Every breath you take moves your body. At 18 meters for indoor and up to 70 meters outdoors, that movement translates directly into missed points. Learning to control your breathing during the shot cycle is essential for any competitive archer.
The Standard Breathing Cycle
- Before raising: Take one slow, full breath in and exhale fully to reset
- Second breath: Inhale as you raise the bow and begin drawing
- At full draw: Exhale about half the breath, then hold the remainder lightly
- Release and follow-through: Release while holding the partial breath
- After the shot: Complete your exhale naturally
The "hold" period at full draw should be no more than 6–8 seconds. Beyond this, your vision begins to blur from oxygen reduction and your muscles begin to fatigue. If you're not releasing within 8 seconds, lower the bow, take two breaths, and start over.
Breathing Under Pressure
Competition adrenaline causes shallow, rapid breathing. This disrupts your timing, increases body movement, and tightens your muscles. The solution: take a deliberate, slow diaphragmatic breath before every shot routine starts. Box breathing (4-count inhale, 4-count hold, 4-count exhale) between ends helps regulate nervous system arousal during high-stakes rounds.
Training Breath Control
Practice your breathing pattern at blank bale until it's automatic. Then test it by introducing mild pressure (small competitions, for-score practice rounds). Breath control that isn't habitual in low-stress conditions will not appear automatically under competition pressure.
Work on Your Shot Cycle
Book a session with Lalit Jain to refine your complete shot cycle including breath timing.