Slowed, extended-exhale breathing

Deliberately lengthen the exhale to down-regulate the nervous system within minutes.

Why it works

A longer exhale increases parasympathetic (vagal) activity, slowing heart rate and raising heart-rate variability — a physiological marker of calm and self-regulation. This is one of the few fast, reliable levers on autonomic state.

How to do it

  1. Inhale for a count of 4, exhale for 6–8, for two to five minutes.
  2. Breathe through the nose, into the belly, not the chest.
  3. Use it as a pre-emptive tool before stressors, not only as rescue after.

Evidence

Slow-paced breathing (~6 breaths/min) reliably raises HRV and reduces self-reported stress and anxiety across multiple studies and a growing meta-analytic literature. (rct)

Effects are real but modest and acute; it regulates state, it does not resolve underlying stressors.

Sources

  • Zaccaro et al. (2018), systematic review of slow breathing and autonomic/CNS effects, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience

Common mistake

Over-breathing or forcing big inhales, which can increase arousal. The lever is the slow, long exhale, not volume.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach paces breathing for you when a session gets activated, then resumes the work once your state has settled.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).