logo
Every breath you take affects how you move. Here's how to fix both

Every breath you take affects how you move. Here's how to fix both

CNN2 days ago
Dana Santas, known as the 'Mobility Maker,' is a certified strength and conditioning specialist and mind-body coach in professional sports, and is the author of the book 'Practical Solutions for Back Pain Relief.'
If you've been dealing with persistent tension, poor posture or nagging pain, it's worth checking in on your breathing. How you breathe not only reflects your movement quality — it also holds the power to change it for the better.
Most people understand breathing's role as a life-sustaining function with stress-relieving properties. (Think — deep inhale, deep exhale.) But the way you breathe can also reveal how efficiently and effectively you move — and improving your breathing can help your body break out of a bad cycle of tension, imbalance and strain.
When breathing becomes shallow and rapid, it doesn't just affect oxygen exchange — it disrupts the foundation of how your body functions. That's why much of my work in professional sports focuses on teaching the fundamentals of breathing biomechanics. I've seen firsthand how poor breathing patterns lead to mobility limitations, posture problems, chronic pain and increased risk of injury.
In today's high-stress, screen-focused world, these same dysfunctional breathing patterns are common across all walks of life.
But you can address faulty breathing by developing a better awareness of your patterns and practicing proper technique for a few minutes every day. Here's how to unlock your superpower.
Breathing is one of the body's most fundamental movement patterns — occurring on average more than 23,000 times a day — and the diaphragm's contractions play a key role. Under stress, however, your body naturally shifts into the nervous system's sympathetic or fight-or-flight mode, driving faster, shallower breaths from the upper chest. Over time, especially with chronic stress, this becomes the default breathing pattern. Your breathing becomes more vertical — up in your chest and neck — rather than expanding your lungs and rib cage horizontally.
This upper-chest pattern bypasses your diaphragm, forcing muscles in your neck and shoulders to take over the work of pulling in each breath. When your diaphragm isn't functioning properly, it can't fulfill its secondary role as a postural stabilizer because true core engagement requires this large muscle to work in harmony with your deep abdominal and pelvic floor muscles.
Because the diaphragm attaches to both your rib cage and your spine, poor engagement creates core instability and shifts your rib cage position. As your rib cage moves out of alignment, your spine and head follow, and because your shoulder blades glide over your rib cage, your shoulder position and function are also affected.
Forward head posture develops as your neck extends and your rib cage lifts and flares. Moreover, rib mobility decreases, which restricts mid-back rotation and extension — essential for healthy movement patterns. Overall, mobility suffers and injury risk increases as your body reacts to increasing core instability by creating protective tension and muscular compensations — often straining the lower back.
This creates a vicious cycle: Your breath affects your posture, your posture affects your breath, and both affect how you feel and move.
People frequently try to address these problems with stretching or strength work alone, but without changing your breathing mechanics, you will remain stuck in dysfunctional patterns.
One of the simplest ways to evaluate your breathing is by lying on your back with your knees bent and feet on the floor. Place your hands on your lower ribs on either side of the area where your rib cage splits below your sternum.
Spend a few moments taking some deep breaths, noticing where the movement happens. If you experience tightening or movement in your neck, upper chest or shoulders, or your ribs barely move, those are signs you may be breathing shallowly and not using your diaphragm effectively.
Rather than focusing on so-called 'belly breathing' — a term often used to encourage relaxation but biomechanically misleading — focus on rib mobility and diaphragm function. The slight expansion of your abdomen is the result of increased intra-abdominal pressure, not air filling your belly. Overemphasizing belly movement can inhibit proper rib cage expansion and diaphragm mechanics over time.
Try taking a few more breaths, directing your breath into the lung space under your lower ribs. With each inhale, feel for lateral expansion of your ribs under your hands. With each exhale, feel your rib cage move down and your lower ribs move in, promoting a natural core engagement to support the movement.
If you identified potential issues with your breathing pattern, the next step is learning to retrain it. While many people focus on taking deeper inhales to improve breathing, the real key to breaking dysfunctional patterns lies in how you exhale. It's the exhale that plays a pivotal role in regulating your nervous system, restoring diaphragm function and improving your tolerance for stress — both physical and emotional.
When you exhale fully and slowly, you stimulate your parasympathetic nervous system, the branch responsible for calming your body and promoting recovery. A long, complete exhale also helps reset your diaphragm position, allowing it to contract more effectively on the next breath.
Although oxygen tends to get most of the attention, this process is closely tied to carbon dioxide tolerance. CO₂ is what triggers the urge to breathe. But when you chronically overbreathe — taking in more oxygen than your body can use — you reduce CO₂ levels too quickly. This can make your chemoreceptors, the specialized sensors in your brain stem and arteries that monitor CO₂ levels in your blood, overly sensitive, causing feelings of breathlessness even when oxygen levels are adequate.
Training yourself to tolerate slightly elevated carbon dioxide levels through long, slow exhales can improve your respiratory efficiency and build stress resilience.
Sit comfortably with your hands on your lower ribs to monitor and guide movement.
Inhale through your nose for a count of four.
Exhale slowly through your nose or mouth (whatever feels best for you) for a count of eight.
Pause briefly for a count of two at the end of the exhale.
Repeat this pattern for 10 to 12 breaths, keeping your face, jaw, neck and shoulders relaxed.
Practice this daily, gradually increasing to a 5:10 or 6:12 ratio as you build tolerance. This breathwork helps restore diaphragm function and rib mobility while retraining your nervous system to stay calm under pressure.
The awareness and proficiency you develop through a regular breathwork practice becomes even more powerful when applied to physical activity. Integrating improved breathing mechanics into your daily life will make your movement feel more fluid, connected and efficient.
Here are ways to apply better breathing during workouts:
• Warm up with conscious breathing to create postural alignment, activate your core and increase focus.
• Exhale on exertion: In strength training, exhale during the effort phase to engage your core and stabilize your spine.
• Guide mobility with breath: During rotational or flexibility drills, use inhales to create space and exhales to deepen movement.
• Breathe nasally during light to moderate cardio to improve oxygen utilization and maintain better breathing patterns.
• Elongate exhalations to recover: Post-workout, practice the 2:1 exhale-to-inhale ratio to downregulate your nervous system.
Remember, your breath isn't just a background function. By restoring proper breathing, you support better posture, deeper core strength, smoother movement and a more resilient nervous system.
So the next time your neck feels tight or your shoulders ache, don't immediately try to stretch it out. Check your breath first. It may be telling you exactly what you need to know.
Sign up for CNN's Fitness, But Better newsletter series. Our seven-part guide will help you ease into a healthy routine, backed by experts.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chihuahua Puppy Tries Strawberries and Dramatically Loses Her Tiny Mind
Chihuahua Puppy Tries Strawberries and Dramatically Loses Her Tiny Mind

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Chihuahua Puppy Tries Strawberries and Dramatically Loses Her Tiny Mind

Chihuahua Puppy Tries Strawberries and Dramatically Loses Her Tiny Mind originally appeared on Parade Pets. There's nothing cuter than a little puppy trying a new food for the first time, especially if the little pup has a reaction like this tiny Chihuahua encountering her first taste of strawberries. She hops, she bounces, she lunges, she goes in for the attack, and backs her booty up. We can't tell if she loves the fruit or wants to fight it, but either way, she's too cute for it to matter. One person asked, "Is that a dog rabbit? It looks mixed." Another person said, "Oh, she is just about the cutest thing ever." She really is! Those strawberries are almost bigger than she is!You may be wondering if it's OK for your own dog or puppy to eat strawberries, and the answer is yes. Strawberries are a safe and healthy treat for dogs when served properly and eaten in moderation. PetMD explains, "Strawberries boast several health benefits for dogs. Not only are they high in immune system-boosting vitamins, including vitamins C, B-1, B-6, and K, but they're also loaded with fiber and contain omega-3, which helps support coat health." It's important to keep portion sizes small, especially with little puppies, because too many berries can cause an upset stomach, and no one wants that! Another precaution the article does mention is that whole strawberries can be a choking hazard, especially for small pups. Always slice strawberries into smaller pieces before serving. Remove the stems and leaves, too, so they don't become a choking hazard or cause intestinal blockages. So, as cute as it may be seeing a tiny puppy next to a big bowl of strawberries, safety first, so cut up the fruit so your fur baby can safely enjoy it. 🐶SIGN UP to get 'pawsitivity' delivered right to your inbox with inspiring & entertaining stories about our furry & feathered friends🐾🐾 Chihuahua Puppy Tries Strawberries and Dramatically Loses Her Tiny Mind first appeared on Parade Pets on Jul 6, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade Pets on Jul 6, 2025, where it first appeared.

Kraft Heinz Food company recalls over 360,000 pounds of fully cooked turkey bacon
Kraft Heinz Food company recalls over 360,000 pounds of fully cooked turkey bacon

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kraft Heinz Food company recalls over 360,000 pounds of fully cooked turkey bacon

( — The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food and Safety and Inspection Services announced that Kraft Heinz Foods Company recalled almost 367,812 pounds of fully cooked turkey bacon products that may have been adulterated with Listeria monocytogenes. The turkey bacon was produced from April 24 through June 11, and the following labels were recalled. According to FSIS, the products subject to recall bear the USDA mark of inspection on the front of the label. The items photographed above were sold at retail locations nationwide, and some were sent to the British Virgin Islands and Hong Kong. Public House Downtown announce closure after 13 years of service FSIS said that officials found the program after laboratory testing at the establishments showed that the product could have been contaminated with LM. At this time, there have been no confirmed reports of customers having reactions due to the consumption of the products. 'Consumption of food contaminated with Lm can cause listeriosis, a serious infection that primarily affects older adults, persons with weakened immune systems, and pregnant women and their newborns. Less commonly, persons outside these risk groups are affected,' FSIS said. Listeriosis can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance, and convulsions that sometimes could be preceded by diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms, FSIS stated. FSIS said, 'Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Why Your Nervous System Might Be at War With Modern Life
Why Your Nervous System Might Be at War With Modern Life

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why Your Nervous System Might Be at War With Modern Life

A viral TikTok video is striking a deep chord with viewers who say it perfectly explains why they're exhausted, anxious, and burned out. The message? It's not just you—your nervous system may be in survival mode all the time. Brittany Piper, a 36-year-old Somatic Experiencing® practitioner and author of Body-First Healing, posted a video in March that's now racked up nearly half a million views. In it, she argues that our modern lives are fundamentally out of sync with what the human body—and especially the nervous system—was built to handle. 'It is my personal and professional belief that the drastic rise we are seeing in chronic physical and mental illness can be attributed to this one thing,' Piper says. 'We have created a world that our nervous system no longer wants to live in.' Piper compares the nervous system to a security alarm, constantly scanning for danger. In our fast-paced, hyper-connected world, it's often triggered, not just by traumatic events, but by everyday stressors like digital overload, political division, economic uncertainty, and social disconnection. The result? Our bodies stay locked in survival states like fight, flight, freeze, or shutdown, flooding us with cortisol and adrenaline. She told Newsweek that this ongoing activation can lead to anxiety, fatigue, pain, and other chronic issues. 'Many of the symptoms we face today at alarming rates,' she said, 'are not random symptoms, but the body's intelligent responses to overwhelm.' Piper's video has struck a nerve with thousands of viewers who say they've been desperate for answers, and her explanation finally makes sense of what they've been feeling. Her advice? Healing doesn't mean pushing harder. It means slowing down, grounding yourself, and building awareness of what your body is trying to tell you. Piper suggests starting with small actions: feel your feet on the ground, notice your breath, or identify something comforting in your environment. These steps, she says, can build a sense of internal safety and help regulate the nervous system. 'Healing is less about doing more,' Piper adds, 'and more about doing less, with more attunement.' As conversations around mental health, trauma, and somatic therapy gain mainstream traction, Piper's viral theory offers both validation and a practical path forward, especially for those who feel like they're stuck in overdrive. Why Your Nervous System Might Be at War With Modern Life first appeared on Men's Journal on Jul 5, 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store