Diaphragmatic Breathing Exercises: Fixing Your “Location of Movement”

This is a ‘quick-reading’ article – I try to keep it short-ish, to-the-point, and in a reading format that skimming feels good. Enjoy.

When I hear people say “I breathe just fine,” I believe them! 

“Just fine.”

That’s a low bar, though….

If you’re training for hiking, endurance, or high altitude—and especially if you’re doing it later in life—how you breathe matters just as much as how much you train. 

Because how well you breathe has an impact on how efficient your time spent in training is. 

And one of the most common issues I see isn’t fitness or even lung capacity. It’s something more basic:

This article is about fixing that.


Let’s clear something up right away.

Diaphragmatic breathing is not about sticking your belly out like a proud Thanksgiving turkey.

That’s a side effect—not the underlying mechanism.

Your diaphragm is a dome-shaped muscle that sits beneath your lungs and above your abdominal organs. When it contracts, it moves downward, creating negative pressure that draws air into the lungs. When it relaxes, air flows back out.

[insert picture of diaphragm]

That’s breathing.

What most adults do instead is:

  • Lift the ribcage upward
  • Tense the neck and shoulders
  • Pull air in shallow and fast
  • Let accessory muscles do the work

This is inefficient. You’re using muscles not designed to do your breathing, do your breathing.

The problem is illuminated under load, going uphill, and at altitude.


Remember when you were a kid and your doctor held the stethoscope to your heart and said, “Take a deep breath!”?

[Your shoulders shoot upward, then drop….]

A breath that moves 360º circumferentially…. Is.

And that doesn’t require your shoulders.

Earlier in life, you can muscle through poor mechanics.

You recover faster. You tolerate inefficiency better. You don’t pay for mistakes immediately.

Later on? The bill arrives faster.

What I see repeatedly in hikers and climbers in their 50s and beyond:

  • Tighter rib cages
  • Underactive diaphragms
  • Overactive accessory breathing muscles
  • Early breathlessness that feels like poor fitness

But isn’t.

  • More oxygen goes to breathing muscles (than is actually needed)
  • Less oxygen is available for legs
  • Heart rate rises faster
  • Stress response kicks in earlier

At altitude—where air pressure is lower—this inefficiency gets magnified.


Why?

Because you can have:

  • Good lungs
  • Decent VO₂ max
  • Solid training history

…and still struggle if your diaphragm isn’t doing its share of the work.

Proper diaphragmatic breathing:

  • Reduces unnecessary upper-body tension
  • Improves ventilation efficiency
  • Enhances oxygen exchange in the lower lungs
  • Lowers the energetic cost of breathing

It’s not about breathing more.

It’s about breathing more efficiently.


Most generic advice sounds like:

  • “Take deep breaths”
  • “Breathe slowly”
  • “Relax your shoulders”

Not wrong. Just incomplete.

Without load, feedback, and specificity, breathing drills become vague relaxation exercises. Helpful for stress, sure—but not enough to rewire mechanics or strengthen the diaphragm.

If you want diaphragmatic breathing to hold up:

  • Under pack weight
  • On steep grades
  • At 14,000+ feet

You need to train it like a muscle.


This part surprises people.

The diaphragm can fatigue (even if we don’t feel it much)

The diaphragm can underperform.

The diaphragm can be trained.

When it’s weak or poorly coordinated, your body compensates by:

  • Breathing faster
  • Using neck and chest muscles
  • Increasing perceived effort
  • Triggering stress responses earlier

This is one of the most effective ways to fix Location of Movement because it removes distractions and forces the right muscles to work.

It’s a body position – 

You lie on your back.

Feet flat on the ground.

Knees bent at about 90 degrees.

This position:

  • Reduces postural demands
  • Limits accessory muscle use
  • Makes it easier to feel diaphragmatic movement

Think of it as taking gravity and ego out of the equation.


  • Lie on your back
  • Knees bent, feet flat
  • Face, neck, shoulders relaxed
  • Place resistance on your lower belly and rib cage

(Buteyko Belt, resistance band, light weight, or even a heavy book)

(if you want MORE resistance – you can use ‘the dumbbell for your diaphragm’ – the SportsMask)

  1. Inhale forcefully and quickly
  2. Feel your belly and lower ribs expand against resistance – hopefully 360º around
  3. Let the exhale happen passively
  4. Do not force air out
  5. Start each inhale from a neutral lung position

Each strong inhale = one rep.

Yes—this is strength training.

No—this is not a meditation.


Once you’ve built basic control, you can layer in:

  • The SportsMask for air resistance
  • One-nostril breathing
  • Increased physical resistance

Now you’re training:

  • Strength
  • Coordination
  • Control under restriction

Which is exactly what uphill hiking at altitude demands.


This exercise:

  • Strengthens the diaphragm
  • Improves rib cage mobility
  • Reinforces proper movement patterns
  • Reduces reliance on accessory muscles
  • Improves breathing efficiency under load

Translation: You breathe better when it actually matters.


Athletes who fix their Location of Movement often report:

  • Slower breathing at the same pace
  • Lower heart rate on climbs
  • Less “air hunger” early on
  • Better control during hard pushes
  • More composure at altitude

Not because they got fitter, but because they stopped wasting oxygen.


If you don’t know your limiter, you’ll train the wrong thing.

Some people need: Lung capacity work

Others need: CO₂ tolerance

Others need: Nervous system regulation

LOM problems exist in plain sight – start noticing where your own movement happens.

That’s why we assess first—then prescribe.


What is the belly breathing mechanism?

It’s diaphragmatic contraction creating downward movement, expanding the lower lungs and abdomen—not shallow chest expansion. This happens 360º around your low ribcage area.

What’s the difference between belly breathing and diaphragmatic breathing?

Belly movement is a result. The diaphragm is the source of the movement.

What muscles are used in diaphragmatic breathing?

Primarily the diaphragm, assisted by your external intercostals. Notably: not neck or shoulder muscles.

How does belly breathing affect oxygen levels?

It improves ventilation efficiency and oxygen exchange in the lower lungs (where your alveoli are concentrated).

Is holding your breath for one minute good?

Context matters. Breath-holds are a sign of CO2 tolerance, which is a different mechanism to assess for. 

Here, we’re talking about mechanics, and those come first.


If hiking feels harder than it should…

If you’re fit but feeling out-of-breath…

If altitude exposes cracks fast…

Notice where you’re breathing.

Fix your Location of Movement.

Strengthen the diaphragm.

Then let the rest of your fitness actually show up.

Because when breathing works the way it’s supposed to…. everything uphill gets a little easier.

Do you know how good your breathing is?

Click on this link to start your Free Assessment