Vagus Nerve, HRV, and Breathing: What You Need to Know
If you've fallen down the breathing rabbit hole, two terms keep coming up: the vagus nerve and HRV. They sound technical, but the idea is simple — and it explains why slow breathing is so powerful.
The vagus nerve, briefly
The vagus nerve is the main highway of your parasympathetic 'rest and digest' system, running from your brain to your heart, lungs and gut. When it's active your heart rate slows, your body relaxes, digestion picks up. Stimulating it is basically flipping the calm switch.
How breathing stimulates it
Your vagus nerve is most active during the exhale. That's why a long, slow out-breath produces calm you can feel — it's directly toning the vagus nerve. Short, panicky breathing does the opposite.
What HRV actually is
Heart rate variability is the tiny variation in time between heartbeats. Counterintuitively, more variability is healthier — it means your nervous system can flex between gears. Low HRV is associated with stress and poor recovery; higher HRV with calm and resilience.
Breathing trains both
Slow breathing at around six breaths a minute maximises HRV in the moment and, practised regularly, can raise your baseline over time. You're doing reps for your nervous system's flexibility.
What to do with this
- Favour long exhales — that's the vagus-nerve lever.
- Aim for roughly five seconds in, five out, for HRV.
- Practise a few minutes daily, not just in crises.
- Let a guided app keep the pace so you can focus on the breath.
Need it right now? Open the quick-start page: How breathing affects your mood.