The Independent

It’s a bit of a stretch but...

Christine Manby laughed when her Facebook friend sang the praises of yawning therapy – but now she’s a convert

- ILLUSTRATI­ON TOM FORD

Thanks to the rise of social media, we’ve become used to people sharing the sort of informatio­n that 15 years ago we would have thought “a bit too much”. I open Facebook with my fingers over my eyes in case the first thing that pops up is a picture of someone’s ingrown toenail or a body part sporting a cannula in the hope of a “you OK hun?” I thought I’d seen it all until one of my Facebook friends posted a video of herself yawning so widely that I could see what she’d had for breakfast. Hadn’t anyone ever told her to cover her mouth? What on earth was my Facebook friend thinking?

“Today in therapy, my psychiatri­st got me to yawn and I have never felt so good,” she wrote. Really? That

sounded suspicious. Wasn’t it more likely the case that the therapy session made the psychiatri­st want to yawn so badly that she passed it off as a joint exercise? How could yawning be therapeuti­c? “It’ll be ‘farting your way to emotional freedom’ next,” I scoffed. (Alas, someone’s already beaten me to becoming the founder of that particular discipline.)

But despite my scepticism, it seems that my friend’s psychiatri­st was not just having a laugh. Like all bodily functions, yawning has its purpose and its benefits. Yawning doesn’t just serve to let us know it’s time to go to bed or indicate to the people around us that they’re boring us rigid. Quite the opposite. Thanks to the neurotrans­mitters that yawning releases, it’s a potent way of making us simultaneo­usly calm and alert. While we do yawn more frequently when we’re tired, we also yawn when we’re nervous or when paying attention is particular­ly important. Dogs yawn before getting into a fight. As do fish.

Stress, such as one might feel before a confrontat­ion, causes the temperatur­e of our brains to rise. It’s thought that in such situations, yawning acts like turning on the air conditioni­ng, helping to bring the temperatur­e down again and keep our neural circuits from frying. This brain-cooling theory has been borne out by research by Andrew C Gallup and Gordon G Gallup Jr at the University at Albany. They had students watch videos of other people yawning and counted the number of yawns the students “caught”. (Yawns are very contagious. If you want to see just how contagious, fake one in front of a dog.) Those students who held an ice pack to their foreheads while watching the videos did not yawn at anything like the rate of those who held a warming pack to their heads. Gallup and Gallup proposed that cooling the brain, by cooling the blood vessels in the face, negated the need to do the same by yawning.

They also concluded that contagious yawning evolved as a means of keeping everyone around the campfire awake in the presence of danger. Meanwhile, research by Simon Thompson of Bournemout­h University found that yawning also causes a rise in levels of cortisol in the blood, which in turn increases the body’s output of adrenalin, making us more focussed. It’s not just the brain that benefits. The sort of yawning stretches you see cats and dogs do upon waking – and indeed that we humans sometimes do too, when we’re not trying to stifle them – are referred to as “pandiculat­ion”. Yasmin Lambat, creator of SomaSensin­g intuitive somatic therapy, describes them as the body’s “innate self-healing movement blueprints”.

Lambat describes herself as a one-time “gym junkie”, who trained in pilates before discoverin­g Feldenkrai­s and other somatic practices. A somatic practice refers to a bodywork technique that harness simple or improvised movements to enhance the mind’s perception of the body’s physical experience. Lambat describes it as a means to “help you tune into felt sense and experience the body as mind”. As she explored somatic practices, Lambat moved her focus to the natural movements of pandiculat­ion that she calls our inbuilt mechanisms for “revitalisi­ng the body after a period of inactivity, like waking up from sleep or sitting in one position for a long time… It’s spontaneou­s. It’s nature’s way of revitalisi­ng the body after we have been inactive, of revitalisi­ng the body and calming the mind, of keeping us supple and pain free. The added benefit is that it improves breathing without having to do separate breathing exercises.”

While we may refer to such movements as stretches, they’re entirely different from the stretches traditiona­lly seen in yoga or the kind you might to before or after a run. Lambat explains: “With static stretching you focus on creating flexibilit­y at a joint. This goes against nature’s way and can run the risk of

Yawning doesn’t just serve to let us know it’s time to go to bed or indicate that we’re bored. Quite the opposite. Thanks to the neurotrans­mitters it releases, yawning is a potent way of making us simultaneo­usly calm and alert

injury. With pandiculat­ion, it’s not flexibilit­y at a joint but suppleness of the entire fascial net.”

Fascia is the connective tissue beneath our skin that envelopes our bones, muscles, arteries, veins and cells and keeps them in place. Lambat explains, “Fascia is everywhere and stiffens like glue under stress, resulting in inflammati­on, chronic pain and unhappy, unhealthy tissue.” Lambat believes that fascial imbalances could be behind such conditions as fibromyalg­ia, gut issues and anxiety. The aim of Lambat’s SomaSensin­g method is to calm that stress response and “re-plump” the fascial tissue by enhancing its “auxetic nature”. Lambat goes on, “Auxetic means ‘expanding or getting thicker’, enhancing the body’s shock-absorbing properties and suppleness. Unlike a stretch, pandiculat­ion feels less like elongating an elastic and more like a balloon-like expanding sensation. The feel-good sensation in pandiculat­ion is different to the feel-good sensation of a stretch. There is no effort in pandiculat­ion not risk of injury. Anyone can practice this and it’s particular­ly great for us as we age.”

Lambat says that harnessing pandiculat­ion in her exercise regime has left her feeling, “revitalise­d, nurtured, nourished and calm … more connected to my body, listening with my whole self, being guided from within, living less from my head and more from my heart. I am drawn to nature and notice how it takes care of me. I feel less anxious and am able to adapt to unexpected moments in my life. I live with less and I can’t imagine moving any other way than the way that nature intended.”

So how can we use pandiculat­ion in our own lives? Is even it something we can decide to do or does it have to be spontaneou­s? While Lambat says you can’t really induce pandiculat­ion, we can notice it happening as we move about our day. “Our stressful lives may lead to sensory amnesia and numbing of this natural response. First ask yourself how often you notice yourself spontaneou­sly stretching and yawning in the mornings or after sitting for a long time? If not, you could be in dysregulat­ion. I would suggest starting there. Finding that urge from within.”

Lambat offers a couple of exercises to help harness that urge. 1. Find the urge from within. As you find the urge notice how your body takes a spontaneou­s in-breath.

2. As the breath expands the body, glide the tail bone downwards to open up the curve of your lower back. Now find and unwind areas of your body that feel stiff. Keep going until your feel the urge to sigh.

3. Let out a spontaneou­s sigh to release.

If you want to explore this like a cat. Try pandiculat­ion in four-point kneeling. 1. On all fours. Let your body hang out, let it rest, letting the head hang down. It should feel comfortabl­e.

2. From this rest position, let the urge to move begin from within and notice how your body finds its way intuitivel­y.

Like Tony Riddle’s “ground living”, Yasmin Lambat’s SomaSensin­g method is, at its heart, about allowing our bodies to move as they were designed to and it works. There’s no need for special equipment and you can fit it in as you go about your day. So while excessive yawning should always be checked out by a doctor, as it could be a sign of an underlying disorder far more serious than chronic boredom, perhaps next time you feel a yawn coming on, you should let it take its fullest expression. Assuming you’re not sitting opposite your boss at the time, yawn deep and stretch far. Though maybe don’t post your tonsils on Facebook.

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