Welcome to Breathing Exercises for Screen Breaks! Did you know that the way you breathe can actually change how your brain works? When you have been staring at a screen for a while, your body gets tense, your breathing becomes shallow, and your brain starts feeling foggy. But with a few simple breathing exercises, you can hit the reset button on your whole body and mind. In this course, you will learn easy, fun breathing techniques that take just a few minutes and make a big difference. These exercises are perfect for taking a break between screen sessions, calming down when you feel overwhelmed, and helping your brain switch from screen mode to the real world. The best part? You can do them anywhere — at your desk, in bed, in the car, or standing in line. Let us take a deep breath and dive in!
In This Guide
What You'll Learn
- Understand the science behind how controlled breathing resets your nervous system
- Master at least four different breathing techniques you can use during screen breaks
- Build the habit of taking regular breathing breaks throughout your day
- Use breathing exercises to transition smoothly from screen time to other activities
- Recognize the physical signs that your body needs a breathing break
- Feel calmer, more focused, and more energized after screen sessions
- Teach at least one breathing technique to a friend or family member
1. Why Breathing Matters
Your brain uses about 20 percent of all the oxygen you breathe in. When you are focused on a screen, your breathing often becomes shallow without you even noticing. This means your brain gets less oxygen, which makes you feel tired, foggy, and cranky. Deep, intentional breathing floods your brain with fresh oxygen and activates your parasympathetic nervous system — the part that helps you relax. It is like pressing a reset button! Scientists have found that just 60 seconds of controlled breathing can lower your heart rate, reduce stress hormones, and help you think more clearly.
Your brain uses 20 percent of your oxygen — shallow breathing during screen time starves it
Screen use often causes 'screen apnea' where people unconsciously hold their breath or breathe shallowly
Deep breathing activates the vagus nerve, which sends a calm-down signal throughout your whole body
Just 60 seconds of intentional breathing can measurably reduce stress and improve focus
Try This Activity
Try this awareness experiment: Set a timer and use a screen normally for 3 minutes — watch a video, play a game, or scroll through something. Pay attention to your breathing. Is it deep or shallow? Are you holding your breath? Now put the screen down and take 5 slow, deep breaths — in through your nose for 4 counts, out through your mouth for 6 counts. Notice the difference in how you feel. Write down what you observed about your screen breathing versus your deep breathing.
2. Belly Breathing
Box breathing is one of the most popular and effective breathing techniques in the world. It is so powerful that Navy SEALs, astronauts, and professional athletes use it to stay calm under pressure. The technique is simple: breathe in for 4 counts, hold for 4 counts, breathe out for 4 counts, and hold empty for 4 counts. That makes a box shape if you draw it out! Each cycle takes about 16 seconds, and just four cycles — about one minute — can make a noticeable difference in how you feel. It is the perfect exercise to do every time you take a screen break.
Box breathing follows a 4-4-4-4 pattern: inhale, hold, exhale, hold — each for 4 counts
Navy SEALs and astronauts use box breathing to stay calm in high-pressure situations
The hold after exhaling is what makes box breathing especially effective at calming the nervous system
Four rounds of box breathing takes about one minute and creates a measurable calm effect
Try This Activity
Let us practice box breathing together! Sit up comfortably. As you breathe, trace a square in the air with your finger. Breathe IN through your nose for 4 counts (draw the left side up). HOLD for 4 counts (draw the top across). Breathe OUT through your mouth for 4 counts (draw the right side down). HOLD empty for 4 counts (draw the bottom across). That is one box! Do 4 boxes total. After you finish, sit quietly for a moment and notice how your body feels. Practice this every time you stop using a screen — it makes a perfect transition ritual!
3. 4-7-8 Breathing
The Balloon Breath is a fun and easy breathing exercise that is great for younger kids (but works for everyone!). You imagine that your belly is a balloon and you are slowly filling it up with air. When you breathe in deeply, your belly expands like a balloon inflating. When you breathe out, the balloon slowly deflates. You can even pick a color for your balloon and imagine it growing and shrinking with each breath! This technique teaches diaphragmatic breathing, which is the healthiest way to breathe. Most people breathe into their chest, but belly breathing uses your diaphragm muscle and fills your lungs more completely.
Belly breathing uses the diaphragm muscle and fills your lungs more completely than chest breathing
Imagining a colorful balloon helps kids (and adults) focus on breathing deeply into the belly
Diaphragmatic breathing increases oxygen intake by up to 30 percent compared to shallow chest breathing
The Balloon Breath can be done standing, sitting, or lying down — perfect for any screen break moment
Try This Activity
Stand up or sit tall. Put both hands on your belly. Choose a color for your belly balloon. Breathe in through your nose for 5 counts and feel your balloon fill up — push your belly out as far as you can! Hold for 2 counts when it is fully inflated. Now breathe out through your mouth for 7 counts, making a gentle 'shhhh' sound, and feel your balloon slowly deflate. Do 6 balloon breaths. Try changing colors with each breath! This exercise is great to do when you stand up from screen time — it gets fresh oxygen to your brain quickly.
4. Box Breathing
Five-Finger Breathing is a technique where you trace the outline of your hand while breathing in and out. As your tracing finger goes up each finger, you breathe in. As it goes down, you breathe out. By the time you have traced all five fingers, you have taken five slow, deep breaths. This technique is special because it combines touch, movement, and breathing all at once, which gives your brain three things to focus on instead of just one. It is one of the best exercises for stopping racing thoughts or that antsy feeling you get after too much screen time.
Five-Finger Breathing combines touch, sight, and breathing for a multi-sensory calming effect
Tracing your hand gives your brain a focus point that makes it easier to breathe slowly
You can do this exercise anywhere — no one will even notice you are doing it
Five breaths is the perfect amount for a quick screen break reset between activities
Try This Activity
Hold one hand up with fingers spread like a star. Use the pointer finger of your other hand to trace. Start at the base of your thumb. Trace UP the outside of your thumb — breathe IN. Trace DOWN the inside of your thumb — breathe OUT. Trace UP the outside of your pointer finger — breathe IN. Continue for all five fingers. When you finish, go backwards from pinky to thumb for 5 more breaths! Do this exercise every time you take a screen break today. Challenge: teach it to someone else — when you teach it, you learn it even better!
5. Balloon Breathing for Little Kids
The Calm Down Breath is designed for those moments when you feel really worked up — maybe you are upset about something, frustrated that screen time is over, or anxious about something at school. The key is making your exhale longer than your inhale. When you breathe out for longer than you breathe in, it activates a powerful calming reflex in your body. This is why sighing naturally feels good — it is a long exhale! The pattern is simple: breathe in for 4 counts, then breathe out for 8 counts. Even three rounds of this can take you from stressed to calm.
Making your exhale longer than your inhale triggers your body's natural calming response
A 4-count inhale and 8-count exhale is the most effective ratio for activating the calm response
This technique is especially useful when you feel frustrated that screen time is ending
Sighing is your body's natural version of the calm-down breath — long exhales reduce stress hormones
Try This Activity
Let us practice the Calm Down Breath. Sit or stand comfortably. Breathe IN through your nose for 4 counts (count slowly: 1... 2... 3... 4). Now breathe OUT through your mouth for 8 counts (1... 2... 3... 4... 5... 6... 7... 8). Tip: purse your lips like you are blowing through a straw to make the out-breath last longer. Do 5 rounds. If 8 counts is too hard at first, try breathing out for 6 counts and work up to 8. Use this technique the next time you feel upset, frustrated, or anxious. Write down a time this week when you used it and how it helped!
6. Five-Finger Breathing
Now that you know several awesome breathing techniques, the key is to actually use them every day! The best way to build a breathing habit is to attach it to something you already do — like taking a breathing break every time you put down your phone, or doing box breathing before starting homework. This is called 'habit stacking,' and it is how the brain builds new habits most easily. In this module, you will create your personal breathing plan and learn strategies for remembering to practice. Even one minute of intentional breathing several times a day can transform how you feel.
Habit stacking means attaching a new habit to an existing one so your brain remembers to do it
The best time for a breathing exercise is during the transition from screen time to another activity
Three one-minute breathing sessions spread throughout the day are more effective than one long session
Creating visible reminders like sticky notes or colored dots helps you remember to breathe mindfully
Try This Activity
Create your Breathing Break Plan! Draw three columns on a piece of paper. Column 1: 'When I...' (write triggers like 'put down my phone,' 'sit down for homework,' 'get into bed'). Column 2: 'I will do...' (write which breathing exercise you will do). Column 3: 'For how long' (write 1 minute, 2 minutes, etc.). Pick at least 3 trigger moments. Put sticky notes at those spots as reminders. Track your breathing breaks for one week — put a checkmark each time you remember. Aim for at least 3 breathing breaks per day!
Key Takeaways
- Understand the science behind how controlled breathing resets your nervous system
- Master at least four different breathing techniques you can use during screen breaks
- Build the habit of taking regular breathing breaks throughout your day
- Use breathing exercises to transition smoothly from screen time to other activities
- Recognize the physical signs that your body needs a breathing break
Take the Full Interactive Course
This guide covers the highlights. The full course includes voice narration, interactive quizzes, reflection exercises, and a completion certificate.
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