Box breathing, explained

The steady 4-4-4-4 square that keeps pilots, surgeons, and Navy SEALs calm under pressure.

Box breathing — sometimes called square breathing — is about as simple as a calming technique gets. You breathe in for four counts, hold for four, breathe out for four, and hold for four again. Four equal sides, like a box. Then you go around the box again.

It's famously used by people whose jobs don't allow for panic: fighter pilots, emergency doctors, and Navy SEALs, who use it to steady themselves before and during high-stress moments. If it can calm someone mid-mission, it can absolutely handle a stressful inbox.

How to do it

  1. Breathe in gently through your nose while counting to four.
  2. Hold your breath for four counts. Keep your shoulders soft.
  3. Breathe out slowly through your mouth for four counts.
  4. Hold empty for four counts. Then start again.

Go around the box four to six times — about one minute. That's genuinely all it takes.

Why it works

Two things are happening at once. First, you're slowing your breath way down, which activates your parasympathetic nervous system — the body's built-in "rest and settle" mode. Your heart rate eases, your muscles unclench, and the stress response quiets down.

Second, the counting gives your busy mind a simple job. It's very hard to spiral about tomorrow's meeting while your brain is gently occupied tracing the sides of a square. That's why box breathing feels less like willpower and more like a trick — a kind one.

When to use it

Box breathing shines in the middle of things: before a difficult conversation, between back-to-back meetings, in a waiting room, on a crowded train. You can do it with your eyes open and nobody will ever know.

Little tips

  • If four counts feels like straining, use three. The evenness matters more than the number.
  • Breathe low into your belly rather than high into your chest.
  • Don't force the holds — they should feel like a pause, not a squeeze.
Cloudi, a smiling little cloud

Cloudi walks you through this in one minute.

A friendly cloud grows and softens with your breath, counting the box for you — no thinking required.

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