by Dr. Lori Davis, NP | Certified Sex Counselor | Relational Desire Coach
When was the last time you and your partner were truly present with each other—not talking, not doing, just being?
If you’re like most couples, the answer is probably “I can’t remember.”
When was the last time you and your partner were truly present with each other — not talking, not doing, just being?
If you’re like most couples, the answer is probably “I can’t remember.”
There’s a simple practice that can help: synchronized breathing. It takes just 5-10 minutes and might transform how you connect.
Between work, kids, screens, and the endless to-do list, most relationships exist in a state of constant distraction. You’re together, but not really together.
And then you wonder why sex feels disconnected. Why intimacy feels forced. Why you don’t feel as close as you used to.
Here’s what might not be obvious: Sometimes the problem isn’t your communication. It’s that your nervous systems never get a chance to settle down together. This is something I come back to again and again in my work with couples around desire. What I call Relational Desire is the idea that desire between long-term partners is a response to the relational climate you are living inside. And nervous system regulation is the foundation of that climate. You cannot want someone long term and have great sex if you never actually land with me.
There’s a practice that can help. It’s ancient. It’s free. And it takes only 5-10 minutes.
It’s called synchronized breathing — and it might be the most underrated intimacy practice you’ve never tried.
The Quickie
Your nervous systems are designed to coregulate. Breathing together synchronizes heart rates, lowers stress hormones, and creates felt safety in the body — and it works when talking doesn’t, because it bypasses language and calms the nervous system before words make things worse. This practice is not about sex. The goal is presence and connection, though arousal may naturally follow. Emotions will come up: awkwardness, laughter, even tears are all part of the practice, not signs something is wrong. Five to ten minutes is enough to start, with skin-to-skin contact encouraged but not required. Add eye contact, circular breathing, or the yab-yum position as you get comfortable.
What is synchronized breathing?
Synchronized breathing is exactly what it sounds like: breathing together with your partner in rhythm.
That’s it. No fancy equipment. No complicated instructions. Just two people, breathing at the same time, allowing their bodies to attune to each other.
Sounds simple, almost too simple to matter. But here’s what’s happening beneath the surface:
Your nervous systems are designed to coregulate.
Coregulation means your body is exquisitely attuned to your partner’s body. When you create space to breathe together, your heart rates synchronize, your stress hormones decrease, and your nervous systems shift from “doing mode” to “being mode.”
This is the foundation for all connection—emotional, physical, sexual.
You can’t force intimacy. But you can create the conditions where it naturally emerges.
Why synchronized breathing sometimes works when talking doesn’t
Most relationship advice focuses on communication: “Talk about your feelings. Express your needs. Have the hard conversation.”
And yes, communication matters. But sometimes communication is the problem.
When you’re both activated—stressed, anxious, defensive—talking just escalates things. Your words get misinterpreted. Your intentions get questioned. You end up further apart than when you started.
Synchronized breathing bypasses language entirely.
It works on a physiological level, calming the nervous system and creating felt safety in the body. When you feel safe, connection becomes possible.
Think about it: So much of what prevents intimacy isn’t lack of love—it’s lack of nervous system regulation. Your mind is racing. Your body is tense. Your attention is scattered.
Synchronized breathing allows your minds to settle, your anxieties to ebb, and your bodies to relax together. It creates presence—the one thing that’s been missing.
This is not about sex
Let me be clear: Arousal and desire are not the goals of this practice.
The goal is to slow down. Turn inward. Follow the breath. Allow yourself to relax without any pressure to move toward sex or orgasm.
There’s nowhere to go. Nothing to achieve. You’re just being together in the sound, movement, and sensation of breath.
That said—this practice can be incredibly intimate. You might become aroused. That’s normal. Have a plan for how you’ll manage arousal while staying present with the practice itself.
What to expect: it might get emotional
This is a vulnerable practice.
You might feel awkward at first. You might laugh nervously or make jokes to ease the tension. That’s fine—laughter is part of the process. But notice when you’re using humor to avoid vulnerability, and gently return to the breath.
You might feel overwhelmed. You might cry. This is also normal and expected.
When we slow down and create space for genuine presence, emotions that have been pushed aside often surface. Let them. Let your tears flow. See what happens next.
Difficult feelings are part of the practice too. The question isn’t whether they’ll come up—it’s whether you can be with them and begin to share them rather than pushing them away.
How to practice synchronized breathing
Create a container:
- Choose a time when you won’t be interrupted
- Set the mood: dim lights, candle, incense, comfortable temperature
- Set a timer for 5-10 minutes (longer if you want, but start small)
- Make this feel special, even sacred
Get comfortable:
- You can be clothed or naked—whatever feels right
- Skin-to-skin contact is encouraged but not required
- Sit or lie down together in a position that feels sustainable
- Make sure you’re both cozy and supported
Begin the practice:
- Place a hand on each other’s chest
- Feel the rise and fall of their breath; feel their hand on your chest
- Slowly allow your breaths to synchronize
- Notice the connection between your bodies as breath moves together
- Your breaths will fall out of sync sometimes—that’s fine, just let them align again
- Notice how it feels when you’re synchronized vs. when you’re not
- As the timer ends, embrace and feel your breaths moving together
Remember: There’s no “perfect” way to do this. The practice itself is the point.
Ways to deepen the practice
Once you’re comfortable with the basic practice, try these variations (spending at least 10 minutes with each):
Hand placement:
- One hand on chest, one hand on lower abdomen
- Feel the breath moving into different parts of the body
Add eye contact:
- Breathing together while maintaining soft eye contact
- This intensifies vulnerability and connection
Try circular breathing:
- You inhale when your partner exhales
- Creates a continuous circuit of breath between you
- Can feel incredibly intimate
Yab-yum position:
- One partner sits cross-legged
- Other partner straddles them, legs wrapped around their back
- Very intimate position for synchronized breathing
When to use this practice
Use synchronized breathing when:
- You feel disconnected from your partner
- You want intimacy but talking feels like it will escalate
- You’re both stressed and need to regulate together
- You want to create a foundation for sex but don’t want to jump straight there
- You need to slow down and remember why you’re together
This practice is especially powerful:
- Before having difficult conversations (it regulates your nervous systems first)
- As a regular intimacy practice (even when things are good)
- When sex has become routine and you want to reconnect
- After conflict, when you’re ready to repair but words aren’t working
The foundation for everything else
Here’s the truth about intimacy: you cannot think your way into it. You cannot talk your way into it.
Intimacy happens in the body. It requires presence. It requires safety. It requires your nervous systems to be regulated enough to actually connect.
Synchronized breathing creates those conditions. Not by manufacturing desire, but by building the relational climate in which desire can exist. This is the heart of what I call Relational Desire: the recognition that in long-term partnerships, wanting does not arise in a vacuum. It arises in a relationship. In a nervous system. In a body that feels safe enough to open.
Synchronized breathing is one of the simplest ways I know to begin building that. Five minutes. Two bodies. One breath at a time.
It is not a cure-all. It will not fix deep relational problems on its own. But it can create the physiological foundation from which repair, connection, and genuine desire become possible.
Stay slow. Stay connected. Stay real.
Working with me
Disconnection in a relationship rarely fixes itself. If you recognized something in this post, I can help you and your partner build the capacity for real presence and intimacy, not just better communication. In person in Ithaca or virtually anywhere in the US. Leaern more about working with me by booking a free consultation below.
Dr. Lori Davis is a board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner and Certified Sex Counselor specializing in relational desire and intimacy in long-term partnerships. Known for bridging clinical health with relational coaching, she helps couples bring pleasure, ease, and connection back into their relationships and sex lives. Her work has been featured in The New York Times, Oprah Daily, and Women’s Health, and she teaches sexuality counseling at the University of Michigan. Today, she offers virtual consultations, coaching, and intensives for couples ready to create fierce intimacy together.
