Skip to content

Breathing training & breathing techniques

How to reduce stress, increase performance, and learn to influence your autonomic nervous system through conscious breathing

Breathing is the only autonomic bodily function we can consciously control. Through targeted breathing techniques, you directly influence your nervous system, reduce stress, improve sleep, and boost athletic performance. Scientifically sound, free, and applicable anywhere – this guide shows you the most effective techniques.

The forgotten superpower: Why breathing is underestimated

You breathe around 20,000 times a day – mostly without giving it a second thought. This automatic function keeps you alive, but it offers far more potential than mere gas exchange. Breathing is the interface between the conscious mind and the unconscious body – and therefore a powerful tool for health and performance.

Unlike your heartbeat or digestion, you can consciously control your breathing at any time. This unique access to the autonomic nervous system opens up possibilities that were long attributed only to yogis and monks. Today, science confirms what traditional practices have utilized for millennia.

The connection to the nervous system

The autonomic nervous system controls unconscious functions and consists of two opposing systems: the sympathetic nervous system ('fight or flight') and the parasympathetic nervous system ('rest and digestion'). In modern life, the sympathetic nervous system is chronically overactivated – due to constant stress, constant availability, and information overload.

Breathing directly influences which branch of the nervous system is dominant. Rapid, shallow breathing activates the sympathetic nervous system. Slow, deep breathing with a prolonged exhalation activates the parasympathetic nervous system. You can consciously modulate your stress level through this mechanism.

The vagus nerve as a key

The vagus nerve is the main channel of the parasympathetic nervous system – it connects the brain to the heart, lungs, digestive tract, and many other organs. Deep, slow breathing directly stimulates the vagus nerve. This explains why a few conscious breaths can provide immediate calm in stressful situations.

Vagus tone – the activity of the vagus nerve – is measurable and trainable. People with high vagal tone are more stress-resistant, emotionally stable, and physically healthier. Breathing exercises are one of the most effective ways to improve vagal tone.

More than relaxation

Breathing exercises are not only relevant for stress reduction. Athletes use breathing techniques to improve performance and recovery. People with breathing problems (asthma, anxiety-related shortness of breath) learn functional breathing patterns. Creative professionals use breathing for focus and flow. The applications are as diverse as the techniques themselves.

Understanding the physiology of breathing

To use breathing exercises effectively, a basic understanding of physiology is helpful. Breathing is more than just oxygen intake and CO2 release – it influences blood chemistry, heart rhythm, the nervous system, and brain function in complex interactions.

Oxygen and carbon dioxide

Oxygen is essential for life – but more isn't automatically better. During normal activity, blood is 95-99% saturated with oxygen. Breathing faster barely increases this saturation, but it does change something else: the CO2 level.

Carbon dioxide is not merely a waste product. It plays a central role in oxygen release into tissues (Bohr effect), blood pH regulation, and respiratory drive. Paradoxically, too little CO2 (due to hyperventilation) leads to poorer cellular oxygenation – despite high blood saturation.

The urge to breathe

The primary respiratory drive does not stem from oxygen deficiency, but from CO2 excess. When CO2 levels rise, the brain signals: 'Breathe!' People with low CO2 tolerance experience shortness of breath earlier and breathe more frequently, often dysfunctionally.

Breathing exercises can increase CO2 tolerance. This leads to more relaxed, slower breathing with all its associated benefits. It also explains why breath-holding (with increased CO2) is a central element of many breathing techniques.

Nasal vs. mouth breathing

The nose is designed for breathing – the mouth is backup. Nasal breathing filters, humidifies, and warms the air. The nasal passages produce nitric oxide (NO), which dilates blood vessels and has antimicrobial properties. Mouth breathing bypasses these benefits.

Chronic mouth breathing is associated with poorer sleep quality, increased risk of infection, dental problems, and even facial development disorders in children. A simple intervention: consciously focus on nasal breathing, even during moderate exercise.

Functional vs. dysfunctional breathing

Functional breathing is slow, quiet, through the nose, and uses the diaphragm (abdominal breathing). Dysfunctional breathing is fast, audible, often through the mouth, and primarily uses the chest muscles.

Dysfunctional breathing patterns are surprisingly common – estimated to affect 30-50% of the population. They can cause or worsen symptoms such as shortness of breath, anxiety, dizziness, and difficulty concentrating. The good news: breathing patterns can be corrected.

Basic breathing techniques for everyday life

Getting started with breath training doesn't require exotic techniques. Simple, scientifically sound exercises can have noticeable effects after just a few minutes. The following techniques are practical for everyday life and suitable for everyone.

The physiological sighing breathing pattern

This technique, studied at Stanford University, is particularly effective for rapid stress reduction. It mimics the natural sigh the body uses to regulate CO2 levels.

Here's how: Breathe in deeply through your nose. At the end of the inhalation, take another short breath to fill your lungs completely (a double inhalation). Then exhale slowly and completely through your mouth. A single such breath can measurably slow your heart rate. Repeat 1-3 times during acute stress.

The 4-7-8 breathing pattern

Popularized by Dr. Andrew Weil, this technique is easy to remember and particularly effective before falling asleep or during stressful moments.

Here's how: Inhale through your nose and count to 4. Hold your breath and count to 7. Exhale through your mouth and count to 8. Repeat 4-8 cycles. The prolonged exhalation activates the parasympathetic nervous system; holding your breath temporarily increases CO2 levels and enhances the relaxation effect.

Box breathing (square breathing)

This technique is used by Navy SEALs and elite athletes to stay focused under pressure. It balances inhalation and exhalation with two holding phases.

Here's how: Inhale for 4 seconds. Hold for 4 seconds (lungs full). Exhale for 4 seconds. Hold for 4 seconds (lungs empty). Repeat 4-10 cycles. The regularity creates a meditative rhythm; the holding phases train CO2 tolerance and focus.

Coherent breathing

At approximately 5-7 breaths per minute (instead of the usual 12-18), the cardiovascular system reaches a state of increased 'coherence' – heart rate variability is optimized, and the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems are balanced.

Here's how: Inhale for 5 seconds, exhale for 5 seconds. This results in 6 breaths per minute. Practice for 5-20 minutes. Apps like 'Breathe' or simple timers can help you set the rhythm. Regular practice will permanently improve vagal tone.

Advanced techniques: Wim Hof, Buteyko and more

Beyond everyday techniques, there are more intensive methods for specific goals. These require more training and are not suitable for everyone, but offer deeper effects when applied correctly.

The Wim Hof ​​breathing technique

The method, named after the 'Iceman', combines hyperventilation with breath-holding and exposure to cold. It is stimulating, not relaxing – ideal for energy and focus, but not for falling asleep.

Here's how: Take 30-40 deep, rapid breaths (fully inhale, relaxed exhale). After the last exhale, hold your breath with empty lungs for as long as comfortably possible (often 60-90+ seconds). Then inhale deeply and hold for 15 seconds. Repeat 3-4 rounds.

Hyperventilation lowers CO2, which makes stopping more comfortable and can induce an altered state of consciousness (tingling, dizziness). Never practice this technique in water, while driving, or in other risky situations!

Buteyko method

Developed by the Ukrainian physician Konstantin Buteyko, this method focuses on reducing hyperventilation and increasing CO2 tolerance. It is particularly relevant for people with breathing problems (asthma, anxiety-related hyperventilation).

Key principle: Breathe less, not more. Through your nose, quietly, slowly. The 'control pause' (time between normal exhalation and the first urge to breathe while holding your breath) is a measure of CO2 tolerance – longer pauses indicate better tolerance.

Exercises: Reduced breathing (intentionally taking in slightly less air than desired), nasal breathing during progressively more intense movement, and monitoring of breathing rate. The goal is to relearn the breathing pattern to a more functional breathing pattern.

Pranayama from yoga

The yogic breathing tradition (Pranayama) encompasses dozens of techniques for various purposes. Some have been scientifically studied and validated.

Bhastrika (bellows breathing): Rapid, powerful breaths – activating, energizing. Nadi Shodhana (alternate nostril breathing): Alternating breathing through each nostril – balancing, focusing. Ujjayi (ocean breathing): Breathing with a slightly constricted throat, producing a gentle whooshing sound – calming, concentrating.

Breathing exercises for athletes

In competitive sports, breathing is often the limiting factor – not the muscles. Athletes who optimize their breathing can improve endurance, recover faster, and build mental strength.

Nasal breathing during training

Many athletes automatically breathe through their mouths during exertion. Switching to nasal breathing (at least at moderate intensity) offers advantages: optimized CO2 tolerance, nitric oxide production for better vascular function, and a natural 'pacemaker' that prevents overexertion.

The training: Start with low intensity (e.g., running at a conversational pace) and consistently breathe through your nose. Initially, this will feel limiting – that's normal. Over the weeks, your body will adapt, your nasal capacity will increase, and you'll be able to handle higher intensities while breathing nasally.

CO2 tolerance training

Higher CO2 tolerance means more relaxed breathing during exertion and better oxygen utilization (Bohr effect). Exercises such as the Buteyko control pause or breath-holding exercises during training (e.g., holding your breath for a few seconds every few steps while running) can increase tolerance.

Advanced technique: 'Hypoxic training' with reduced breathing. This simulates altitude training and can trigger adaptations such as increased erythropoietin production. Should be used with caution and knowledge.

Breathing strategies for different sports

Endurance sports: Rhythmic breathing (e.g., 3 steps in, 2 steps out while running) stabilizes and prevents side stitches. Focus on nasal breathing at lower intensities, and use additional mouth breathing during sprints.

Strength training: The Valsalva maneuver (holding your breath, abdominal press during heavy lifts) stabilizes the spine. With moderate weights: Exhale during exertion, inhale during the relaxation phase.

Martial arts: Short, explosive exhalations during strikes ('kiai') create core tension and focus power. Between actions: calm, controlled breathing for recovery.

Regeneration through breathing

After training, the goal is parasympathetic activation. 5-10 minutes of slow, deep breathing (e.g., coherent breathing or 4-7-8) accelerates the transition into recovery mode and can measurably improve regeneration.

Empfohlener Heimtest

Produkt: metabolism check plus

Analyse im Fachlabor
Diskrete Verpackung
Ergebnis in 72h

Breathing exercises for stress management and anxiety

The connection between breathing and anxiety is bidirectional: anxiety changes breathing (faster, shallower), but altered breathing can also trigger or intensify anxiety. This cycle can be used – by controlling our breathing, we can influence our state of anxiety.

The hyperventilation-anxiety spiral

In times of panic or intense anxiety, many people unconsciously hyperventilate. This lowers CO2 levels, raises blood pH, and causes symptoms such as tingling, dizziness, and chest tightness – which are then interpreted as threatening and increase anxiety. A vicious cycle.

Breaking the cycle: Consciously slow your breathing, focus on a long exhalation, perhaps briefly breathe into a paper bag (this increases CO2). The symptoms of hyperventilation subside, and the anxiety decreases.

Preventive breathing practice

Regular breathing exercises (10-20 minutes daily) can reduce the baseline susceptibility to anxiety. Trained vagal tone makes the nervous system more resilient; practiced breath control provides a tool that is available in acute situations.

Studies show that breathing exercises can be as effective as some medications for anxiety disorders – without side effects. While they do not replace therapy for severe disorders, they are a valuable addition or initial intervention for milder forms.

Techniques for acute stress

The physiological sigh (double inhalation, long exhalation) takes effect within seconds. The 4-7-8 breathing pattern is somewhat more elaborate, but also quickly effective. Even simple slow breathing (5 seconds in, 5 seconds out) for 1-2 minutes can noticeably calm an agitated state.

These techniques work best when practiced beforehand. Learning a new technique in an acute situation is difficult. Practice regularly in calm moments so that the techniques are automatically available in stressful situations.

Long-term transition

For people with chronic anxiety or stress, switching to a functional breathing pattern (slow, nasal, diaphragmatic) is a long-term project. It's not about individual exercises, but about changing the unconscious breathing pattern.

This requires attention over weeks and months: How am I breathing right now? Rapidly? Shallowly? Through my mouth? Gently correct, again and again. Over time, the new pattern becomes a habit and the nervous system stabilizes.

Breathing exercises for better sleep

Difficulty falling asleep and restless sleep are epidemic. Breathing techniques offer a natural, side-effect-free approach that is effective for many people – sometimes surprisingly quickly.

The physiology of falling asleep

Falling asleep requires a transition from sympathetic (awake) to parasympathetic (calming) dominance. Ruminative thoughts, physical tension, and rapid breathing keep the sympathetic nervous system active and prevent this transition.

Breathing techniques work on several levels: They directly activate the parasympathetic nervous system, shift attention from thoughts to the body, and establish a ritual that signals 'bedtime' to the brain.

The 4-7-8 technique before sleep

This technique is particularly suitable for sleep. Holding the breath for an extended period and exhaling for a longer time slows down the heartbeat and nervous system. Many people report falling asleep after just a few cycles.

Practical tip: Lie down in bed, close your eyes, and breathe 4-7-8 for 4-8 cycles. If you're still awake after 8 cycles, pause briefly and repeat. Most people fall asleep within 2-3 rounds – often even before the first one is finished.

Coherent breathing for sleep quality

Not only falling asleep, but also sleep quality can be improved through breathing exercises. Regular practice (e.g., 10 minutes of coherent breathing in the evening) improves vagal tone and thus the ability to regenerate during deeper sleep phases.

The effects become apparent over weeks: improved sleep efficiency, more deep sleep, and fewer nighttime awakenings. HRV trackers (Oura Ring, Whoop) can objectively document these improvements.

Upon waking up at night

If you wake up at night and can't fall back asleep, it's usually due to sympathetic overstimulation. Gentle breathing techniques (not activating ones like Wim Hof!) can help: slow, deep breathing, prolonged exhalation, possibly the 4-7-8 method.

Important: Don't look at the clock (it creates stress), don't use your phone (blue light, stimulation). Stay in the dark, breathe gently, relax even if sleep doesn't come immediately.

Establish a daily breathing practice

The benefits of breath training unfold through regular practice. Individual sessions feel good, but the deeper changes – increased vagal tone, altered breathing patterns, improved stress resistance – require consistency over weeks and months.

Minimum effective dose

Even 5 minutes of conscious breathing a day shows measurable effects. For deeper changes, 10-20 minutes is ideal. More is possible, but the marginal benefit diminishes. 10 minutes daily is better than 60 minutes once a week.

The challenge is not the duration, but the regularity. As with any habit, it helps to link the practice to existing routines.

Morning vs. Evening

Morning practice: Activating techniques (Wim Hof, Bhastrika) or balancing techniques (box breathing, coherent breathing) set the tone for the day. Before coffee, after waking up – an energizing start.

Evening practice: Calming techniques (4-7-8, slow abdominal breathing) support the transition into evening and improve sleep. Ideally practiced 1-2 hours before bedtime or as a bedtime ritual in bed.

Both are valuable – choose based on your goals and time resources. Many people establish a short morning practice (5 minutes) and a longer evening practice (10-15 minutes).

With instructions or without?

Guided instructions can help you get started – apps like Breathe, Calm, Oak, or specific breathing applications provide a rhythm and explain techniques. Over time, many people develop a preference for silent, self-directed breathing.

Both approaches work. Some people appreciate the structure of an app in the long run; others find it annoying after a few weeks. Experiment and find what works for you.

progression

Start with simple techniques (coherent breathing, 4-7-8) and moderate durations. Once these become routine, you can experiment: longer sessions, more advanced techniques, combining them with meditation or cold exposure.

The 'Control Pause' (Buteyko) is a good progress marker: How long can you comfortably hold your breath after exhaling normally? Increasing values ​​indicate improved CO2 tolerance and overall respiratory health.

Safety and contraindications

Breathing exercises are safe for most people, but certain techniques and situations require caution. As with any intervention, the right dose applies to the right person in the right context.

Hyperventilation techniques with caution

Techniques like Wim Hof ​​or holotropic breathing, which utilize controlled hyperventilation, can lead to drowsiness, tingling, visual disturbances, and, in rare cases, brief loss of consciousness. This is physiologically explainable and not dangerous when used correctly – but the environment must be safe.

Never practice such techniques: in or near water (risk of drowning!), while driving, operating machinery, at heights, or in any other situation where unconsciousness would be dangerous. Only use them while sitting or lying down in a safe place.

Contraindications for intensive practices

In the following conditions, activating/intensive breathing techniques (hyperventilation, prolonged breath holding) should be avoided or medically evaluated: epilepsy (hyperventilation can trigger seizures), severe cardiovascular diseases, acute mental crises, advanced pregnancy, recent surgeries.

Gentle techniques (slow, deep breathing, 4-7-8, coherent breathing) are safe for almost everyone. If in doubt, consult your doctor.

When breathing triggers anxiety

Some people experience discomfort or even panic when focusing on their breathing. This can occur with anxiety disorders or a history of trauma. In this case: Don't force it. Start with very short sessions (30 seconds), choose gentle techniques, and possibly seek professional guidance (therapist, breathwork coach).

During training and sports

Holding your breath during intense physical activity (not referring to the Valsalva maneuver during weight training) can dangerously raise blood pressure and should be avoided. Hypoxic training for competitive athletes should be conducted under supervision.

When you should seek professional help

Breathing exercises are a powerful self-help tool, but they have limitations. Certain situations require professional assessment or treatment.

Seek medical advice if you have chronic shortness of breath or feel like you are not getting enough air, if breathing difficulties are accompanied by physical symptoms (chest pain, severe heart rhythm disturbances), or if breathing problems are part of a known condition (asthma, COPD, heart disease).

Consider seeking therapeutic support if breathing exercises trigger strong emotional reactions or flashbacks, if anxiety or panic does not improve despite regular practice, or if you are looking for guidance on more complex techniques.

Professional breath therapists, breath coaches, and yoga therapists can address your individual situation and adapt the practice to your needs. However, for most people, self-practice with basic techniques is perfectly sufficient.

Sicherheit durch Testen

Jetzt wo du die Symptome kennst: Verschaffe dir Klarheit mit einem diskreten Heimtest.

For a metabolic check

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Acute effects (calming, energizing) are noticeable within minutes. Long-term changes (increased vagal tone, improved CO2 tolerance, altered basic pattern) become apparent after 2-4 weeks of regular practice.

It depends on your goal. For relaxation: 4-7-8 or coherent breathing. For energy: Wim Hof ​​or Bhastrika. For balance: box breathing. For sleep: 4-7-8. Experiment and find what works for you.

Gentle techniques are safe for almost everyone. With more intense techniques (hyperventilation, prolonged breath-holding), dizziness or tingling may occur – this is normal. It only becomes dangerous if you practice in an unsafe environment (water, driving).

Daily is ideal – 5-20 minutes is enough. Consistency trumps intensity. 5 minutes every day is better than 60 minutes once a week.

The Buteyko method has shown positive effects in studies on asthma – reduced medication needs, fewer symptoms. It doesn't replace medical treatment, but it can complement it. Talk to your doctor.

Hyperventilation lowers CO2 and shifts the blood pH. This causes tingling, dizziness, and altered perception. When done correctly (in a safe place, not in water), this is harmless and part of the experience.

Yes. The nose filters, humidifies, and warms the air. It produces nitric oxide for better vascular function. Chronic mouth breathing is associated with various health problems. Mouth breathing is fine during sports and intensive breathing.

Breathing exercises and meditation overlap, but they are not identical. Some breathing techniques are meditative, others more energizing. Breathing is often the starting point for deeper meditative practice, but then the focus expands. Both have value.

The body stores tension and emotion. Deep breathing can release this. This is normal and often liberating. If it becomes overwhelming, practice more gently or seek therapeutic support.

For guided exercises: Breathe, Oak, Calm (breathing area). For Wim Hof ​​specific: The official Wim Hof ​​app. For simple timing without guidance: Insight Timer or any timer app. Many are free in their basic version.

Bereit für den nächsten Schritt?

Du hast jetzt alle wichtigen Informationen. Sorge für deine Gesundheit mit einem zuverlässigen Heimtest.

For a metabolic check
DoctorBox AI Advisor
Hey! 👋 What health concerns do you have? I will help you find the right test.

AI-powered – Answers may be inaccurate.