If Breathwork Worked, You’d Feel Better By Now — image 1

Functional Patterns Brisbane Blog

If Breathwork Worked, You’d Feel Better By Now

Written by Louis Ellery

The slow inhales.

The long exhales.

The box breathing before bed.

And it does something.

You feel calmer.

A bit more grounded.

Like your system finally exhaled for the first time all day.

But then… life resumes.

You stand up, walk around, get back into your day —

and within an hour or two, you're back to:

shallow breathing

tension in your neck and chest

that underlying "on edge" feeling

So what gives?

If breathwork works…

why doesn't it hold?


You Can't Layer Good Breathing Onto a Bad System

Here's the part no one tells you:

You can't breathe well in a body that isn't organised to support it.

You can practice better breathing.

You can access it when you slow everything down.

But if your default structure is off —

your body will pull you straight back into the same pattern it trusts.

And for most people, that pattern looks like:

  • ribs flaring forward instead of expanding

  • chest and neck doing the work instead of the diaphragm

  • constant low-level bracing just to feel stable

So you end up doing "good breathing"…

inside a system that can't sustain it.


Breathing Isn't Just a Relaxation Tool — It's a Mechanical Event

We've turned breathing into something soft and separate from the body.

But breathing is physical.

It relies on:

  • how your ribcage moves

  • how your pelvis is positioned

  • how pressure is managed through your torso

If those pieces aren't working together, your options are limited.

So when someone says "just breathe deeper"…

Your body often responds by:

  • arching the lower back

  • lifting the chest

  • recruiting the neck

That's not better breathing.

That's compensation.


Why Breathwork Feels Good (and Why That's Not the Goal)

When you lie down to do breathwork:

the ground stabilises you

you don't have to organise your posture

your body can finally let go

So you access a cleaner breathing pattern.

That's why it feels so good.

But the moment you stand up and move?

Your body goes back to the strategy it knows how to hold under load.

And that's the part most people skip:

you have to be able to breathe well while upright, moving, and under stress.

Otherwise it's just a temporary state — not a change.

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The Nervous System Doesn't Care About Your Practice — It Cares About Your Pattern

People talk about "regulating the nervous system" through breath.

That's real.

But the nervous system isn't just responding to your breathing drills.

It's constantly reading:

  • how stable your body feels

  • how efficiently you move

  • how much tension is required to keep you upright

If your body feels unstable or inefficient, your system will stay "on" —

no matter how many calming breaths you take on the floor.

Because from a biological perspective:

Instability = threat

And threat requires tension.


This Is Where Movement Changes Everything

When you start moving well:

  • your ribcage can expand without flaring

  • your pelvis can support you without bracing

  • your body can distribute force instead of gripping

Now your system has a new option.

And something interesting happens:

Your breathing improves without you trying to fix it.

You don't have to force long exhales.

You don't have to remind yourself to relax your shoulders.

It just… happens.

Because the structure finally allows it.


What "Learning to Breathe" Actually Means

It's not just drills on your back.

It's teaching your body to:

  • manage pressure while standing

  • maintain alignment while moving

  • coordinate breath with movement

That's when breathing becomes something you live in —

not something you visit for 10 minutes a day.


A Simple Reality Check

Watch yourself (or someone else) when:

walking

training

reaching overhead

You'll often see:

  • breath holding

  • rib flare

  • tension creeping into the neck

That's not a mindfulness problem.

That's a mechanics problem.

If Breathwork Worked, You’d Feel Better By Now — image 3

The Shift That Actually Sticks

Instead of asking:

"How do I breathe better?"

Start asking:

"What does my body need so that good breathing becomes the default?"

That's a completely different path.

It leads you toward:

  • better movement

  • better structure

  • better coordination

And then the nervous system can actually settle — for real.


The Bottom Line

Breathwork isn't useless.

But on its own, it's not enough.

Because you can't layer calm breathing

onto a body that has to stay tense to function.

Fix the body…

and the breath follows.


If You Want It to Actually Hold

At Functional Patterns Brisbane, we don't separate breathing from movement.

We rebuild how your body:

  • organises itself

  • handles load

  • moves through space

So your breathing isn't something you have to think about —

it's something your body supports naturally.

Book an assessment if you want it to carry over into real life.

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