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Three breathwork techniques to find instant calm during ...

When deadlines pile up or anxiety hits, these simple breathing practices—rooted in mindfulness science—can reset your nervous system in minutes.

By Tasmania Wellness Desk · Published 30 June 2026 at 3:16 pm Updated

3 min read

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Three breathwork techniques to find instant calm during ...
Photo: Photo by Kevin Malik on Pexels

It's 2pm on a Tuesday. Your inbox is overflowing, your shoulders are tensed around your ears, and you've barely left your desk in Hobart's CBD since morning. Sound familiar? Before you reach for a third coffee, consider this: your breath might be the most underused stress-management tool at your fingertips.

Breathwork—intentional, structured breathing practices—sits at the intersection of ancient mindfulness traditions and modern neuroscience. Unlike meditation, which requires 20 minutes of stillness, these techniques can reset your nervous system in as little as three to five minutes, even during a working day.

The 4-7-8 technique is a popular starting point. Breathe in through your nose for four counts, hold for seven, and exhale through your mouth for eight. This extended exhale activates your parasympathetic nervous system—essentially telling your body it's safe to relax. Try it once while sitting at your desk on Elizabeth Street, and you'll notice your shoulders naturally drop.

Box breathing, favoured by first responders and military personnel, works through rhythm. Inhale for four counts, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four. The symmetry creates a meditative anchor that quiets racing thoughts during high-pressure moments.

The third technique—alternate nostril breathing, or nadi shodhana—balances both hemispheres of your brain. Close your right nostril and inhale through the left, then switch. This practice, rooted in yoga traditions, takes just two minutes and leaves many practitioners reporting improved focus immediately afterward.

Several Hobart venues now offer structured breathwork classes. The growing wellness community around kunanyi/Mt Wellington has embraced these practices as part of holistic health routines, and many practitioners incorporate breathwork into parkrun warm-ups at Hobart Waterfront on Saturday mornings.

UTAS researchers have documented breathwork's effectiveness for anxiety management, particularly among students during exam periods. The university's wellness services increasingly recommend these techniques as accessible, zero-cost mental health support.

The beauty of breathwork is accessibility. No app subscription required. No special equipment. You can practise in a car parked near Salamanca Place, in a bathroom stall, or between video calls from home. The physiological shift happens regardless of location.

Start with whichever technique resonates. Consistency matters more than perfection. Five minutes of daily breathwork, particularly during high-stress periods, builds your capacity to self-regulate. By next week, when stress arrives again—and it will—you'll have a proven tool already in your nervous system's toolkit.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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This article was produced by the The Daily Tasmania editorial desk and covers wellness in Tasmania. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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