The Breathable Body
01/14/2026
The Buteyko Breathing Education Method
Breathing for Asthma, Anxiety & Restful Sleep
with Robert Litman –– Buteyko Educator since 2003
Author of The Breathable Body: Transforming Your World and Your Life One Breath at a Time (featured on Oprah Online)
Thursdays: Feb 5, 12, 19, 26 & Mar 5, 2026 — 11am-12:30pm PT
Or
Sundays: Feb 8, 15, 22 & Mar 1, 8, 2026 — 1-2:30pm PT
Classes are identical on both days. If you miss one session, you may attend the alternate day.
For more information and registration information follow this link
Resources - The Breathable Body & Robert Litman Helpful resource links to aid in your discovery
09/07/2025
The Insidiousness of Holding One’s Breath
I have been swimming for most of my life—since age fifteen. Now, at eighty-one, I still swim three days a week. What began as competition in my younger years has become something entirely different. I no longer count laps or chase times. Instead, I swim to feel connected, to sense how my 660 muscles coordinate as I move through the water.
Swimming, for me, is about flow—inside and out. When my movement becomes fragmented, the water tells me immediately. I slow down, sense where I’ve lost connection, and invite that part of my body back into the whole. The moment flow returns, so does ease in my breath.
This link between flow and breathing is unmistakable. When movement is fragmented, breath feels restricted. When movement flows, breathing opens naturally. Yet the place I most often lose this connection is my head. I tend to hold it rigidly, especially in the water. True swimming flow requires spiraling motion from head to toe, led by the pelvis. Any body part that resists—especially the head—creates limitation.
Recently, I allowed my head to move with greater ease, and the release surprised me. It brought not just freedom in my stroke but also a surge of emotion. I felt sadness and relief all at once. Sadness for how long I had been holding my head—and with it, holding my breath. Relief in realizing that letting go was possible.
Holding my breath has been a lifelong pattern, rooted in early trauma. As a child, I learned to hold myself tightly—my body, my head, even my breath—to keep vulnerability hidden. Though it may have protected me then, the costs have been real. Over the years, I’ve suffered six concussions, two of them in just the past three years. Each has reminded me to ask: What is this teaching me?
Part of the answer is that fear shaped my body. Fear of being hurt. Fear of going crazy. Fear of being unsafe. For decades, my baseline was frantic energy, fueled by coffee. Not surprisingly, my last two concussions happened while I was heavily caffeinated. Almost a year ago, I stopped drinking coffee and eventually black tea as well. Without stimulants, I began to notice more: emotions, sensations, aches, confusions. The unraveling of old defenses began to show itself, and with it, the possibility of freedom.
This is where breath comes in. For the past 22 years, I’ve taught Buteyko Breathing Education, and for 37 years I’ve taught movement inquiry. Again and again, I encounter the same pattern in students: holding the breath.
This holding can appear in two ways. The obvious is simply stopping the inhale or exhale. The subtler is holding the body so tightly that the breath is trapped in a small space, never fully nourishing us. Either way, oxygen supply is limited, energy production is disrupted, and flow is interrupted.
Sometimes, this happens in small moments of concentration or fear. For example, many people unconsciously stop breathing while reading emails—so much so that it’s been named “email apnea.” Over time, these small breath-holds accumulate, creating erratic breathing patterns that affect both body and mind.
The insidious part is that we often don’t realize we’re doing it. Holding the breath becomes invisible, automatic, and deeply ingrained. Yet the consequences are real. Breath-holding disrupts our chemistry, our movement, and even our capacity to feel. Many of us hold our breath precisely to avoid feelings that seem too threatening, a habit often learned in childhood when the world felt unsafe.
I know this pattern from the inside. And I also know that it can change. Through movement, through water, through breath practices and inquiry, I’ve discovered that the very patterns that once kept me safe can be softened. Breath can return. Flow can return. And with them comes the possibility of living not in fear, but in presence—where the body, the breath, and the self are free to move, feel, and belong.
The Breathable Body - Robert Litman We explore the breathing body, its harmony and balance. Making choices that enhance health and provide energy in all aspects of our being.
05/29/2025
Unlock Better Breathing on Vashon …a 6 week series
Buteyko Breathing Education for Asthma, Allergies, Sleep, Anxiety
with Robert Litman - Local author of The Breathable Body
Tuesdays – June 17, 24, July 1, 8, 15 & 22, 2025
One Private Session included
11 am – 12:30 pm PT
Modi Bldg. – 9929 SW Bank Rd Suite 204 @ 11:00 am - 12:30 pm
$395 (sliding scale and payment plans)
For more information - [email protected]
Register here:
Unlock Better Breathing Vashon ...a 6 week series - The Breathable Body Hows does Buteyko work its magic? By restoring normal breathing patterns, you tap into your body's innate regulating mechanisms ...
03/26/2025
Next Tuesday: April 1 - Tree of Life Wellness Center. Join Robert Litman for a 5-week book club exploring The Breathable Body, Tuesdays from April 1 – April 29, 11-12:15 at the Tree Of Life Wellness Center. This series will dive into breathing practices for better health, addressing issues like asthma, anxiety, sleep disturbances, and more. Through discussion and guided practice, participants will discover how breath can cultivate greater health, embodiment, ease, and vitality. Sliding scale: $15-$25 per session. Books are available at Vashon Bookshop or from the author. For more info and to let me know you are attending. Reservations are not required, You don’t have to read the book to attend but it will help you grasp the concepts with more ease.
[email protected].
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