@andezzy: Jamaican Jerk Co #currychicken #jamaicanfood #foodtiktok #yummyfood #orlando

Andezzy
Andezzy
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Saturday 23 August 2025 18:50:16 GMT
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flygirlsheena
Flygirl :
That looks so good!
2025-08-23 19:17:43
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Soviet doctor Konstantin Buteyko discovered something in the 1950s that mainstream medicine still refuses to officially acknowledge. He found that most people breathe wrong — and that's exactly what's slowly destroying their health. His method fits into one exercise. Exhale. Pinch your nose. Walk. 10 steps. 15. 20. Inhale. Next week — 25. After a month — 40. A body that used to panic at the slightest rise in CO2 learns to function calmly where it used to gasp. First, test yourself. Exhale. Pinch your nose. Time how long until the first urge to breathe. Under 20 seconds — chronic hyperventilation. 20–40 — normal. Over 40 — excellent. Buteyko claimed this number predicts your health status more accurately than most lab tests. Try it right now. Why walking specifically. When you move, your muscles produce CO2 faster. Your receptors panic. But after a week — they adapt. The threshold shifts. The bronchial tubes expand on their own. Breathing slows down without any effort. That's not a metaphor — it's physiology. Asthma sufferers reduce their inhaler use. A Cochrane review confirmed it: people with asthma who practice the method regularly reduce their need for bronchodilators. Symptoms decrease. Quality of life improves. No pulmonologist will prescribe this — but the data exists. Athletes gain endurance without extra training. When the body tolerates CO2 longer — it works longer without needing another breath. Less energy spent on breathing. More energy available for movement. Endurance increases without changing the workload. How to start. 20 steps without inhaling. Mild discomfort at the end — normal. Pain — no. Add steps every week. After 4 weeks your control pause grows from 15 to 35–40 seconds. Anxiety decreases. Breathing calms down. Free. No equipment. Right on your daily walk. I spent 10 years in therapy, meditation, and breathwork — follow me and find out what actually moves the needle. #health #lifebalance
Soviet doctor Konstantin Buteyko discovered something in the 1950s that mainstream medicine still refuses to officially acknowledge. He found that most people breathe wrong — and that's exactly what's slowly destroying their health. His method fits into one exercise. Exhale. Pinch your nose. Walk. 10 steps. 15. 20. Inhale. Next week — 25. After a month — 40. A body that used to panic at the slightest rise in CO2 learns to function calmly where it used to gasp. First, test yourself. Exhale. Pinch your nose. Time how long until the first urge to breathe. Under 20 seconds — chronic hyperventilation. 20–40 — normal. Over 40 — excellent. Buteyko claimed this number predicts your health status more accurately than most lab tests. Try it right now. Why walking specifically. When you move, your muscles produce CO2 faster. Your receptors panic. But after a week — they adapt. The threshold shifts. The bronchial tubes expand on their own. Breathing slows down without any effort. That's not a metaphor — it's physiology. Asthma sufferers reduce their inhaler use. A Cochrane review confirmed it: people with asthma who practice the method regularly reduce their need for bronchodilators. Symptoms decrease. Quality of life improves. No pulmonologist will prescribe this — but the data exists. Athletes gain endurance without extra training. When the body tolerates CO2 longer — it works longer without needing another breath. Less energy spent on breathing. More energy available for movement. Endurance increases without changing the workload. How to start. 20 steps without inhaling. Mild discomfort at the end — normal. Pain — no. Add steps every week. After 4 weeks your control pause grows from 15 to 35–40 seconds. Anxiety decreases. Breathing calms down. Free. No equipment. Right on your daily walk. I spent 10 years in therapy, meditation, and breathwork — follow me and find out what actually moves the needle. #health #lifebalance

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