Breathwork Patterns
An exploration of structured breathing techniques. Covers rhythmic breath patterns, breath-hold variations, and slow exhalation approaches — with practical notes on each.
A curated collection of educational guides on the most widely explored pre-sleep relaxation practices — written for curious adults, not clinical professionals.
Deliberate breathing is one of the most accessible and widely documented relaxation practices. Unlike many other techniques, it requires no equipment and can be adapted to fit almost any schedule or environment.
The guides below explore several commonly referenced patterns — each with a brief background, a step-by-step description, and suggestions for when and how to experiment with them in an evening context.
Each area is covered through dedicated educational content — background reading, step-by-step exploration guides, and reflection prompts.
An exploration of structured breathing techniques. Covers rhythmic breath patterns, breath-hold variations, and slow exhalation approaches — with practical notes on each.
Guided mental attention to physical sensations, moving progressively through the body. Includes variations in duration (5, 10, and 20 minutes) and focus direction.
A structured practice involving the deliberate tensing and releasing of muscle groups. Educational context covers its documented history and general exploration approach.
Mental imagery exercises that use descriptive narratives — peaceful landscapes, neutral environments — to gently redirect attention from active thought toward restful imagery.
Originally described by physician Edmund Jacobson in the 1920s, PMR involves a systematic sequence of tensing and releasing specific muscle groups. The educational value lies in developing awareness of the contrast between muscular tension and release.
Our guide walks through a standard full-body sequence, a shortened 10-minute version, and a seated variation — each with clear instructions and suggested frequency for self-directed exploration.
This content describes PMR as an educational practice only. It is not intended to address, treat, or diagnose any physical or psychological condition. Consult a qualified professional if you have relevant health considerations.
An educational framework for structuring the final 30 minutes before you intend to sleep — adaptable to any schedule or preference.
Consciously closing screens and transitioning to a screen-free environment. Dim lighting is often explored during this window.
Choose one breathing pattern to explore consistently. The guide recommends starting with the same technique for at least two weeks before comparing options.
A brief body scan or PMR variation to shift attention from mental activity to physical sensation — often explored in a lying position.
A period of stillness or gentle journaling before the intended sleep moment — supporting a consistent, intentional close to the evening.
Our personalized guidance service combines your schedule, preferences, and the techniques that interest you most into a written educational plan — non-medical, non-clinical, and entirely at your pace.