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Alternate Nostril Breathing Breathing: How To Do It, Benefits, and a Free Timer

When stress is already in your chest, you do not need a long lecture. You need one clear breath to follow. This page gives you a visual pacer for alternate nostril breathing, set to 4s inhale, 4s exhale. Start the timer, use the protocol for 5 minutes, then adjust with the troubleshooting notes if the first round feels awkward.

intermediatebalanced5 min
Inhale4s
5:00 left

What is Alternate Nostril Breathing?

Nadi Shodhana is a pranayama practice built around alternating nostrils by hand. Its strongest practical effect may be that it makes wandering attention obvious and gives the breath a physical sequence. The practical version is deliberately plain: no incense, no subscription, no hidden lesson. You follow the on-screen cue, keep the breath comfortable, and stop if the body pushes back.

The exact ClearBreaths setting is 4s inhale, 4s exhale. Use the nose for the inhale when possible, keep the jaw loose, and make the exhale quiet enough that you could repeat it without strain.

Step-by-step protocol

  1. Sit upright or lie down if you are using the practice for sleep.
  2. Inhale gently for 4 seconds through the nose.
  3. Exhale for 4 seconds through the nose.
  4. Repeat until the timer ends, then take three normal breaths before standing.

The science

The strongest direct citation here is Therapeutic benefits of pranayama: a review. Its useful finding for a practitioner is modest but real: Reviews pranayama research, including autonomic and psychological outcomes. The mechanism is not magic. Alternating sides creates a paced attentional ritual while keeping breathing slow and nasal. Slow breathing research also suggests that exhale-weighted breathing can shift heart-rate variability markers and reduce state anxiety in a single session.

That does not make alternate nostril breathing a cure. It is a state-change tool. Use it when the problem is arousal, rumination, or breath-holding under stress; use medical care when symptoms are severe, new, or physical.

Who it is for

This protocol fits people looking for calm, focus support, especially when they want a timed practice rather than an open-ended meditation. It is also a useful contrast to more activating breathwork because the pace makes the exhale the main event.

Common mistakes

  • Pressing the nostril too hard.
  • Adding breath holds too early.
  • Twisting the neck.

Variants

VariantChangeUse it when
No-hold Nadi ShodhanaFour in, four out, alternating sides.Beginner calm and focus practice.

Troubleshooting

  • One nostril is blocked: Skip the hand position and use coherent breathing instead.

Try it now

Inhale4s
5:00 left

FAQ

What is the physiological sigh?

The physiological sigh is a two-part inhale followed by a longer exhale. It happens naturally in the body, and the deliberate version is used as a fast downshift when stress is high.

How many physiological sighs should I do?

For a quick reset, try three to six slow cycles. For a structured practice, use the five-minute cyclic sighing version tested by Stanford researchers.

Is physiological sighing the same as cyclic sighing?

They are closely related. Cyclic sighing usually means repeating the physiological sigh pattern for several minutes as a formal practice.

Should I inhale through my nose or mouth?

Use the nose for both inhales if you can, then exhale slowly through the mouth. Keep the second inhale small rather than forceful.

Can physiological sighing help anxiety?

It may help reduce acute stress arousal for some people. It is not a treatment for an anxiety disorder, and severe or recurring symptoms deserve clinical support.

Can I do this lying down?

Yes. Sitting is better for daytime stress because it keeps you alert. Lying down is fine for sleep or a middle-of-the-night reset.

Related techniques

Sources

  1. Therapeutic benefits of pranayama: a review, Saoji, Raghavendra, Manjunath, Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine, 2019.
  2. Breathwork Protocols for Health, Focus and Stress, Huberman Lab, Huberman Lab Newsletter, 2022.

Written by ClearBreaths Editorial. Reviewed by ClearBreaths Research Desk. Last reviewed .