Trauma breathing is one of the simplest, most powerful tools you can use in the moment with traumatized children—and with the adults they become. It’s a skill building way to teach the brain’s alarm system (the amygdala) that it does not have to engage fear, fight, flight, or freeze every time something feels like a threat.
What it does
Slow, diaphragmatic (“belly”) breathing sends a strong “you are safer now” signal through the body. By slowing the breath to about 4–6 breaths per minute and lengthening the exhale, you help:
-
Activate the calming, parasympathetic side of the nervous system
-
Soften the amygdala’s rapid, often violent fear response
-
Strengthen the brain’s “brakes” in the prefrontal cortex so a child can think and choose instead of react
Over time, practicing trauma breathing can reduce baseline anxiety, hypervigilance, and explosive reactions. It gives children a concrete skill they can use when they feel that “snap” from zero to ten—at school, at home, and in the community.
How to teach it (in homes, classrooms, care settings, and the field)
Use simple, non‑clinical language and practice when the child is not in crisis first.
-
Name it and normalize it
-
“Your body has a really strong alarm system because of what you’ve been through. That’s not your fault. We can teach your body a trick to turn the alarm down a little.”
-
-
Show belly breathing
-
Have them put one hand on their chest and one on their belly.
-
“Try to make the belly hand go up like a balloon when you breathe in, and slowly down when you breathe out.”
-
-
Use a simple count
-
Inhale through the nose for a slow count of 4.
-
Exhale gently through the mouth for a slow count of 6–8 (like blowing through a straw).
-
Repeat for 1–3 minutes, or 5–10 breaths, depending on the situation.
-
-
Make it child‑friendly
-
For younger kids: “Smell the hot cocoa…now blow on it to cool it down.”
-
Use visuals: tracing a square (breathe in on one side, hold, breathe out, rest), blowing bubbles, or pretending to blow up a balloon.
-
-
Practice before crisis
-
Build this into daily routines: at the start of class, before bed, after visits, before appointments, or after a loud or stressful event.
-
The goal is to make trauma breathing a habit they can reach for automatically.
-
-
Use it in the moment, without shaming
-
When a child is escalating, keep your voice low and steady.
-
“Your body’s alarm is going off really loud right now. Let’s do three balloon breaths together so your brain can catch up.”
-
Model the breathing yourself—your regulation helps theirs.
-
Tips for different roles
-
Educators and school staff
-
Teach a brief breathing routine to the whole class so no one child is singled out.
-
Use it as a standard transition tool (after recess, before tests, after fire drills or loud events).
-
-
Law enforcement and school resource officers
-
Use trauma breathing as a de‑escalation tool instead of commands like “calm down.”
-
Position yourself at an angle, soften your tone, and invite: “Let’s slow your breathing so your body can step out of ‘danger mode’ with me.”
-
-
Foster and adoptive parents
-
Integrate breathing practice into everyday life—before bed, after family conflicts, before school, and after visits or court dates.
-
Emphasize safety: “Your body learned to be on alert all the time. Here’s something we can do together to help it feel a little safer.”
-
-
Kinship caregivers and relative caregivers
-
Use familiar routines (mealtime, TV time, car rides) as chances to practice a few slow breaths together.
-
Connect it to culture and family strengths—songs, stories, or rituals that already soothe the child.
-
-
Daycare and early childhood workers
-
Turn breathing into a game—bubble play, feather blowing, “smell the flower, blow the candle.”
-
Use very short practices (30–60 seconds) many times a day, especially during transitions and after tantrums.
-
-
Group home, shelter, and residential staff
-
Teach breathing as part of a broader coping‑skills toolbox and practice it during calm times in groups.
-
In crisis, pair a clear safety boundary (“I need everyone’s hands to themselves”) with an invitation to breathe together to lower the room’s intensity.
-
-
Health care workers (pediatricians, nurses, therapists, techs)
-
Introduce two or three slow breaths before shots, procedures, or difficult conversations.
-
Explain: “This kind of breathing tells your brain and heart you’re not in the same danger you were before, even though this is still hard.”
-
-
Social workers, case managers, therapists, advocates, and CASA volunteers
-
Pair trauma breathing with helping the child notice where they feel activation (“Where in your body do you feel it the most?”).
-
Reinforce any effort: “You just gave your brain a chance to choose. That’s a big skill.”
-
-
Coaches, youth workers, mentors, and faith‑based leaders
-
Use breathing at the start and end of practices, groups, or youth meetings.
-
Present it as a performance and focus tool that also helps with big feelings.
-
Trauma breathing is not about telling kids to “relax” or denying their fear. It’s about giving their survival‑wired nervous system a concrete tool so the amygdala doesn’t attack every seamless trigger. When educators, law enforcement, foster and adoptive parents, kinship caregivers, daycare workers, group home staff, health care workers, and other caring adults use and model this practice consistently, it reduces violent outbursts, improves safety, and builds a sense of control and dignity for the child.
More On How To Teach Trauma Breathing in the READ MORE BELOW.
HOW TO TEACH TRAUMA BREATHING
Use simple, non‑clinical language. Practice when the child is not in crisis first.
1. Name it and normalize it
“Your body has a really strong alarm system because of what you’ve been through. That’s not your fault. We can teach your body a trick to turn the alarm down a little.”
2. Show belly breathing
-
Ask the child to put one hand on their chest and one on their belly.
-
“Try to make the belly hand go up like a balloon when you breathe in, and slowly down when you breathe out.”
3. Use an easy count
-
Breathe in slowly through the nose for a count of 4.
-
Breathe out gently through the mouth for a count of 6–8 (like blowing through a straw).
-
Repeat for 5–10 breaths (about 1–3 minutes), or as tolerated.
4. Make it child‑friendly
-
“Smell the hot cocoa…now blow on it to cool it down.”
-
Blow bubbles, a pinwheel, or “blow up” an imaginary balloon.
-
Trace a square: breathe in up one side, hold across the top, breathe out down the other side, rest along the bottom.
5. Practice before crisis
Build it into everyday routines so it’s familiar:
-
At the start of class or group
-
Before bed or nap
-
After visits or court dates
-
Before and after medical or dental appointments
-
After loud, chaotic, or scary events
6. Use it in the moment—without shame
When a child is escalating, keep your voice low and steady.
“Your body’s alarm is going off really loud right now. Let’s do three balloon breaths together so your brain can catch up.”
Model the breathing yourself. Your regulation helps theirs.
BACK: QUICK SCRIPTS BY ROLE
Use or adapt the lines that fit your setting and voice.
Educators and School Staff
-
Whole‑class routine:
“Before we start math, let’s all do five balloon breaths so our brains are ready to learn.”
-
In conflict or meltdown:
“We’ll talk about what happened. First, let’s slow your breathing so your body doesn’t feel like it’s in danger.”
Law Enforcement and School Resource Officers
-
On scene / de‑escalation:
“Your body thinks it’s in big danger right now. I’m not here to hurt you. Let’s take a few slow breaths together so we can figure this out safely.”
-
During a pause:
“In through your nose while I count to four, then out through your mouth while I count to six. I’ll do it with you.”
Foster and Adoptive Parents
-
Daily routine:
“Before bed, let’s do five slow belly breaths to tell your body it’s safe enough to rest.”
-
After a visit, nightmare, or flashback:
“That was a lot for your body. Let’s help your alarm turn down with some slow balloon breaths.”
Kinship and Relative Caregivers
-
Everyday moments:
“In this house, when our feelings get big, we help our bodies with breathing first. Want to do our three cocoa breaths with me?”
Daycare, Preschool, and Early Childhood Workers
-
Transition tool:
“Before we line up, let’s smell the flowers… and blow out the candles. Ready? Smell the flowers (breathe in)… blow out the candles (breathe out).”
-
Tantrum support:
“Your feelings are really big. I’m going to sit right here and do slow breaths. You can join me when you’re ready.”
Group Home, Shelter, and Residential Staff
-
Group regulation:
“The room feels really intense. Let’s take one minute for quiet breathing so everybody’s brain can feel a little safer.”
-
Individual crisis:
“I hear you. I’m not going to argue with you. Let’s get three slow breaths in together so you don’t have to carry all this in your body at once.”
Health Care Workers (Pediatricians, Nurses, Techs, Dentists)
-
Before procedures:
“This might hurt, but you’re not in the same danger you were before. These breaths help your brain and heart know that. Breathe in as I count to four, out as I count to six.”
-
During pain or fear:
“You can squeeze my hand and use your breathing to help your body get through this.”
Social Workers, Case Managers, Therapists, Advocates, CASA
-
In visits and sessions:
“Where in your body do you feel it the most right now? Let’s send our breath there—breathe in, and then slowly out like you’re blowing through a straw.”
-
Skill‑building:
“That breath you just took gave your brain a second to choose. That’s you using your power.”
Coaches, Youth Workers, Mentors, Faith Leaders
-
Before practice or group:
“Athletes/leaders need strong lungs and calm brains. Five slow breaths together, then we start.”
-
After conflict on the team or in the group:
“We’ll sort out what happened. First, we’re going to use our breathing to cool down our bodies.”
KARA / KIDS AT RISK ACTION / INVISIBLE CHILDREN






