Part 2: The Frenzel Technique in Action
The tongue acts as a piston; by thrusting the tongue back and up, the entire volume of the throat airspace is crushed. The air must go somewhere. It tries to go into the lungs, but the epiglottis is closed. It tries to go into the stomach, but the esophagus is closed. It tries to exit via the nose, but the nose is plugged by the fingers. The only place to go is into the Eustachian tubes. The pressure of air forced into the Eustachian tubes is limited only by the strength of the tongue. The tongue is incredibly strong. The tongue can provide enough air pressure to rupture the eardrums.
To perform the Frenzel technique:
1. Pinch your nose.
2. Fill your mouth up with a little bit of air.
3. Close the epiglottis.
4. Move the soft palate to the neutral position.
5. Use the tongue as a piston and push air towards the back of your throat.
Unfortunately, most people do not know how to control the epiglottis or the soft palate, and most people do not know how to use the tongue as a piston. The purpose of this document is to describe step-by-step procedures to learn each of the above steps. As long as each individual step is mastered, success is guaranteed.
The individual steps which must be learned can be broken down as follows:
1. Learn to fill the mouth up with air
2. Learn to control the epiglottis
3. Learn to control the soft palate
4. Learn to apply the ‘tongue block’
5. Learn to use the tongue as a piston
6. Learn to control the epiglottis and soft palate independently
7. Put it all together
8. Test it in the water
9. Learn the advanced variations
Step 1: Learn to fill the mouth up with air
Fill your cheeks up like a balloon, and hold the air there for a few seconds.
Then, using your cheeks, push the air back into your lungs.
Repeat this several times, until you can do it at will.
To do a ‘complete cheek fill’, fill your cheeks until they are bursting.
To do a ‘moderate cheek fill’, fill your cheeks until they just start to bulge.
When I say ‘Fill your mouth up with a little bit of air’, I mean do a ‘moderate cheek fill.’
Step 2: Learn to control the epiglottis
There are many ways to learn to control the epiglottis. Practice these individual exercises to assure that you have perfect control over the muscles that control it:
Method 1: Gargling water or mouthwash
1. Take a sip of water
2. Tilt your head back, but do not allow the water to flow down your throat. Do not swallow the water.
3. The water does not enter your throat because you have closed the epiglottis.
Method 2: Exhaling and stopping the air
1. Open your mouth, and keep it wide open.
2. Exhale, but don’t allow any air to escape.
3. In other words, ‘close your throat’ and exhale against your closed throat
4. No air comes out because you have closed the epiglottis
Method 3: Inhaling and stopping the air
1. Open your mouth, and keep it wide open.
2. Inhale, but don’t allow any air to enter your lungs
3. In other words, ‘close your throat’ and inhale against your closed throat
4. No air enters your lungs because you have closed the epiglottis
Method 4: Epiglottis

1. As in method 2, exhale against your closed throat. Continue to apply pressure.
2. Now, for just an instant, let air through, then stop it again. It should make a funny choked noise.
3. Let air out, stop it, let air out, stop it, again and again, as fast as possible.
4. The muscle you are controlling is the epiglottis.
Method 5: Epiglottis

on an inhale
As in method 4, but inhale, stop the air, let it pass, stop it, let it pass.
Continue practising methods 4 & 5 until you have mastered the epiglottis.
Step 3: Learn to control the soft palate
1. Close your mouth
2. Inhale through your nose
3. Exhale through your nose
4. Inhale through your nose
5. Open your mouth
6. Exhale through ONLY your nose; NO AIR should come out of your mouth
7. Inhale through ONLY your nose, NO AIR should flow into your mouth
8. Keep breathing through your nose only, while keeping your mouth open
9. Now, breathe through JUST your mouth, without any air flowing through your nose
10. Once you are sure you can breathe through either your nose or mouth (keeping mouth open), proceed to the next step.
11. Inhale deeply
12. Open your mouth wide, and keep it wide open
13. Begin exhaling SLOWLY through your MOUTH ONLY.
14. Still exhaling, keeping your mouth WIDE OPEN, exhale through your NOSE ONLY
15. Still exhaling, switch again, continuing to exhale through your MOUTH ONLY.
16. Keep exhaling slowly, switching back and forth between nose and mouth as fast as possible.
17. Try the same thing when inhaling – keep the mouth wide open, switch back and forth rapidly between inhaling through the mouth and nose
18. As you switch back and forth, you will feel something soft and fleshy at the upper back of your throat moving. That is the soft palate. You raise the soft palate to breathe through your mouth, you lower the soft palate to breathe only through your nose.
19. Keep repeating the above exercises until you can ‘raise’ or ‘lower’ the soft palate at will.
20. When you exhale through BOTH your mouth and your nose, the soft palate is in the NEUTRAL position (neither up nor down).