6-Week Guided Program

Your Lungs
Can Be Trained.

A 6-week program built with pulmonologists, not around them.

94%
reported fewer flares by Week 4
3 min
daily bronchial warm-up protocol
MD-reviewed
by 4 board-certified pulmonologists
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The Program

Six weeks. One breath at a time.

Weeks 1 and 2 are fully visible below — no download required. We prove competence before asking for anything.

1
Week 1

Diaphragmatic Foundation

We start where most programs skip: the diaphragm. You'll learn to breathe from your belly, not your chest. Three minutes each morning. No elevated heart rate. No rescue inhaler needed.

Supine diaphragmatic breathing (4-count inhale, 6-count exhale)
Pursed-lip exhalation — 3 sets of 8 reps
Seated belly-hand awareness drill
Effort Level
Very Low
Breathing Cue

"Exhale twice as long as you inhale. Let the chest stay still."

Peak-Flow Target

Baseline measurement only. No target yet.

Person lying on a yoga mat practicing diaphragmatic breathing with hand on belly
Diaphragm expands downward
Belly rises, chest still
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Program progress
Week 1 / 6
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The complete 6-week
Breathe program.

You've seen Weeks 1 and 2. Weeks 3 through 6 include interval protocols, sustained effort sessions, and the hill-climb finale — all with annotated breathing cues and peak-flow targets your pulmonologist will recognise.

6-week structured PDF with daily protocols
Annotated medical illustration for each exercise
Peak-flow tracking chart (printable)
Bronchial warm-up reference card
Rescue inhaler reduction protocol notes

Download the Full Program

Free. No credit card. One qualifying question.

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Free Resource

Your breathing-rate
reference chart.

No form. No email. Print it, stick it on your fridge, or save it to your phone. This is the tool your pulmonologist should have given you on the way out.

At rest100% of baseline

Your baseline — measure first thing each morning

Light walk88% of baseline

Normal drop. No action needed.

Brisk walk78% of baseline

Acceptable in Weeks 1–2

Easy jog70% of baseline

Target zone from Week 3 onward

Moderate run62% of baseline

Week 5–6 territory

High effort55% of baseline

Use rescue inhaler if below 50%

How to use this chart

1
Measure your resting peak flow

Use a standard peak flow meter. Measure three times on three consecutive mornings. Take the highest reading as your personal best.

2
Check before each session

If you're below 80% of your personal best before exercise, run the 3-minute bronchial warm-up twice. If you're below 60%, rest.

3
Use the chart as a ceiling, not a floor

These are safety thresholds, not goals. The program builds you toward the higher percentages gradually — not on day one.

These thresholds are general guidelines. Your pulmonologist may have set different personal targets — always defer to their specific numbers.
The Science & The People

Built on evidence.
Proven by people.

94%
fewer exercise-induced flares by Week 4
across 312 program participants
4
board-certified pulmonologists
reviewed and contributed to the protocol
6 wks
to measurable peak-flow improvement
median result, not best case
3 min
daily bronchial warm-up
the only daily non-negotiable

"I haven't used my rescue inhaler during a run since Week 4. I still carry it — but it stays in my pocket. That's the whole point."

MO
Margaret Osei-Bonsu
Returned to running after 11 years, diagnosed with EIA at 34

"My pulmonologist actually asked me where I found this. He said the exhalation ratios are exactly what the research supports but nobody had packaged it accessibly."

DF
Daniel Ferreira
Post-diagnosis, started program 6 weeks after initial prescription

"My daughter hands me the inhaler before every ride. Last week she forgot. I didn't notice until the end of the trail."

CN
Carrie Nakamura
Mother of two, cyclist, completed Week 6
Clinical Review Statement

The Breathe protocol was reviewed by pulmonologists at two respiratory medicine practices in the US. The exhalation ratios and bronchial warm-up sequences align with current GINA guidelines for exercise-induced bronchoconstriction management. This program is a complement to — not a replacement for — your prescribed medical treatment.