In this episode Coaches Caroline and Valerie unpack the breathing craze—what’s helpful, what’s hype, and exactly how to use breathing drills to improve your running. They explain why breathing is a rhythm inside your run (not a distraction), how to practice breathing so it becomes automatic, and simple drills you can use in warm-ups to expand your chest, calm your panic response, and run longer/faster with less effort.
🔑 Key Takeaways
- ✅ Breathing is part of running’s rhythm — practice it as a drill, not as a constant thought during your run.
- ✅ Drills (exaggerated practice) teach your body to take fuller, calmer breaths so your breathing becomes automatic in the “show.”
- ✅ Nose vs. mouth breathing: useful drills exist (and historical methods like Buteyko helped many), but don’t limit your breath during hard efforts — expand it when you need it.
- ✅ Use the exhale-first cue at the start of easy runs (exhale → inhale → run) to release tension and find a steady rhythm quickly.
- ✅ Chest expansion and intercostal mobility let you lift your torso, increase fall, and run with better elasticity — breathing mechanics help speed and endurance.
- ✅ Breathing devices and masks are toys — they can help with drills, but they don’t replace coached progressions and movement training.
What to try this week
- Add a 5-minute breathing warm-up before runs: slow diaphragmatic breathing → chest expansion breath series → 2 minutes of fast, rhythmic exhale-focused steps.
- Try a few drills off the run (bands, balloons, exaggerated chest opens) to feel your ribcage expand before you practice on the move.
- If breath panic hits mid-run: stop → long exhale(s) → a short drill (ball-foot hops or marching) → restart.
SEO keywords (use these in platform tags & show notes)
Breathing for running, diaphragmatic breathing, running drills, breathing drills, run cadence breath, breath training for runners, RunRX Academy, expand chest running, exhale-first running cue.
Listen & follow
- Watch breathing deep dives and demo drills on our YouTube channel: RunRX.
- Download the RunRX Academy app (iOS & Android) for focused drill libraries, warm-ups, and guided breathing progressions.
- Got a breathing question or want Valerie to review your drill form? Post a clip in the app or drop a comment on the latest episode — we read every message.