Breathing Exercises

Breathing exercises will not resolve ongoing anxiety, trauma, or depression on their own, and they are not a substitute for counselling. What they are good for is bringing your body out of a stress response quickly enough to think clearly, get through a hard conversation, or simply get through the next ten minutes. If anxiety is what keeps bringing you back to this page, anxiety counselling looks at what is underneath it.

A structured 4-4-4-4 pattern to steady your focus before something that needs a clear head.

A double inhale and long exhale that resets your body in under a minute, the technique behind the Stanford study above.

A slower pattern for the end of the day, when the goal is winding down rather than staying alert.

The foundation most other breathing techniques build on, worth learning properly once.

Written for the ten minutes waiting in the car, a small window to reset between one part of the day and the next.

References

Balban, M.Y., Neri, E., Kogon, M.M., et al. (2023). Brief structured respiration practices enhance mood and reduce physiological arousal. Cell Reports Medicine, 4(1), 100895.