Here is the Reason Why The Apple Watch Tells You To Breathe
Anyone who owns an Apple Watch is probably familiar with this notification telling you to breathe. But why are you getting this remainder in the first place?
So, one of the main features of Apple Watch is its health
functionality. Like tracking your workouts, counting your steps, monitoring
your heart rate, and even reminding you to stand up every hour. But Apple
wanted to take things beyond physical health by adding mental wellness
features. And the Breath app is a result of that effort. It guides users
through a number of deep breathe.
Since studies suggest those exercises may help relieve
symptoms of mental health conditions like general stress, anxiety, depression
and PTSD. But Apple knew people likely wouldn’t think about using the Breath
app throughout the day, so they decided to enable notification reminders to
help out. And there’s been a lot of speculation over the timing of these
notifications.
With people thinking
they may trigger by a rise in heart rate due to stress, or when their breathing
pattern changes. But that isn’t the case. Apple designed Breathe notifications
to appear when a user has been sitting silently for at least five minutes. Since
you can typically spend sixty seconds deep breathing in those moments compared to
sitting in a meeting or while driving.
By default, the number of Breath remainders you receive per
day is set to three. While the number of deep breathes per session is set to
seven. And there’s some science behind this too. Apple actually ran a study
with users who practice meditation as well as people who has asthma or other
breathing problems, and they found that talking seven breaths per minute was
the most comfortable for the most people.
Now if you’ve found the breath notifications to be annoying,
you can always disable them in your iPhone’s watch app settings. But just like
standing up every hour is beneficial to your physical health, Apple realized
that deep breathing throughout the day is beneficial to your mental health. So,
it’s probably a good idea to take a few deep breathes during those quiet moments,
since the health benefits are what prompted Apple to deliver those notifications
in the first place.
