name: breathing-exercise-guide description: "Provides structured breathing exercise programs for stress relief, sleep improvement, focus enhancement, and anxiety management. Includes step-by-step guided instructions for various techniques. Use when the user wants breathing exercises, asks about breathwork, or needs quick relaxation techniques." version: 1.0.0 user-invocable: false allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob, Write, Edit metadata: {"openclaw":{"emoji":"🌬️","category":"health"}}
Breathing Exercise Guide
A comprehensive breathwork assistant that provides guided exercises, situation-based recommendations, progressive training plans, and practice tracking for stress relief, sleep improvement, focus enhancement, and anxiety management.
Capabilities
1. Exercise Library
Detailed step-by-step instructions for each technique, organized by category.
Calming Exercises
| Exercise | Pattern | Rounds | Duration | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4-7-8 Breathing | In:4s Hold:7s Out:8s | 4 cycles | ~3 min | Beginner |
| Box Breathing | In:4s Hold:4s Out:4s Hold:4s | 6-8 cycles | ~5 min | Beginner |
| Extended Exhale | In:4s Out:8s | 8-10 cycles | ~4 min | Beginner |
| Physiological Sigh | Double in (nose), long out (mouth) | 3-5 | ~1 min | Beginner |
| Alternate Nostril (Nadi Shodhana) | Alternate L/R nostril | 5-10 rounds | 5-10 min | Intermediate |
4-7-8 Breathing (The Relaxing Breath)
- Preparation: Sit upright with back supported. Place tongue tip behind upper front teeth.
- Exhale completely through mouth with a whoosh sound.
- Inhale quietly through nose for 4 seconds.
- Hold breath for 7 seconds.
- Exhale completely through mouth with whoosh for 8 seconds.
- Repeat for 4 cycles total.
- Beginner modification: Use 2-3.5-4 ratio if 4-7-8 feels too long.
- Common mistakes: Breathing too forcefully; losing tongue position; rushing the hold.
- Expected sensations: Lightheadedness on first attempts is normal and fades with practice. Deep relaxation by cycle 3-4.
Box Breathing (Square Breathing)
- Preparation: Sit comfortably. Visualize tracing a square with each phase as one side.
- Inhale slowly through nose for 4 seconds.
- Hold breath for 4 seconds (lungs full).
- Exhale slowly through nose or mouth for 4 seconds.
- Hold breath for 4 seconds (lungs empty).
- Repeat for 6-8 cycles.
- Beginner modification: Start with 3-second sides and work up to 4.
- Common mistakes: Tensing shoulders during holds; gasping at transitions.
- Expected sensations: Calm alertness; reduced heart rate; mental clarity.
Extended Exhale
- Preparation: Sit or lie down comfortably.
- Inhale gently through nose for 4 seconds.
- Exhale slowly through pursed lips for 8 seconds.
- Repeat for 8-10 cycles.
- Beginner modification: Use 3:6 ratio if 4:8 feels strained.
- Common mistakes: Forcing the exhale rather than letting it flow; chest breathing instead of diaphragmatic.
- Expected sensations: Activation of parasympathetic nervous system; slowing heart rate; drowsiness.
Physiological Sigh
- Preparation: Can be done in any position.
- Take a sharp inhale through the nose.
- Immediately take a second, shorter inhale through the nose on top of the first (filling lungs completely).
- Exhale slowly and fully through the mouth in one long breath.
- Repeat 3-5 times.
- Beginner modification: None needed; this is the fastest calming technique available.
- Common mistakes: Making both inhales equal length (second should be shorter); rushing the exhale.
- Expected sensations: Near-immediate reduction in stress response; the double inhale reinflates alveoli for efficient CO2 offloading.
Alternate Nostril Breathing (Nadi Shodhana)
- Preparation: Sit in a comfortable position. Use right hand in Vishnu Mudra (fold index and middle fingers to palm).
- Close right nostril with right thumb. Inhale through left nostril for 4 seconds.
- Close left nostril with ring finger. Hold both closed for 4 seconds.
- Release right nostril. Exhale through right for 4 seconds.
- Inhale through right nostril for 4 seconds.
- Close right nostril. Hold for 4 seconds.
- Release left nostril. Exhale through left for 4 seconds.
- This completes one round. Repeat 5-10 rounds.
- Beginner modification: Skip the holds; just alternate inhale/exhale between nostrils.
- Common mistakes: Applying too much pressure to nostrils; forgetting which side to breathe through.
- Expected sensations: Balanced energy; calm focus; sense of bilateral equilibrium.
Energizing Exercises
| Exercise | Pattern | Rounds | Duration | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breath of Fire (Kapalabhati) | Rapid exhales, passive inhales | 30-60 breaths | 1-3 min | Intermediate |
| Wim Hof Method | 30 power breaths + retention | 3 rounds | 15-20 min | Advanced |
| Bellows Breath (Bhastrika) | Forceful in and out | 10-20 breaths | 1-2 min | Intermediate |
Breath of Fire (Kapalabhati)
- Preparation: Sit upright with hands on knees. Empty your lungs first.
- Take a passive, gentle inhale through the nose (about 1/3 lung capacity).
- Sharply exhale through the nose by contracting the abdominal muscles.
- Allow the inhale to happen passively as the belly relaxes.
- Repeat at a rhythm of about 1-2 breaths per second.
- Start with 30 breaths, rest, then repeat. Build to 60 breaths.
- Beginner modification: Slow the pace to 1 breath every 2 seconds. Place hand on belly to feel the pumping action.
- Common mistakes: Focusing on the inhale instead of the exhale; moving the chest instead of the belly; holding tension in the face.
- Expected sensations: Warmth in the core; tingling in hands/face; heightened alertness; slight lightheadedness initially.
Wim Hof Method
- Preparation: Lie down or sit in a safe, comfortable place. Never near water.
- Round: Take 30 deep, powerful breaths (in through nose, out through mouth) — fully in, letting go (not fully out).
- After breath 30, exhale and hold with lungs mostly empty as long as comfortable.
- When you need to breathe, inhale fully and hold for 15 seconds.
- Release and begin next round.
- Complete 3 rounds total.
- Beginner modification: Start with 20 breaths per round and shorter retention holds.
- Common mistakes: Hyperventilating too aggressively; practicing in unsafe locations; forcing retention beyond comfort.
- Expected sensations: Tingling, lightheadedness, wave-like sensation, emotional release, warmth. Retention times naturally increase with practice.
Bellows Breath (Bhastrika)
- Preparation: Sit upright with spine straight.
- Inhale forcefully through the nose while raising arms overhead.
- Exhale forcefully through the nose while bringing arms down with fists near shoulders.
- Maintain equal force on both inhale and exhale.
- Start with 10 breaths, rest, then repeat. Build to 20.
- Beginner modification: Reduce speed; ensure equal force on inhale and exhale before increasing pace.
- Common mistakes: Unequal force between inhale and exhale; chest-only breathing; tension in neck and shoulders.
- Expected sensations: Energy surge; warmth; mental clarity; increased heart rate.
Focus Exercises
| Exercise | Pattern | Rounds | Duration | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5-5 Coherence | In:5s Out:5s | continuous | 5-10 min | Beginner |
| Resonance Breathing | In:5.5s Out:5.5s | continuous | 10-20 min | Beginner |
| Counted Breathing | Count breaths 1-10, repeat | continuous | 5 min+ | Beginner |
5-5 Coherence Breathing
- Preparation: Sit comfortably. Optionally place hand on heart center.
- Inhale smoothly through the nose for 5 seconds.
- Exhale smoothly through the nose for 5 seconds.
- Maintain an even, smooth rhythm without pauses between inhale and exhale.
- Continue for 5-10 minutes.
- Beginner modification: Start with 4-4 and lengthen as comfort allows.
- Common mistakes: Adding pauses between breaths; uneven transitions; chest breathing.
- Expected sensations: Heart rate variability optimization; calm focus; sense of "flow state"; reduced mental chatter.
Resonance Breathing
- Preparation: Sit or lie down. This is best done in a quiet setting.
- Inhale gently through the nose for 5.5 seconds.
- Exhale gently through the nose for 5.5 seconds.
- Aim for approximately 5.5 breaths per minute.
- Continue for 10-20 minutes.
- Beginner modification: Use 5-5 timing first, then fine-tune to 5.5.
- Common mistakes: Trying to control breath too rigidly; breathing too deeply (moderate depth is ideal).
- Expected sensations: Deep calm with sustained alertness; optimal blood gas balance; prayer/meditation-like state. Research suggests 5.5 breaths/minute is the resonant frequency for many adults.
Counted Breathing
- Preparation: Sit in a comfortable meditation posture. Close eyes.
- Breathe naturally without controlling the breath.
- At the end of each exhale, mentally count: 1.
- Continue counting each exhale up to 10.
- After reaching 10, start over at 1.
- If you lose count, gently return to 1 without judgment.
- Beginner modification: Count to 5 instead of 10.
- Common mistakes: Trying to control breath rhythm; getting frustrated when losing count (losing count is normal and part of the practice).
- Expected sensations: Improved concentration; awareness of mental wandering; progressive deepening of focus over sessions.
2. Situation-Based Recommendations
| Situation | Recommended Exercise | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Can't sleep | 4-7-8 Breathing | Extended hold and exhale activate parasympathetic response, slowing heart rate for sleep onset |
| Panic / acute anxiety | Physiological Sigh then Extended Exhale | Physiological sigh is the fastest known voluntary calming mechanism; extended exhale sustains the effect |
| Before presentation or meeting | Box Breathing | Balances alertness with calm; used by Navy SEALs for high-pressure situations |
| Morning energy boost | Breath of Fire | Activates sympathetic nervous system; increases core body temperature and alertness |
| General stress relief | Alternate Nostril | Balances left/right brain hemispheres; regulates autonomic nervous system |
| Focus for deep work | 5-5 Coherence | Optimizes heart rate variability for sustained attention and cognitive performance |
| Quick 1-minute reset | Physiological Sigh | Most time-efficient calming technique backed by Stanford research |
| Pre-workout activation | Bellows Breath | Rapidly increases oxygen availability and sympathetic tone |
| Meditation preparation | Resonance Breathing | Establishes optimal respiratory rate for meditative states |
| Mid-afternoon slump | Breath of Fire (short round) | Resets alertness without caffeine; 30 breaths takes under a minute |
| Test or exam anxiety | Box Breathing then Counted Breathing | Box breathing calms the initial anxiety; counted breathing sharpens focus |
3. Guided Session Format
When guiding the user through an exercise, follow this structure:
Pre-Session
- State the exercise name, purpose, and expected duration.
- Posture cue: Describe ideal body position.
- Environment cue: Suggest closing eyes, minimizing distractions.
- Ask the user to rate their current state on a 1-10 scale (1 = very stressed/unfocused, 10 = very calm/focused).
During Session
- Provide clear timing cues for each phase (inhale, hold, exhale, hold).
- Use countdown format: "Inhale... 2... 3... 4..."
- Announce round numbers: "Round 3 of 4."
- Include brief encouragement or focus cues between rounds.
- Offer modifications if the user reports difficulty.
Post-Session
- Guide a few natural breaths to transition out.
- Ask the user to rate their state again on the 1-10 scale.
- Note any observations or adjustments for next time.
- Suggest when to practice next for best results.
4. Practice Tracking
Track each session with the following fields:
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| date | Date of practice (YYYY-MM-DD) |
| time | Time of day (morning/afternoon/evening) |
| exercise_type | Name of the breathing exercise performed |
| duration | Length of session in minutes |
| rounds | Number of rounds or cycles completed |
| pre_session_state | Self-reported state before session (1-10) |
| post_session_state | Self-reported state after session (1-10) |
| notes | Any observations, difficulties, or milestones |
Calculated Metrics:
- Effectiveness score: (post_session_state - pre_session_state) for each session; averaged over time per exercise type.
- Consistency streak: Consecutive days with at least one practice session logged.
- Favorite exercises: Ranked by frequency of use and average effectiveness score.
- Weekly summary: Total sessions, total minutes, average effectiveness, most-used exercise.
- Progress indicators: Increasing retention times (for Wim Hof), longer session durations, higher baseline pre-session states over time.
5. Progressive Training Plans
Beginner Plan (Weeks 1-2)
- Goal: Build a daily habit; learn foundational techniques.
- Daily commitment: 5 minutes.
- Week 1: 4-7-8 Breathing (4 cycles, morning or evening).
- Week 2: Alternate days of 4-7-8 and Box Breathing.
- Milestone: Complete 10 consecutive days of practice.
Intermediate Plan (Weeks 3-4)
- Goal: Expand repertoire; increase session length.
- Daily commitment: 10 minutes.
- Week 3: Add Alternate Nostril Breathing. Practice one calming technique + one focus technique daily.
- Week 4: Add 5-5 Coherence Breathing. Begin pairing exercises with specific activities (coherence before work, 4-7-8 before bed).
- Milestone: Notice measurable improvement in pre-session baseline states.
Advanced Plan (Weeks 5+)
- Goal: Full library access; personalized practice based on data.
- Daily commitment: 15-20 minutes.
- Week 5: Introduce Breath of Fire or Bellows Breath for energizing sessions.
- Week 6+: Experiment with Wim Hof Method (with all safety precautions). Design custom routines based on tracking data.
- Milestone: Develop a personalized morning and evening routine. Achieve 30-day consistency streak.
Maintenance Plan (Ongoing)
- Minimum 5 minutes daily of any technique.
- Use situation-based recommendations for targeted sessions.
- Review tracking data weekly to optimize practice.
6. Breathing Metrics
When wearable or biometric data is available, track and analyze:
| Metric | Source | Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Respiratory rate (breaths/min) | Wearable / manual count | Baseline trend; lower resting rate indicates improved respiratory fitness |
| Heart rate variability (HRV) | Wearable (chest strap, ring, watch) | Primary indicator of autonomic balance; breathwork should increase HRV over time |
| Resting heart rate | Wearable | General cardiovascular health; should trend downward with consistent practice |
| SpO2 (blood oxygen) | Pulse oximeter / wearable | Relevant for Wim Hof practice; monitor for safety during retention holds |
| Pre/post session heart rate | Wearable / manual | Immediate session effectiveness indicator |
Analysis Approach:
- Compare HRV on breathwork days vs. non-breathwork days.
- Track respiratory rate trends over weeks and months.
- Correlate exercise types with biometric improvements.
- Flag anomalies (e.g., unusually low SpO2 during retention) for safety review.
Output Format
Provide responses in these formats depending on the context:
Guided Exercise: Step-by-step instructions with timing cues, formatted for easy reading during practice. Use clear spacing and numbered steps.
Practice Log Entry: Structured data entry confirming the session was recorded, with calculated effectiveness score.
Progress Report: Summary table of recent sessions, streak count, average effectiveness per exercise, and recommendations for the next week.
Exercise Recommendation: When the user describes a situation or goal, respond with the recommended exercise, a brief explanation of why it fits, and offer to guide them through it.
Data Persistence
- Daily log: Store practice entries in the user's daily file under a
## Breathworksection. - Exercise library reference: Maintain a reference file at
items/breathing-exercises.mdcontaining the user's personalized notes, modifications, and preferences for each exercise. - Tracking data: Append session data to the daily file for longitudinal analysis.
Alerts and Safety
Stop Immediately If You Experience:
- Persistent dizziness or vertigo
- Excessive tingling or numbness (hands, feet, face)
- Sharp chest pain
- Feeling faint or losing consciousness
- Nausea or severe discomfort
- Rapid, uncontrollable heartbeat
Contraindications — Avoid Forceful Techniques (Breath of Fire, Wim Hof, Bhastrika) If:
- Pregnant or trying to conceive
- History of epilepsy or seizures
- Uncontrolled hypertension or cardiovascular conditions
- Recent surgery (especially abdominal or thoracic)
- Acute respiratory infection or asthma attack
- Detached retina or glaucoma
Wim Hof Method Specific Warnings:
- NEVER practice near water (pool, bath, ocean) — risk of shallow water blackout
- NEVER practice while driving or operating machinery
- NEVER practice while standing — always sit or lie down
- Fainting is a known risk during breath retention; ensure a safe environment
General Safety Principles:
- Start with beginner exercises and progress gradually.
- Gentle techniques (4-7-8, Box Breathing, Coherence) are safe for nearly everyone.
- Listen to your body; discomfort is a signal to ease off.
- Breathwork is a complementary practice, not a replacement for medical treatment.
- If you have a respiratory condition (COPD, asthma, etc.), consult your healthcare provider before beginning a breathwork practice.
Medical Disclaimer: This breathing exercise guide is for informational and wellness purposes only. It is not medical advice and does not replace professional medical consultation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions regarding a medical condition. If you experience any adverse effects during breathwork, discontinue immediately and consult a medical professional.