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Owned by Maja

Digital Skating School

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Where adult skaters thrive at any age! Tailored method & Olympic-level coaching weekly. Zero judgment, just progress. Currently: FREE (limited time!)

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3 contributions to OHM Breath Academy
Introductory QUESTIONS for Everyone
Hello there my fellow breathers, I have 3 simple questions for you all: 1. Have you practiced breathing as a trainable skill before? Or is this the first time? 2. What are the things you have the most difficulty with when it comes to learning how to breathe or practicing breathing? 3. What is your WHY? Why are you wanting to learn how to breathe? BONUS: Where are you from and how's the weather ;)
Introductory QUESTIONS for Everyone
0 likes • 17d
Have done many years of Wim Hof breathing as well as trained in contemporary dance, and pilates where breathing is connected to all movement. Would love to understand more science and biomechanics behind it. ZH, CH - absolute heatwave with the luck of one rainy day today 😅
Weekly Guided Practice (11): Quadruped Extensions
Kia ora breathers, DO THIS PRACTICE RIGHT NOW :) GET AWAY FROM THE SCREEN Today we're going to start exploring the somatic side of our breath journey. Obviously, we can evolve our breath far beyond a seated practice. The diaphragm-psoas unit within the deep core of the body is an amazingly adaptable region of musculoskeletal wonder. Just look at an advanced yogi or contortionist to see the incredible control they have over their body. Much of this, I believe, comes down to the way our nervous system, fascial layers and breath work in unison to allow the body to maintain its freedom and fluidity in everyday life. A vital piece of this puzzle is learning to use the pressure of our breath in rhythm and synchronisation with how the body moves. A simple way to understand this is: - As we inhale, we open the body, extend the spine and expand. - As we exhale, we close the body, flex the spine and decompress. I guarantee that if you complete this practice, you'll feel energised and revitalised after 3 sets of 10–15 repetitions. In the beginning, your wrists, shoulders and core may not be up to completing 15 reps in one go - and that's completely okay. Simply slow the movement down, work within your natural range of motion, and break the sets into smaller chunks (for example, 6–8 sets of 5 reps). As your strength and coordination improve, you can gradually progress and begin adding the options demonstrated in the video above. 1. Starting Position - Sit on the floor with your legs straight out in front of you, feet hip-width apart. Keep your spine tall and upright. - Place your palms flat on the floor beside your hips. - Crucial hand placement: Your fingers should point forward towards your toes. - Gently tuck your chin towards your chest and complete a full, slow exhalation. 2. The Inhalation & Lift - Begin a deep, slow inhale through your nose. - Press firmly through your palms and heels, bending your knees as you lift your hips off the floor. - Drive your hips upwards until your torso and thighs form a flat tabletop position. Your arms and shins should be vertical. - As your hips rise, allow your head to gently extend back in line with your spine. Open through the chest and throat, but don't let your head hang if it causes discomfort in your neck. - At the very top, briefly contract your glutes, core and shoulders to create full-body tension.
Poll
2 members have voted
0 likes • 17d
Really looking forward to trying this. Am I seeing this correctly, your pelvis is slightly hovering above the ground when you exhale and push the pelvis back between the hands?
Welcome from New Zealand — I’m Fraser, founder of the OHM (Optimal Health Model).
This community exists to help people train their breathing in a way that genuinely transfers to real life. P.S. Downloading the Skool app on your phone makes it way easier to stay up to date 😉 After 15+ years of practical and theoretical research working across sports performance, rehabilitation, corporate wellbeing, and academia, one thing is clear: breathing is often talked about, but rarely trained properly or progressively. That’s what the OHM Breath Academy is here to change. At OHM, we believe breathing isn’t just something you do, it’s also something you can train. It sits at the centre of how we move, think, recover, and respond to stress. When trained well, it supports performance, focus, resilience, and long-term health. Our approach is simple: - Foundations — understanding efficient, functional breathing - Progression — developing strength, control, adaptability - Integration — applying breath to real-world demands Inside this community you’ll find guided sessions, research reviews, practical education, and conversations focused on doing this work properly. If you want breathing education that supports your health — you’re in the right place. 👉 To start, please introduce yourself below: - Where you’re joining from - What brought you here - One area you’d like your breathing to support Welcome to the family!
2 likes • May 5
This looks great. I have a lot of practical and some theoretical knowledge on breathing in sports, for well beeing, meditation and general mood control, but would like to dive deeper into the anatomical side of things. Thanks, this platform looks great!!
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Maja Luther
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@maja-luther-8206
I’m Maja, author of "A Somatic Approach to Figure Skating" and founder of the Digital Skating School, a supportive community for adult ice skaters! ⛸️

Active 2h ago
Joined May 4, 2026
Zürich, Switzerland