Ajaan Fuang said there is a line of breath energy running down the middle of your body. The breath is coming in from every direction. When you breathe in one part of the body, it can connect with every other part of the body.

"One perception I’ve found useful is one that Ajaan Fuang recommended. He said, there is a line of breath energy running down the middle of your body. When the breath comes in, it comes in to nourish that line, and when it goes out, it goes out of that line. So it’s not like you try to pull the breath in just through the nostrils. The breath is coming in from every direction, to fill up that line in the middle. Then you want to make sure the line doesn’t get squeezed out even as you breathe out. Keep it full, so that whatever breath energy is helpful stays in the body, and only those breath energies that seem excessive or unpleasant at the moment can go.

Another useful perception is of the body as a big sponge, with all the holes in the sponge connected, so that when you breathe in one part of the body, it can connect with every other part of the body. Or you can find whatever other perceptions help to keep the breath as calm, to keep that sense of ease in the body as calm as possible. Because that’s the next step: to calm down these mental fabrications, i.e. the feelings and the perceptions, until there eventually arises the perception of the whole body as just being filled with breath energy, and it gets more and more still. Ultimately, you can actually reach the point where the sense of the in-and-out breath stops. There’s just breath energy filling the body and it’s sufficient. The mind is still. What’s happening is that you’re using less and less oxygen in the brain, so your need for in-and-out breathing gets reduced. The oxygen coming in the pores is enough to keep you going."

~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "The Buddha’s Sixteen Steps"

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