Intermediate

Sauna Breathing

Combine sauna heat with conscious breathing. Slow, deep breaths to enhance heat tolerance and relaxation.

10 min

10 minute session

How to Practice

Enter the sauna at a moderate temperature (70-80°C on a lower bench). Sit upright with your spine tall. Close your eyes. Breathe in slowly through the nose for 5 seconds, out through the nose for 5 seconds. Continue this 5-5 pattern throughout the session. The heat amplifies every aspect of the breath: inhales feel warmer, exhales feel longer, attention goes to the chest and belly more automatically. Stay 10-15 minutes. Exit, cool down, and repeat for 2-3 rounds. This practice deepens heat tolerance faster than passive sitting because it gives your nervous system a task that competes with the heat stress.

Tips

Nose breathing only — mouth breathing in a sauna dehydrates you much faster.
Start at lower temperatures to keep the rhythm achievable. Build up in heat, not just duration.
The breath anchor makes the heat more manageable, not more intense.
Best done in quiet solo sessions; conversation disrupts the rhythm.
Effective for people who find passive sauna time boring or restless.

Safety Notes

  • Standard sauna precautions — no alcohol, hydrate heavily, exit if dizzy.
  • If slow breathing feels forced or induces light-headedness, shift to natural rhythm for that round.

About This Practice

Combine sauna heat with conscious breathing. Slow, deep breaths to enhance heat tolerance and relaxation.

How to Practice

Enter the sauna at a moderate temperature (70-80°C on a lower bench). Sit upright with your spine tall. Close your eyes. Breathe in slowly through the nose for 5 seconds, out through the nose for 5 seconds. Continue this 5-5 pattern throughout the session. The heat amplifies every aspect of the breath: inhales feel warmer, exhales feel longer, attention goes to the chest and belly more automatically. Stay 10-15 minutes. Exit, cool down, and repeat for 2-3 rounds. This practice deepens heat tolerance faster than passive sitting because it gives your nervous system a task that competes with the heat stress.

Tips

Nose breathing only — mouth breathing in a sauna dehydrates you much faster.
Start at lower temperatures to keep the rhythm achievable. Build up in heat, not just duration.
The breath anchor makes the heat more manageable, not more intense.
Best done in quiet solo sessions; conversation disrupts the rhythm.
Effective for people who find passive sauna time boring or restless.

Precautions

Standard sauna precautions — no alcohol, hydrate heavily, exit if dizzy.
If slow breathing feels forced or induces light-headedness, shift to natural rhythm for that round.