Let’s cut through the noise.


What the Hell Is 90/90 Wall Balloon-Breathing?

Picture this: You’re seated against a wall, knees and hips bent at 90 degrees, ribs stacked like bricks. A small balloon sits between your lips. You inhale—deeply—filling your belly like a bellows, then exhale slowly into the balloon, fighting the urge to collapse. Your core trembles. Your diaphragm burns. And somewhere, a choir of stabilizer muscles you’ve never met starts singing.

This isn’t yoga. This is biological engineering.


  1. Set Up: Sit against a wall, knees and hips bent at 90 degrees. Feet flat, spine neutral.
  2. Balloon Ready: Place a small balloon (think birthday-party size) between your lips. Pinch it lightly.
  3. Breathe In: Inhale through your nose for 4 seconds, expanding your belly out, not up. Imagine filling a tire around your waist.
  4. Breathe Out: Exhale into the balloon for 6-8 seconds. Keep it half-inflated—no rapid puffing.
  5. Repeat: 6-8 breaths. When your abs feel like they’ve been TASERed, you’re doing it right.

“Most guys treat their diaphragm like a shy intern. This exercise promotes it to CEO.”
—Eugene Thong, CSCS


The Science of Sucking Wind (Intelligently)

  • Intra-Abdominal Pressure (IAP): Proper breathing increases IAP, creating a “brace” that protects your spine and amplifies power.
  • Rib Cage Mobility: Stiff ribs = shallow breathing. Balloon breathing forces your rib cage to expand laterally, ungluing years of desk-job hunching.
  • Vagus Nerve Activation: Slow exhales trigger parasympathetic relaxation, dialing down stress hormones that melt muscle and inflame joints.

Who It’s For (And Who Should Run Away)

  • Lift heavy but leak power during squats/deadlifts
  • Want a tighter waist without endless crunches
  • Play sports requiring rotational power (golf, baseball, MMA)
  • Sit 8+ hours a day and feel “stuck” in your own skin
  • Have unmanaged hypertension (the breath-hold spikes blood pressure)
  • Are rehabbing a recent rib/core injury
  • Hate feeling vulnerable (this humbles even gym veterans)

Pros vs. Cons: No Fluff, Just Facts

ProsCons
Boosts core stiffness for bigger liftsSteep learning curve (first tries feel awkward)
Improves posture in 10 minutes/dayBalloon may trigger latex allergies
Enhances lung capacity for enduranceNot a standalone workout—best paired with training
Reduces lower back pain from sittingRequires discipline (no Spotify distractions)

“Your Core is a Whisper, Not a Scream”

Charles Damiano, B.S. Clinical Nutrition, puts it bluntly: “Modern fitness is loud. Grunting, clanging plates, ego. But the body’s strongest signals are silent. Master breathing, and you master movement.”

The 90/90 Wall Balloon-Breathing exercise isn’t glamorous. But neither is a Swiss watch. And both thrive on precision.

Q&A: THE QUESTIONS YOU’RE TOO EMBARRASSED TO ASK (BUT SHOULD)

1. “WHAT KIND OF BALLOON SHOULD I USE—AND DOES SIZE MATTER?”

Skip the party aisle novelty balloons. Opt for *9-inch latex balloons*—they’re small enough to create resistance without turning your exhale into a circus act. “Too big, and you’ll strain your neck. Too small, and you’ll pass out,” warns Eugene Thong. Pro tip: Unused balloons work best; recycled ones carry the existential dread of last year’s birthday.

2. “CAN I DO THIS WITHOUT A BALLOON? I HATE THE TASTE OF RUBBER.”

Yes, but you’ll miss the biofeedback. The balloon measures your exhale’s consistency—no cheating. In a pinch, exhale through pursed lips (like sipping a thick shake) or use a straw submerged in water. Charles Damiano admits, “The balloon’s a cruel coach. But it works.”

3. “HOW IS THIS BETTER THAN CRUNCHES OR PLANKS?”

Crunches train your rectus abdominis (the “show muscles”); planks build endurance. The 90/90 drill targets your deep core stabilizers (transverse abdominis, pelvic floor) and resets dysfunctional breathing patterns. Thong puts it bluntly: “Planks make you stiff. This makes you smart.”

4. “I HAVE A BULGING DISC—WILL THIS MAKE IT WORSE?”

If your injury is acute, skip it. But for chronic stiffness, the 90/90 position’s spinal unloading and diaphragmatic breathing can reduce pressure on discs. “It’s like giving your spine a foam roller from the inside,” says Damiano. Always consult a physio first—this isn’t a DIY spinal tap.

5. “HOW LONG UNTIL I NOTICE CHANGES IN MY POSTURE OR CORE?”

Within *2-3 weeks*: Better intra-abdominal tension during lifts. 6 weeks: Standing taller without thinking. 12 weeks: Your belt notch might betray you. Consistency is key—think of it as brushing teeth for your diaphragm.

6. “COULD THIS HELP MY GOLF SWING OR TENNIS SERVE?”

Absolutely. Rotational sports demand a stiff core to transfer power from hips to hands. The 90/90 drill teaches your torso to stay locked under load. “Your swing is only as strong as your breath,” notes Thong. One client shaved 4 strokes off his game by “breathing like he gave a damn.”

Still skeptical? Try it for 5 days. Your core will write you a thank-you note.