Have you ever seen the movie Gladiator? I saw it years ago, and one scene that has always stayed with me is the one in which the young emperor (who is more than a little nuts) played by Joaquin Phoenix says, “that vexes me, I’m terribly vexed.”

I’m not an emperor and I’m pretty sure I’m not crazy, but I am terribly vexed!

Travel with me back in time…. (cue the TV “travel back in time bubbles”)

It’s circa 1984 and I’m 15 years old.

I’m standing in front of my new voice teacher.

It’s my first lesson and I’m very excited!

She’s a nice woman and I trust her.

She tells me that I’m breathing “incorrectly” and that I need to “breathe into my diaphragm” (at which point she pats her tummy). Further, she tells me that I must “sing from my diaphragm”, again, patting her tummy.

I’m 15, I have no idea what or where my diaphragm is and I’m too embarrassed to tell her that. I surmise, from the way she’s patting her tummy, that my diaphragm must be in my tummy and therefore breathing and singing correctly has a lot to do with my tummy! This assumption is given additional “merit” when she shows me an exercise that involves lying on my back with a book on my tummy. The idea is that I should lift the book up with each inhale.

Now, she was a very nice woman and I’m sure she meant well, but as a result of this instruction, I spent several years trying to control my breath with my tummy. Years of great frustration, I might add,  wondering why the heck I couldn’t do it. Then I spent several more years untangling the mess of confusion, not to mention the vocal difficulties that this approach created for me (strain, pain, register break……). But I slogged through it. I got myself sorted out and have now spent the better part of the last 20 years helping other singers to sort it out too, educating them and helping them to develop their voices in a healthy, natural way.

So it freaking drives me crazy (!) when singers come to me, having been given, very recently I might add, some of the same misinformation that I heard back in 1984. Now, before I continue, I want to say that there are a growing number of voice teachers and coaches who are very, very well informed and do a fantastic job with their students! To them I say BRAVO! HOWEVER, there are still too many instructors out there who perpetuate these old ways of thinking which don’t hold up when you look at simple anatomy and most importantly, don’t really help singers. Bleh! I’m glad to get that out.

Okay, so would you like to learn some truths about breathing?

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Let’s start with a few basic facts:

1)    Your diaphragm is a thin sheet of muscle that is attached to the inside of your ribs, all the way around your body. In the front of your body it is located just behind the sternum. It sits at an angle so that in the back of your body it’s approximately 2 inches lower than it is in the front of your body. It IS NOT in your tummy!

2)    When you inhale, the air goes into your LUNGS. Your lungs are located inside your ribs, on top of your diaphragm. They are NOT in your tummy!

3)    Your lungs are longer in the back than they are in the front, so therefore, more air will go into your back than into your chest (which is why you don’t want to lift your chest when inhaling).

4)    When you inhale, there’s a coordinated movement of the ribs and the diaphragm, which opens up your lungs and pulls in the air. For the exhale the ribs and diaphragm again move in a coordinated way to compress the lungs and push the air out.

5)    While it’s true that your tummy moves forward a little bit when you inhale, this is NOT caused by air going into your tummy (remember, the air goes into your lungs) but rather by the fact that when you inhale, the organs in your abdominal cavity get pushed around a little bit by the moving diaphragm.

6)    If you tense your abdominal muscles while breathing or singing, it makes it very difficult for your body to work freely and naturally and can result in vocal tension and strain.

TRY THIS to feel how your body naturally works when you breathe:

1)    Place your hands on the sides of your back, a couple of inches below your under arm area (like you’re pretending to be a chicken)

2)    Now exhale…..keep exhaling…..exhale some more…..when you feel like you’re completely empty, exhale some more…..

3)    When you absolutely cannot exhale anymore, take a breath. Did you notice how the sides of your ribs opened up as you inhaled? While you may have noticed your tummy moving forward a bit and felt some air going into your chest as well, the most noticeable area of movement is actually at the sides of your back. Remember, when you breathe most of the air goes into your back,  it has nothing to do with manipulating your tummy!

Proper breath support is about learning how to regulate your air so as to have the correct amount, generated up from your lungs to your vocal instrument. This begins with a solid understanding of vocal anatomy as well as simple, yet powerful exercises. Best of all, it doesn’t take years to master! Give me a shout if you’d like to learn more.

Happy Singing!

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