Does breathwork help anxiety? Yes—sometimes fast. Here are 3 breathwork techniques I actually use when my brain won’t chill, plus how to make them stick.
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Get it on Play StoreYeah. Sometimes a lot. Sometimes a little. But for me, it’s one of the fastest ways to stop my brain from sprinting in circles.
I’m not saying breathwork is some magical cure-all. It’s not. If your anxiety is intense or constant, please don’t try to “just breathe” your way out of needing real support. But for those spiraling moments—tight chest, racing thoughts, random doom over absolutely nothing—breathwork can be a legit reset button.
And I say that as someone who has tried the whole “calm down” thing while very much not calm. Spoiler: it never worked. Breathing with intention? That actually helped.
Anxiety is basically your nervous system acting like a smoke alarm with low batteries. It goes off for tiny things, and then your whole body joins the party—fast heart, shallow breathing, tense shoulders, sweaty palms, the whole ugly little package.
Breathwork helps because your breath is one of the few body functions you can control on purpose. When you slow it down, you send a signal that says, “Hey, we are not being chased by a tiger right now.”
And that matters.
I’ve noticed the change most when I catch myself early. If I wait until I’m already full-on panicking, breathwork helps less. But if I do it the second I feel that first wave—like my jaw clenching or my chest getting weird—it can stop the spiral before it gets expensive.
This is the one I use when I feel scattered, overwhelmed, or weirdly angry for no reason.
How to do it:
That’s it. Simple. Almost annoyingly simple.
I use box breathing before calls I’m dreading, when I’m stuck in traffic and getting irrationally annoyed, or when I’m lying in bed thinking about every embarrassing thing I’ve ever done since 2008.
What I like about it is the structure. When my mind is chaotic, counting gives it something boring to do. And boring is good. Boring is the goal.
My real-life tip:
If 4 counts feels too hard, start with 3-3-3-3. You are not failing. You are just making it doable.
Best for:
This one is my favorite when I feel the physical side of anxiety—the tight chest, the shallow breathing, that gross “something is wrong” feeling.
How to do it:
That longer exhale matters. A lot. It’s basically the brake pedal for your nervous system.
I use this one when I wake up with anxiety, which happens more often than I’d like to admit. You know those mornings where you open your eyes and immediately feel behind on life, even though nothing has happened yet? Yeah. This is my move.
Sometimes I’ll just sit on the edge of the bed, shoulders slumped, and do 10 slow breaths with a longer exhale. By the end, I’m not magically happy, but I’m usually less likely to catastrophize my entire day before breakfast.
My real-life tip:
Don’t force the exhale. Let it be slow and smooth, like you’re fogging up glass gently. If you push too hard, it can feel worse.
Best for:
This one looks silly. It also works ridiculously well.
It’s called a physiological sigh, and it’s basically a double inhale followed by a long exhale.
How to do it:
I use this when I need something fast—like immediately fast. Before speaking in public. After a bad text. When I’m sitting in my car staring into space because my brain has decided to replay one awkward conversation from three years ago.
And honestly? This is the one that feels the most dramatic in a good way. You can feel the shift.
There’s a reason it’s so effective: that second inhale helps open up the lungs a bit more, and the long exhale helps release tension. It’s a quick way to interrupt that “I’m trapped in my own body” feeling.
My real-life tip:
Keep it short. Don’t turn it into a whole event. 3 rounds is enough. If you overthink it, you’ll lose the benefit.
Best for:
I don’t sit down with candles and a spiritual playlist every time I’m anxious. Cute idea, though.
Usually it looks more like:
That last part matters. Because breathwork isn’t just about doing the thing—it’s about noticing the change.
Sometimes the change is big. Sometimes it’s tiny. Sometimes all I get is “I’m still stressed, but less doomed.” I’ll take it.
And if my anxiety is high because I’m overwhelmed by actual life stuff—deadlines, money, relationships, too many tabs open in my head—breathwork helps me get calm enough to think clearly. That’s the win.
This is the part most people skip. They try it once when they’re already in crisis, it feels awkward, and then they decide it “doesn’t work.”
Nope. You need reps.
Here’s what helps:
1. Practice when you’re not anxious.
Do 2 minutes a day when you’re calm. That way your body recognizes the pattern when stress hits.
2. Pair it with something you already do.
I like doing breathwork after brushing my teeth or before opening my laptop. Habit stacking is boring but powerful.
3. Keep it stupidly simple.
Don’t try five techniques at once. Pick one and repeat it for a week.
4. Track it.
Seriously. If you’re trying to build a habit, tracking helps. I’ve used Trider (myhabits.in) for this because I like seeing a streak and not lying to myself about whether I actually did the thing.
5. Use it early, not late.
Breathwork works better as a reset than as a rescue mission. Catch anxiety at the “hmm, something feels off” stage.
I want to be straight with you here.
Breathwork is helpful, but it’s not a replacement for therapy, medication, sleep, boundaries, exercise, or fixing the thing that’s actually stressing you out. It won’t solve your boss being terrible. It won’t erase grief. It won’t make your inbox disappear.
But it can help you get enough space to respond instead of react.
And that’s huge.
If you’re asking, “Does breathwork help anxiety?” my answer is yes, absolutely—if you use the right technique and actually practice it.
For me, the biggest difference came from not expecting breathing to make me feel amazing. I just wanted it to make me feel less hijacked. And it does.
If I had to rank the three:
Try one for a week. Not all three at once. One technique, 2 minutes a day, 7 days straight. That’s enough to learn whether it helps you.
And if you want to build the habit without forgetting about it by Wednesday, give Trider a shot at myhabits.in—it makes the whole “do it consistently” part way less annoying.