A breathing app for anxiety should make the next breath obvious.
When anxiety rises, you do not need a complicated mindfulness lesson. Refresher gives you simple guided breathing patterns that help you slow down and regain enough steadiness to respond.
Short answer: choose the pattern based on the state you are in.
Use 4-7-8 when you need a stronger downshift. Use box breathing when you need to stay functional, composed, and clear. Refresher keeps both available in one calm interface.
What matters during anxious moments
Instructions must be simple
An anxious state leaves less working memory. The app should show the next breath, not ask you to configure a routine.
The exhale needs attention
Longer exhales are often useful when the body feels over-activated, which is why 4-7-8 is a strong first option.
You still need choice
Some anxiety requires calming down; some requires staying sharp. Box breathing and 4-7-8 solve different moments.
How to use Refresher for anxiety
Start with 4-7-8 if the body feels ahead of you: racing thoughts, shallow breathing, tense jaw, or a sense of urgency. The long exhale gives the nervous system a clear deceleration cue.
Use box breathing if you need to settle without becoming sleepy. Equal phases are useful before meetings, calls, presentations, or anything where you need calm focus.
Why use a guided app
Common questions
Can breathing exercises cure anxiety?
No. Breathing exercises can support state regulation, but they are not a substitute for medical or mental health care.
Which breathing pattern should I try first?
Try 4-7-8 if you need to come down quickly. Try box breathing if you need to stay alert and composed.
What if holding the breath feels uncomfortable?
Shorten the hold or switch to a gentler technique. Breathwork should feel steady, not punishing.
Make the next breath easier
Open Refresher when anxiety makes counting, choosing, or timing feel like too much.