The Power of Conscious Breathing
Breathwork

The Power of Conscious Breathing

March 15, 2026 · 5 min read

Breath is the only bodily function that is both automatic and conscious. That makes it the most direct gateway to your nervous system — and to stillness.

We breathe around 20,000 times a day. Almost always unconsciously. But what if I told you that one single act — consciously taking over your breath — has more effect on your nervous system than any supplement, app, or therapy?

Breath as gatekeeper

The nervous system has two modes: the sympathetic (accelerator) and the parasympathetic (brake). Most people in the modern world live chronically in the sympathetic state. Not because there is danger — but because the system never really receives the signal that it's safe.

Breath is the bridge. It is the only autonomic bodily function you can also consciously control. And that is precisely where its power lies.

When you breathe slower and deeper — through the nose, into the belly — your body sends a clear signal to the brain: it's safe. Heart rate drops. Muscles relax. Thinking becomes clearer.

The physiology behind stillness

Slow exhalation activates the vagus nerve — the longest nerve in your body, connecting brain, heart, lungs, and gut. This is not a spiritual concept. This is measurable physiology.

Some effects of conscious breathing: - Lower cortisol levels (stress hormone) - Improved heart rate variability (HRV) - Better sleep quality - More focus and cognitive clarity - Reduction of chronic muscle tension

A simple practice for today

You don't need a course to feel this today. Try this:

The 4-6 breath:

  1. Inhale for 4 counts through your nose
  2. Exhale for 6 counts through your nose or mouth
  3. Repeat for 5 minutes

The longer exhalation is the key. That is the moment the parasympathetic system activates.

Do this in the morning before you reach for your phone. Or in the evening before sleep. Observe what happens — without expectation.

East meets West

In Qigong and Tai Chi, breathing is not a technique — it is the foundation of all movement. The exhalation accompanies the movement outward. The inhalation the movement inward. The body breathes along.

What fascinates me is that Western science and Eastern wisdom point to precisely the same place — from different directions. The Taoist calls it 'the rhythm of heaven and earth'. The neuroscientist calls it 'vagal activation'. They mean the same thing.


Want to put this into practice? Breathwork is always central in my workshops and personal training sessions. Get in touch or view the workshops.

Bastiaan Groen
Bastiaan Groen
Movement & Breathwork Practitioner · Tenerife
About Bastiaan →
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