This autumn, when the new
software for the Apple Watch (watchOS 3) is launched, along with a new
interface and extra watch faces there’s an app called Breathe.
Unlike the macOS and iOS 10 releases
which have public beta programs, watchOS is for developers only, but the
Independent recently tried out the new app behind closed doors.
Breathe is an app that continues Apple’s
focus on health and fitness, an emphasis that the Watch front and centre
with its Activity and Workout apps to count your steps and calories
during the day.
Apple CEO Tim Cook has said, “One day, we
will look back and wonder: how can I ever have gone without the Watch?
Because the holy grail of the Watch is being able to monitor more and
more of what's going on in the body.”
Breathe aims to improve your health, reduce tension and even improve your sleep, in just 60 seconds.
Breathing, we know, is a key to a greater
sense of calm. This app is simple enough. It encourages you to breathe
in and out slowly for a minute. When you open the app, the words you see
tell you what to expect: “Quiet your mind. Relax your body. Be in the
moment.” As Brits, we may prefer the first word to be quieten, but you
get the idea.
You choose the time you want to breathe
for, with a default of one minute, though can do more. When you start
the app it stays dark for a second or so to let you focus. Then a circle
of blue-green petals appear, growing as you inhale, shrinking as you
breathe out.
The Apple Watch also has a haptic
response. This is the subtle vibration the Watch can make, which really
feels like someone is gently tapping your wrist. The tapping measures
out the inhale, falling silent as you breathe out.
At the end of the minute the app shows
your heart rate. When I tried it, I genuinely felt calmer and more
relaxed. My heart rate had dropped, too, to 54 beats per minute.
I talked to Dr John Denninger, Director
of Research at Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at
Massachusetts General Hospital about the science the app taps into.
“A lot
of this goes back to Dr Herbert Benson’s work in the late sixties and
seventies which showed that techniques involving breathing do bring
about a physiological state that is opposite to the stress response.
That’s where your heart beats fast, where you tremble, the
fight-or-flight stuff that gets you away from the proverbial tiger.
There seems to be an ability of the body to enter an opposite state when
you focus on breathing.”
But is a minute really enough? “We have a
number of programmes for stress management and one element is the mini
relaxation that takes a minute or so to do a breathing exercise. It’s
helpful to use it during the day to stay mindful of stress. For
instance, there’s a group of medical professionals at Massachusetts
General Hospital doing palliative care, dealing with people at the end
of their lives. It’s difficult work to do. We ran a program for these
doctors and we recommended 20-minute sessions once or twice a day, but
the group found the most helpful thing was to do these mini-sessions
before going in to see a patient.”
That fight-or-flight response was there
for a reason, surely? Dr Denninger pointed out that we don’t spend as
much time running from tigers these days. “If there are negative health
results from the fight-or-flight response the body doesn’t care, it’s
about saving your life right now. But many of the threats we used to
face no longer apply. So stress responses don’t need to be active – a
nasty email from the boss can cause the same response, but you don’t
need it. And in the long term, chronic stress can cause health problems.
Any way to lower the body’s response to chronic stress is good.
Ultimately it may lead to greater resilience.”
I also talked to Jay Blahnik, a fitness
guru and Apple’s Director of Fitness and Health technologies, about the
app. “Taking a moment to do some deep breathing will feel good, will
quiet your mind, help relax your body and better manage everyday
stress.”
The app will be free when it arrives with the next update of software for the Apple Watch, in the autumn.
The Apple Watch already has a somewhat
addictive Activity app. It consists of three rings with different
meanings and the aim is to close each ring every day.
There’s red, which involves hitting your
chosen number of active calories, green, which completes when you’re
briskly active for at least half an hour and blue, which responds to
your standing up and moving for at least a minute each hour so you’re
not sitting all the time. Closing the rings has become a habit for many
Watch users, apparently.
Breathe could be another winner, a little, quickly habitual revelation that subtly makes a difference.
Breathing is key to a sense of calm, and the new app intends to make you remember that
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