Remember that the breath is energy, it's not just air coming in and out of the lungs. You can hold your breath but you can't hold the energy.
"Remember that the breath is energy, it’s not just air coming in and out
of the lungs. The air can be held, as when you hold your breath, but
the energy of the breath can’t be held. It can be blocked, but you don’t
really hold it. So even as you’re holding the air in your lungs, there
will be a flow of breath energy in different parts of the body. This
means that when we focus on the breath as energy, we’re focusing on
something that’s very light, very quick, and very pervasive.
It
also helps to think about the breath as something that comes in and out
of the body very easily. Even when you’ve got a stuffy nose or
congestion from a cold, there’s still a subtle energy coming into
different parts of the body. It’s like working around a traffic jam: If
you know that the traffic is congested on a main street, you drive
through the side streets.
You can think about the breath just waiting to come in at any time, so you don’t have to pull it in.
At
the same time, you don’t want to squeeze it out. Sometimes when your
out-breath is too long, you end it off with a little squeeze. That
doesn’t really help. As you breathe out, you want to keep all your
breath channels open so that when the body is ready to breathe in again,
they’ll be open, just waiting for the in-breath. If you squeeze things
out, there’s a tightening up and then you have to loosen that up before
the breath is going to come in again. That gets in the way of allowing a
sense of fullness to develop in the breath energy. Even though you’re
focusing on the in-and-out breath you don’t want to develop the habit of
trying to create a very clear marker between the in-breath and the
out-breath. They’re all part of one element, and the element is
continuous through time.
If you can think of the body as a large
sponge or some other porous material, with lots of breath channels all
over the place and then just hold that perception in mind, see how the
body responds."
~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Perceptions of the Breath"
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