My favorite teaching of this session is the The Hour of Power, a series of things you do when you first wake up to get your day started in a peaceful and relaxed state of mind.

I start every day with a big glass of water, the first thing I do in my Hour of Power. I use my Wonder Woman glass, of course!
This post is part of a series about my experience doing Ashok Gupta’s “Advanced Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Recovery Programme,” which I started on September 30 and will last for at least six months.
Session 6 of Ashok Gupta’s Multiple Chemical Sensitivity recovery program has three sections (6, 6A, and 6B) and contains a lot of information and teachings! In this session, Gupta teaches other techniques to supplement the main amygdala retraining technique. All techniques are designed to calm an over stimulated brain and nervous system. Many of you have probably already done a lot of these types of exercises like meditation and breathing techniques to achieve similar results. The beauty part about Gupta’s teachings is that everything is specifically geared toward recovering from MCS, CFS and Fibromyalgia, and I’ve had very good results through taking the time to learn exactly what he’s teaching and then DOING IT.
My favorite teaching of this session is The Hour of Power, a series of things you do when you first wake up to get your day started with a peaceful and relaxed state of mind. I can’t tell you how much I love this routine! It makes a huge impact on the rest of my day. It starts me off in the perfect frame of mind to have a balanced and productive day free from rushing, free from getting hooked into stress and drama, free from anger and frustration, free to cruise through the hours in a relaxed manner while being attentive to everything I need to accomplish. This is all super important when recovering from MCS.
Here’s what Gupta recommends you do to start your day (he says if you can’t do some of these things in the morning, then do them when you can):
The Hour of Power
- Wake up and have big glass of water. I warm the water and drink it out of my Wonder Woman glass! (Photo at top of post.)
- Have a shower.
- Do 10-15 minutes of yoga (that you feel comfortable with; see image below of the postures I’ve started with).
- Do 7-10 minutes of breathing exercise (he teaches an alternate nostril breathing technique).
- Do 20 minutes of meditation, either on your own or with Gupta’s guided meditation (I always use the guided meditation).
- Fruit for breakfast, maybe some oatmeal—I sometimes have a slice of homemade whole grain bread.
Before I started the Gupta program, my day started with my mind in hyper drive thinking about everything I had to get done. My mind was busy busy busy, zooming with ideas before my feet even hit the floor. I couldn’t wait to have a huge mug of green tea, get that caffeine in me, get into the office, check email, check my favorite news websites and blogs, check on The Canary Report, take a look at my to-do list for my day job and get busy! Before I even got a handle on the day, I was buzzing with caffeine, already stressed, often overwhelmed with the scope of the tasks ahead and worried that I wouldn’t get everything done in time. I used to think this was the proper way productive, accomplished people ran their lives! That was until I started the Gupta MCS recovery program.
In contrast to my past routine, everything about the Gupta program is about bringing your brain into a calm, peaceful, relaxed state of being so that your body can heal, return to its natural rhythms, and sustain that state of balance. And there is no better time to set that peaceful tone for the day than the moment you wake up.
For the yoga, which I have never done before in my life, I’ve been doing very simple postures for the past two months—so easy to do but what a difference in how my body feels! I’m reading the book Yoga for Body, Breath, and Mind: A Guide to Personal Reintegration by A. G. Mohan. See below for a sample of what I do in the morning, it’s a page from the book. When I first start stretching in the morning, it always feels awful, so I repeat the postures until I think to myself, “Ah, that feel so good! I’m so glad I’m doing this!” Then I do one or two more minutes of yoga (about 15-20 minutes total) and move on to the breath exercise.

These are the yoga postures that I've been doing in the morning. Very simple but effective at easing me into a yoga habit. I'm amazed at how much more limber I am after doing these simple stretches. This is a page from Yoga for Body, Breath, and Mind: A Guide to Personal Reintegration by A. G. Mohan.
I do the alternate nostril breathing technique that Gupta teaches for about 7-10 minutes. He emphasizes the alternate nostril breathing exercise as being very important. He says many of his patients are not breathing correctly because the nervous system is continuously stimulated so breathing is shallow. The shallow breathing means the pattern of proper oxygenation of cells is being disrupted—not a good state to be in. Getting enough oxygen is really important to health and the breathing technique teaches your body to breath deeper and slower—I can attest that it really works!
After the breathing exercise I do Gupta’s 20-minute guided meditation. It’s hard to get my mind to be still but sometimes I can get it to stop climbing around all over the place and it’s a wonderful feeling! Bliss. Even when I can’t get the thoughts to stop, I remain still and calmly focus on my breath for the full 20 minutes, expecting nothing and not beating myself up if thoughts keep barging in. As Gupta says, “It’s all part of the process.” Sometimes I replace the guided meditation with the Soften & Flow technique, which is very similar to the meditation, but instead of focusing on the breath, focus is put on areas of the body experiencing discomfort or tension.
After the meditation, I have some fruit, oatmeal or fresh homemade bread, and decaffeinated tea (“Eradicate caffeine,” says Gupta). And then I start my work day.
Through doing the Hour of Power, I’ve learned that there is great power in slowing down, pacing myself, and frequently taking deep, full breaths throughout the day. I find that I can now enjoy my work days no matter how tight the deadlines or demanding the work. I rarely get frustrated and I can’t remember the last time I got angry. I feel happy and peaceful; I even move and walk slower than before I started the Gupta program, no rushing. I think a lot of that has to do with doing the main amygdala retraining technique, but there is a strong possibility that I’ll be starting my day with the Hour of Power for the rest of my life!
Remember that the yoga, breathing and meditation exercises are not meant to initiate MCS recovery on their own—you need to be doing the main amygdala retraining techniques to truly initiate recovery—but integrating these types of activities into the daily routine is excellent support for a healthy brain and nervous system. Also remember that even though the main retraining is happening in the brain, Gupta’s hypothesis does NOT hold that MCS is a psychological disorder. Gupta states emphatically that “MCS is a real physical disorder with real physical symptoms, and is not psychological in nature.”
In the next post, I’ll cover Session 6A and Session 6B, which take a closer look at symptom and non-symptom patterns that help perpetuate the illness.
More soon!
Gupta Girl
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