Breathwork & Downregulation

Breathing is the only autonomic function you can consciously control — and it’s the fastest lever for shifting your nervous system from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic (rest-and-digest). This section covers protocols for deliberate downregulation.


Fitness Considerations

The simplest downregulation technique: make your exhale longer than your inhale. A 4-second inhale with a 6–8 second exhale activates the vagus nerve and drops heart rate within minutes. No special technique required — just slow, controlled breathing through the nose.

Post-training, post-shift, before sleep, or any time you notice you’re still “on” when you should be recovering. Chronic sympathetic dominance — always wired, poor sleep, elevated resting heart rate — is a recovery killer. Breathwork is the off switch.

Deliberate breathwork is a skill. The first few sessions will feel awkward or like “nothing is happening.” With practice, you’ll be able to downshift your nervous system in 2–3 minutes. Start with 5-minute sessions and build from there.


Note

Breathwork protocols are being added. In the meantime, try this simple practice: lie on your back, place one hand on your chest and one on your belly. Breathe through your nose — 4 seconds in, 6 seconds out — for 5 minutes. The belly hand should move; the chest hand should stay still.