Improving HRV isn’t about effort or discipline. For people with chronic illness, HRV often rises not when we do more, but when the nervous system feels safer.
These aren’t fixes or requirements — just options. Even one small thing counts.
1. Prioritise Rest Before You’re Exhausted
Resting only once you’ve crashed is often too late.
If you notice:
- Rising pain
- Heavier limbs
- Brain fog
- A sense of “pushing through”
Those are signals to pause. Supporting HRV often means stopping earlier than feels natural.
2. Gentle, Slow Breathing
Breathing with longer exhales supports parasympathetic activity.
You might try:
- Inhale through the nose
- Exhale slowly through the mouth
- Let the exhale be longer than the inhale
Even a minute or two can help.
3. Reduce Sensory Load
Bright lights, noise, and constant stimulation keep the nervous system alert.
Lowering sensory input — dim lights, quiet spaces, fewer demands — can help HRV without using energy.
4. Support the Vagus Nerve
Gentle vagus nerve support can indirectly support HRV:
- Humming or quiet singing
- Cool water on the face
- Safe, predictable routines
These send signals of safety to the brain.
5. Pacing Over Productivity
HRV tends to suffer when the body is repeatedly pushed beyond its limits.
Pacing isn’t giving up — it’s working with your physiology. Fewer crashes often mean more stable HRV over time.
6. Sleep Support (Without Pressure)
Sleep disruption is common in chronic illness and strongly affects HRV.
Rather than chasing perfect sleep:
- Keep routines simple
- Lower expectations
- Focus on rest even when sleep doesn’t come
Rest still matters.
7. Emotional Safety Matters Too
Feeling judged, rushed, or misunderstood keeps the nervous system on guard.
Gentle boundaries, validation, and supportive environments can be just as important as physical rest.
What Often Lowers HRV Further
It’s worth naming this too:
- Pushing through symptoms
- Overexertion “on good days”
- Forcing routines that don’t fit your body
- Treating HRV as something to control
None of this is your fault — it’s what many of us were taught.
A Final Reminder
HRV improves when the body feels supported, not managed.
Small moments of safety, repeated over time, matter far more than intensity.Your nervous system responds to kindness more than effort.
