponies, I call them—that look perfect but have no taste. No flavor. Because flavor comes from minerals, and the minerals aren't in the soil.
Then there's cold storage. They'll pick fruit and store it for weeks, months, even years. Then they thaw it out and sell it to you as "fresh." But it's not fresh. It's been frozen in time, and all the life has been drained out of it.
That's why I encourage people to grow their own food if they can. You know what's going into that soil. You know your food is alive. And with the price of fruit and vegetables these days, it's often cheaper anyway.