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Breathing

Box Breathing

A 4-count breath pattern that shifts the nervous system within minutes β€” used by surgeons, special forces, and anxiety therapists alike.

What it is

Box breathing (also called square breathing or 4-4-4-4 breathing) involves inhaling for 4 counts, holding for 4, exhaling for 4, and holding for 4. It is a voluntary regulation of the autonomic nervous system through breath rate and carbon dioxide dynamics.

Why it matters

The autonomic nervous system controls heart rate, digestion, immune activity, and stress hormone release. It is normally automatic β€” but breath is the one autonomic function under voluntary control, which makes it a lever. Slow, deliberate breathing β€” especially extended exhalation and breath holds β€” increases vagal tone, lowers heart rate, reduces cortisol, and shifts the nervous system from sympathetic (fight-or-flight) to parasympathetic (rest-and-digest) activity. In cancer treatment, chronic sympathetic activation from fear, pain, and uncertainty suppresses immune function and worsens fatigue. Box breathing is a reliable, fast, free tool to interrupt this cycle.

The evidence

Multiple RCTs have shown slow-paced breathing interventions reduce blood pressure, anxiety, and salivary cortisol. A 2019 study in BMC Complementary Medicine found diaphragmatic breathing significantly reduced oxidative stress markers. Vagal nerve stimulation research confirms that HRV (heart rate variability) β€” a marker of resilience β€” improves with consistent breathing practice.

This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Always discuss lifestyle changes with your care team, particularly if you are undergoing active cancer treatment.

How to practice

Sit upright or lie flat. Inhale slowly through the nose for 4 counts. Hold for 4 counts (no tension β€” just pause). Exhale slowly through the mouth or nose for 4 counts. Hold empty for 4 counts. Repeat for 4–8 cycles (about 3–5 minutes). For acute stress or pre-procedure anxiety, extend the exhale to 6–8 counts while keeping the inhale at 4.

Frequency

Daily, and on-demand before stressful situations

Notes

If you feel dizzy or lightheaded, you are over-breathing β€” return to normal breathing and slow down the count. People with certain cardiac arrhythmias should check with their cardiologist before extended breath holds. Do not practise in water.

Tags

stress

anxiety

vagus

HRV

cortisol

nervous system

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Evidence-based self-optimisation for people navigating cancer.

Not medical advice. Always work with your care team.

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Box Breathing β€” GladBoy Lifestyle