Sam has coached breathwork for seven years after a career as an endurance athlete. He trained in Wim Hof Method Instruction and Oxygen Advantage, works with pre-performance athletes and busy professionals, and specializes in making the research translate into a two-minute daily practice. At BreathSesh he covers techniques, use-cases, and beginner content.
The Wim Hof Method is thirty to forty deep breaths in and out, then a full exhale and breath retention until the urge to breathe returns, then a recovery inhale held for about fifteen seconds. Three or four rounds make a session. The published evidence base is small but real. Here is what the protocol is, what the research supports, and who should skip it.
Resonance breathing is slow paced breathing at about six cycles per minute, usually a five-second inhale and a five-second exhale. It is the daily training pattern of HRV biofeedback, not a quick in-the-moment calmer. Here is the physiology, who built the protocol, how to find your own resonance frequency without a chest strap, and when box or 4-7-8 is the better tool.
Slow breathing shifts your nervous system in about a minute. Box for acute anxiety, 4-7-8 for sleep-onset, resonance for daily training. Three patterns ranked, with the research and the honest "when it doesn't work" you won't get from a wellness blog.
Box breathing is four seconds in, four hold, four out, four hold. One cycle is sixteen seconds, four cycles is roughly a minute. Here is how to practice it, what the research actually shows, and when to use a different pattern instead.
4-7-8 breathing is four seconds in through the nose, seven holding, and eight out through the mouth. One cycle takes nineteen seconds. Dr. Andrew Weil popularized it in the 1990s as a wind-down and sleep-onset tool. Here is how to practice it, what the evidence actually shows, and when to skip it for something else.