Functional breathing

Let’s start from the foundations: understanding what functional breathing is, why it has such a strong impact on our well-being, and how to begin right away with a simple exercise suitable for everyone.

We breathe thousands of times a day, often without noticing. Yet many people spend their entire lives with a short, shallow, fragmented breath—one that strains the body rather than supporting it.

functional breathing

Why the breath deserves our attention

In recent years, scientists, physiotherapists, and researchers have begun to look at breathing with growing interest. The reason is simple: the quality of our breath directly influences the quality of our life.

Studies published in journals such as Frontiers in Psychology and the Journal of Applied Physiology show that slower, deeper, diaphragmatic breathing:

  • improves vagus nerve activation, promoting calm and stabilizing the autonomic nervous system
  • reduces muscular tension, especially in areas such as shoulders, neck, and chest
  • improves the balance between oxygen and carbon dioxide, optimizing stress tolerance
  • supports a more balanced posture thanks to the natural activation of the diaphragm

It’s no coincidence that many breathing-based practices—from yoga to respiratory physiotherapy—use the same mechanisms observed in laboratory research: slowing the rhythm, expanding thoracic capacity, and engaging the diaphragm.

What “functional breathing” means

Functional breathing is not an exotic technique or a complex method: it is the natural way the body is designed to breathe.

It means breathing:

  • primarily through the nose
  • with the diaphragm leading the inhalation
  • with a calm and continuous rhythm
  • using the full capacity of the rib cage, not just the upper chest

Researchers from Stanford University and the University of California have shown that diaphragmatic breathing:

  • reduces activity in the amygdala (the brain area linked to the stress response)
  • improves heart–lung interaction, increasing cardiac coherence
  • facilitates emotional and cognitive regulation

Shallow chest breathing, on the other hand, can increase anxiety, tension, and fatigue, because it activates more “alert-driven” physiological mechanisms.

functional breathing

How to begin: a simple and powerful exercise

To take the first steps, it’s helpful to start in a neutral, relaxed, and stable position.
Many programs, including the one described on this blog, suggest lying down: this way, you don’t need to support your body weight and can focus entirely on your breath.

Exercise: conscious diaphragmatic breathing

  • Lie on your back, feet on the floor or extended, shoulders relaxed.
  • Place one hand on your abdomen and one on your chest.
  • Inhale slowly through the nose, allowing the hand on your abdomen to rise—your diaphragm is descending and creating space.
  • Exhale calmly through the nose, feeling the hand lower as your body relaxes.
  • Continue for 5–10 minutes without forcing anything, simply observing the natural flow.

If you wish, you can follow this simple parasympathetic breathing exercise available on BR3ATH.

After just a few breaths, you realize that functional breathing is a simple, almost primitive act. Yet it is precisely this return to naturalness that triggers deep benefits.

Several studies—including research published by the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health—show that just a few minutes of diaphragmatic breathing per day can reduce heart rate, muscle tension, and perceived stress.

diaphragmatic breathing

The benefits you may notice

With consistent practice, even minimal, many people report:

  • a sensation of a wider, freer breath
  • a softer, less “closed” posture
  • greater ability to regain calm after a demanding day
  • improved sleep, thanks to nervous-system regulation
  • increased body awareness

It’s not magic—it’s physiology. The body immediately recognizes a more natural breath and interprets it as a signal of safety.

A first step toward a bigger change

Rediscovering your breath means returning to a simple, human, deeply regulating act.
Before exploring more specific techniques such as 5-2-5, 4-4-8, or the popular 4-7-8 method, it’s important to reconnect with the basics: calm, diaphragmatic, natural breathing. Many aspects of our balance—from posture to sleep quality, from stress management to symptoms linked to a “short” or dysfunctional breath—depend on this.

Whether you want to understand the best type of breathing, the most effective position for breathing, or how to identify the signs of poor breathing or dysfunctional posture, everything begins from a single point: listening to the body. And the simplest way to start is precisely the exercise you have just encountered.

One step at a time, one breath at a time: this is how lasting change is built. And in the next article, we’ll explore how to bring this “rediscovered” breath into everyday life, beginning with its most important channel: the nose.