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Breathing at ~6 Breaths/Min (≈0.1 Hz)

Breathing slowly at ~6 breaths/min (about 5 s in, 5 s out) often increases heart-rate variability (HRV) and nudges the autonomic nervous system toward a calmer balance. It pairs well with a 10-minute pause; use it if you want a little more guidance than "just sit".

What is "6 bpm" / "0.1 Hz"?

6 breaths/min ≈ 0.1 Hz respiration.

Around this rate, the baroreflex (blood-pressure–heart-rate feedback) and respiratory sinus arrhythmia can resonate, which often shows up as higher HRV and a steadier, calmer feel.

Expected effects (short)

  • HRV ↑ / vagal activity ↗: a marker of flexible autonomic regulation.
  • Perceived calmness ↗: smoother breath → steadier internal pacing.
  • Low cognitive load: following a dot is simpler than counting or scripts.

Note: HRV is a proxy, not a goal. The goal is a light reset, not a lab result.

When to use it

  • During a 10-minute pause when attention is jumpy and you want a soft anchor.
  • Before a focus block or after a stressful call.
  • In the evening as part of a gentle wind-down.

When not to (or use plain pause instead)

  • If slow breathing feels uncomfortable or air-hungry.
  • If you're dealing with cardio-respiratory or panic conditions—use your clinician's advice first.
  • If you find yourself over-controlling—drop the technique, return to "just sit".

(This page is educational, not medical guidance.)

A simple 10-minute protocol

  1. Posture: sit or lie comfortably, shoulders loose.
  2. Visual: follow the breathing dot if you like; otherwise close eyes.
  3. Cadence: ~5 s inhale → ~5 s exhale (no breath-holds).
  4. Effort: breathe quietly; keep the chest/shoulders relaxed; belly can move.
  5. Mind: if you start "managing" the breath, soften; if it drifts, gently return.
  6. Finish: notice how the room feels for a few seconds before moving.

Tip: You don't need to be exact. Anything 5–7 breaths/min is close enough; comfort beats precision.

Troubleshooting & common mistakes

  • Too much air → lightheadedness: shrink the volume, not the cadence.
  • Counting stress: stop counting; follow the dot's up–down instead.
  • Jaw/neck tension: unclench teeth; imagine the breath "wide".
  • Impatience: it's a quiet effect. Look for steadiness, not fireworks.

How this fits the app's modes

Breathing dot = gentle pacing at ~6 bpm.

Hidden screen / Ghost timer are fine without breath work; this mode is optional.

References

  1. Lehrer, P. & Gevirtz, R. (2014). Heart rate variability biofeedback: How and why does it work? Frontiers in Psychology. (resonance/0.1 Hz overview)
  2. Laborde, S., Zammit, N., Mosley, E. (2022). Slow-paced breathing and HRV: systematic review/meta-analysis. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.
  3. Zaccaro, A. et al. (2018). How breath-control can change your life: A systematic review on psycho-physiological correlates of slow breathing. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.
  4. Shaffer, F. & Meehan/Smith (2016). A practical guide to HRV metrics and norms. Frontiers in Public Health.
  5. Vaschillo, E., Vaschillo, B., Lehrer, P. (2006). Characteristics of resonance in heart rate variability biofeedback. Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback.